What with all the mass shooting and hurricanes, Trumpery and Brexiting I thought there might be significant trauma at Frieze this year. Not so: if there's a trend in that respect, it's more subtly implied and harder to pin down. But yes, there is interesting work to make you anxious if you are that way inclined...
Kaari
Upson: MMDP (Nail biting), 2016 at Spruth Magers - A4
Kaari Upson’s mother – the title’s acronym stands for ‘My
Mother Drinks Pepsi’– used to sigh with over-ostentatious pleasure after
consuming her favourite drink. Upson - who tends to deal with emotional
traumas and uncomfortable intimacy – found that an alienating trigger for the
psycho-drama of mother-daughter relations. Hence, I assume, the childhood
nail-biting alluded to in the title. Upson pours aluminium into Pepsi
cans, so that container and content amalgamate, burning off the can’s colours
from the inside.
Regina Jose Galindo: still from The Shadow, 2017 at Proyectos Ultravioleta (Guatemala) - H19
Regina Jose Galindo
typically challenges both herself and her viewers
through extreme actions which draw attention to the violence and
injustice
built into power relationships. This is only a nine minute film, but
is taken from nine hours which the artist spent fleeing a tank, and the
effort and distress involved is plain to see. What drove her? The film
was made for Documenta, and features a German 'Leopard' tank from World
War II, so critiquing the extensive supply of arms from German
manufacturers to Galindo's high murder rate home nation of Guatemala.
Daniel Knorr: Depression Elevations, Industrial 15, 2017 at Fonti (Naples) - G28
Even as you wonder what they are, Berlin-based Romanian
artist Daniel Knoor’s seductive wall-based resin sculptures flicker between
sickly sweet and poisonously sickening. In fact, he starts by pouring polyurethane into a
pothole, explaining why we see a flat
‘screen’ backed by swelling shapes suggesting an inner life behind. For Knorr,
the cracking of road surfaces combined with an absence of repair work - which
combine to make potholes common - are signs of neglect and crisis
in society. Yet the beauty draws us in…
Stuart Brisley: Louise Bourgeios’
Leg, 2002 at Hales (London / New York) - D1
Subversive veteran Stuart
Brisley spoke into a hidden microphone in this prosthetic
or amputated leg, a plaster performance object said to be that of the
then-octogenarian Louise Bourgeois, during a narrative which followed on
from his story 'Legs'. To quote the reflexologist character's analysis
in that: 'I am confident that Louise was in harmony with herself, as
her feet were so responsive... though she along with her family were
reputed to have eaten her father for dinner when they were living in
Paris, I am not convinced'. The ironing board setting makes sense, given
the significance of clothing in Bourgeois' life and art...
Poitr Uklański: Untitled (All Gave Some, Some Gave All), 2012 at Massimo de Carlo (Milan / London) - A8
Poitr Uklański made several riffs on the American flag in 2012, in the context of his own status
living between Warsaw and New York and of his work previously referencing the
Polish flag. They seem timely now given
the fracturing in the flag’s assumed power to unify and instill pride. Uklański’s
method builds in a clash between counter-culture and establishment, as the
colour results from the archetypal hippy technique of tie-dying onto cotton.
That is then sewn onto canvas, often with the stitched seams visible so that - to return to metaphorical
mode - you can see the joins.
Cheng Xinyi: Coiffure I, 2017 at Antenna Space (Shanghai) - H17
Amsterdam-based Cheng Xinyi, originally from the South
Chinese river city of Wuhan, shows paintings of men in barber’s shops,
revealing interests both in hair as a sexual signal, and in how the vulnerable
the customers seem - irrespective of their status - in this context. It’s hard
not to feel the client of this coiffure is potentially threatened by the razor, so
much so that the scissors look more
likely to be employed in surgery than in styling. And it's
Cheng’s French gallerist in the chair, so giving that tension between
power and vulnerability an extra tweak.
Minjung Kim: Grey Snow, 2009 at Gallery Hyundai (Seoul) - B9
The Korean artist Minjung Kim is best known for her beautiful collages of red or black ink-washed paper which she delicately singes to make irregular edges, then overlays to form mountains. That playing on the meditative repetition of not quite fully controllable processes occurs here in simpler ink on mulberry Hanji paper, but before we get too lulled by the delicacy, it occurs to us that the snow is grey due to pollution.
Raymond Hains: Union Jack, 2005 at Max Hetzler (Berlin) - A9
Returning to the prescient deconstruction of red, white
and blue flags, this is one of the last works made by
the French artist Raymond Hains (1926-2005), whose
oeuvre is exceptionally varied, far more so than his reputation for
torn-away posters and giant matches would suggest. This is a Plexiglas
series - made for a show in London - which distorts the
Union Jack in the spirit of his caricatures of such brands as Martini.
Shown now, it may suggest that the the French are expecting current
negotiations to have some impact on the shape of the UK.
Maria Taniguchi with her Untitled, 2017 at Taka Ishii (Tokyo) - C7
I’ve seen the work of Maria Taniguchi before: the Filipino always paints
the white outline of small bricks on a dark grey ground, then shades
most of them black but with varying brushstrokes and with a few dark
grey to build up subtle infections. But whereas I'd seem portrait
format, this is a landscape more than 15 feet wide, ramping up the dead
end effect. No wonder her Japanese gallery had to
fly what I'd guess to be 15,000 bricks into London rolled up, and
stretch the canvas at the Fair.
Emma Hart: Commercial
Breakz, 2017 – installation at Sunday Painter (London) - H30
Recent Max Mara prizewinner Emma Hart’s stand of ceramic
satellite dishes sold out fast, and their surface cheer and witty
anthropomorphism no doubt helped that along, together with the simple delight
of finding a new kind of dish made from clay. Yet such dishes are increasingly redundant,
even were they not made useless by their material; they publicly indicate
that something private is going on, which could stand in for many a trauma; and
their content – like all Hart’s work –
carries plenty of scope for anxiety, from spilled drinks to multi-eyed
surveillance to this figure's seeming at once threatened and supported by forks.
One could hardly say that the mood was the same, but there was a certain continuity in the following:
Cornelius de Heem: Still Life of Fruit with Peaches and Grapesat at Koetser Gallery (Zurich)
Frieze
doesn't tend to attract stellar old masters, and Cornelis de Heem
(1631-95) is generally considered less significant than his father Jan
Davidszoon de Heem among a family of flower and fruit still life
painters which included his brother and son. All the same, this is a
fine small painting which might be seen as emphasising or
philosophically accepting the classic anxiety: that about death.
Dan Flavin: for the citizens of France on the 200th anniversary of their revolution, 1989 at Lévy Gorvy (London / New York)
Alfredo Jaar: from Studies on Happiness (1979-81) Galerie Lelong (New York) and Goodman Gallery (Johannesburg) at Frieze Masters
The
Spotlight section of the fair included a presentation of vintage works
by Alfredo Jaar
(born Santiago, 1956), made during
Pinochet’s dictatorship. There were seven photographs from the 'Studies
in Happiness', for which Jaar placed notices and billboards with the
question '¿Es usted feliz?' ('Are You Happy?') - so asking a subversive question,
which publicly suggested there was good reason to believe that
discontent occurred under the junta, albeit people might be afraid to
express it.
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