ARTLURKER
A MIAMI BASED CONTEMPORARY ART NEWSLETTER / BLOG
Jet
Set Saturdays: aaron GM at ltd
By
Annie Wharton
If I feel physically as if the top of my head were taken off, I
know that is poetry. – Emily Dickinson
In a perfect
world, everything would be white and blue and we would speak with native
fluency a previously unlearned language. The blue would be Royal Blue, like the
paint slathered on Yves Klein models just before they writhe around his
canvases; the white a bright white like Miami cocaine or the fluorescent lights
of a Berlin kunsthalle; and describing the faultless simplicity of this
Santorini-esque environ, words that previously we either feared to utter or
never knew existed would miraculously find their intelligible forms in our
throats and mouths. At ltd with his exhibition entitled capezio, aaron GM (née Aaron
Garber-Maikovska) has created a perfect world.
A plethora of wheat flour and
performance-based methodology in the exhibit immediately bring to mind Vito
Acconci’s 1970 Flour/Breath Piece film,
where the artist was shown attempting to blow a thin layer of flour off his own
nude body. capezio’s
lo-fi videos find GM reiterating the vernacular of 60’s and 70’s video artists
who recorded their own banal acts and gave otherwise inconsequential physical
motions importance via the then nascent time-based art medium. Utilizing
minimal editing techniques, repetition, and corporal action to engage the
observer, GM uses his body, voice, minimal studio props, and a single lens to
create a whimsical and compelling oeuvre. Summoning the pace of the 1971 I Will Not Make Any Boring Art video that sees John Baldessari
repeatedly writing these lines on a chalkboard, or the 1972 Baldessari Sings Lewitt where one artist actually sings
the other’s conceptual statements, the videos in this show are not
tautological. More like watching the making of Tibetan sand mandalas, GM forces
the viewer to decelerate and observe his capricious, soothing, and obliquely
mannered technique.
The installation is comprised of quotidian
components: Royal blue painter’s tape and cotton fabric, white sacks of
bleached flour and bright lighting, and walls lacking any sort of color-based
adornment save the geometric forms and “words” made by the tape. GM creates a
character in his video works whose age (with vocal intonations redolent of both
a pre-schooler and an old man) is irrelevant and intelligence is nebulous. 2
computers, 2 projections, a video monitor, and 6 soundtracks on headphones that
house the moving image and sound elements of the show juxtapose a ladder
wrapped in blue tape and propped against the wall. The music (including the
cheesy Sail Away by Enya and Telling Stories by Tracy Chapman) versus the
objects in the show protracts the artist’s interest in divergent formal, sonic,
and material textures. The bread scattered about capezio – signifying both the folding of dough
and the kneading of meaning and language back into itself – becomes a baroque
metaphor.
GM’s language-based explorations are silly
and poignant, with tape on the walls simultaneously employed both to designate
space and spell out quirky acronym titles like A.Q.E.D (Always Quoting Emily Dickinson), and J.A.T.D. (Japanamation Across the Dashboard).
And the collision/collusion of the low (tape and flour) and the cerebral
(temporal manifestations and linguistic exercises) posture the works in a realm
difficult to categorize.
In the video called “donkey” GM does a
disco-dance of sorts – choreographing his opposing hands to rub the blue ladder
rungs in a somewhat masturbatory fashion while finding an off-kilter, sing-song
rhythmic repetition of the words “driving a truck, feeding a donkey, playing
with my soup…”– and the piece ends with the character redemptively “drinking
some soup.”
Via formalist and performative maneuvers,
GM’s capezio leads the viewer with elf-like
nimbleness into a blue and white dreamland for a bit and then releases them —
feeling a bit lighter and slightly confused — back into reality…where, in an
unwelcome Los Angeles torrential downpour, the Dickinsonian quote, “The rain is
wider than the sky” aptly makes the world seem a tad more perfect[.]
For more information please visit: www.ltdlosangeles.com
For the videos detailed above please visit: www.aarongm.com This post was contributed by Annie Wharton.