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![]() Eye Exam Public Art
Despite a sloppy downpour, a good-sized crowd gathers outside the
Page Brothers Building for Burtonwood and Holmes' (my friends and
coworkers at Bridge) installation, "PRODUCT Placement." Outside,
artists are clustered in groups beneath the construction platform that
skirts the building, smoking, talking about Chicago art. Inside, the
walls are covered with junk mail advertising everything from toothpaste
to TVs, and in the middle of the smallish room sits a huge replica,
constructed entirely of cardboard, of an Abrams A1 tank. It too is
covered entirely in junk mail, little corners of the packing tape used
to secure it to the surfaces curling in the humidity. Their installation
is part of the Department of Cultural Affairs "Open Studio" project, a
little too "artist in a fishbowl" in its conception, but an
opportunity no artist in their right mind would turn down, given the
location on the ground floor of the building at the corner of State and
Lake Streets, right across from the ABC TV studio.
It's an admirable project and for this husband-and-wife artist team,
a real career booster. Diverging from their original project-sketch
renderings in that junk mail was not actually applied to the floor and
ceilings as well, the tank doesn't actually fade "magic-eye" style
into the background, but nests comfortably in the bosom of its
commercial surroundings. Junk mail was left off the floor since there
was no way to give it a protective covering, and it adds some weight to
do away with such visual gimmickry in favor of the team's more
straightforward political statement. "When the nation was challenged by
terrorist attacks," they explain in their artist's statement, "the
government's response to Americans was `Go shopping.' They asked us to
do something familiar and boost the economy, which in turn supported the
war on terror."
Everybody knows that wars cost money, and it's a useful reminder to
point out that governments raise that money from those it governs. It's
also laudable to see Chicago city government providing opportunities for
artists to comment on the hypocrisies of its federal branch, given the
demonstrations of intolerance and willingness to criminalize art
reflected in the case of artists such as Steve Kurtz (arrested for
possessing benign biological specimens for use in his Bio-art projects).
Censorship and the willingness to criminalize speech and expression is a
well-established tool of governments like ours, which have slowly
drifted into a kind of "soft despotism." At a time when pundits agree
the center has shifted firmly to the political right, it's worth noting
that Chicago, world-renowned for its sometimes self-aggrandizing
monumental public sculpture, is still willing to abet the degenerate
stuff too. Matter of fact, there seems a real flowering of government
willingness to back art, at a level not seen since before the NEA
cultural-funding battles of the 1980s. This week, for instance, the
Department of Cultural Affairs' Public Art Program announced the first
picks for their "Arts in Transit" program, a unique joint operation
between the DCA and the CTA. It's the first phase in a three-phase
project, with twenty-five stations "along the Dan Ryan branch of the
Red Line and the entire Brown Line" slated to benefit from the program.
Artists have been picked for seven train stops from Sox-35th to 87th on
the Red and five from Western to Kimball on the Brown Line. Notables in
the first phase of the project include local success stories such as
Cody Hudson, Sabina Ott and Josh Garber. A full list of artists
announced for the project and more information on the Arts in Transit
program overall, as well as a cornucopia of information on the
Department of Cultural Affairs myriad Public Art initiatives, can be
found online at www.CityofChicago.org/PublicArt. French Connection
At Thomas Masters Gallery last Thursday, French ex-pat artist David
Gista stood with Tim Anderson before a modest crowd to discuss the
interchange of influences and ideas between French and American artists.
Paris was the center of the art world long before New York stole it away
with the advent of Abstract Expressionism; New York galleries originally
became successful by showing French artists, much like Chicago galleries
must show New York artists now. It was hard to separate the experience
of listening to this history from looking at Gista's paintings from his
"Stranger in a Strange Land" series, images of shadowy, almost
noir-like figures wandering the aisles of bookshelves in what resembles
a version of Borges' infinite library. Geographic place, too will be the
subject of the upcoming "Fool's Paradise" exhibition at the School of
the Art Institute's Betty Rymer Gallery, curated by Murphy Dunn and
former 1R Gallery cohort (and freelancing art critic), Madeline Nusser.
It's open now, though the reception takes place next week. The lineup
includes excellent local and transplant artists such as Rashid Johnson,
Jessica Labatte and jon.satrom, each participating in the stated goal of
exploring "the elusive geographic and metaphoric meaning of a
particular place." It should be well worth a visit. Tom Burtonwood and Holly Holmes show at The Page Brothers
Building, 117 North State Street, (312)455-1195, through March 11.
"Fool's Paradise" shows at the Betty Rymer Gallery, 280 South Columbus
Drive, (312)443-3703, through September 22.
Also by Michael Workman Eye Exam
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