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Venice Biennale: Be Careful What You Wish For

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  • Venice Biennale: Be Careful What You Wish For

    Art in America
    September 2005 Issue

    Venice Biennale: Be Careful What You Wish For.

    By Marcia E. Vetrocq

    Despite the unprecedented appointment of two women as visual-arts
    directors, the 2005 Biennale is a cautious affair, marked by close
    administrative oversight and curatorial temperance. More garden party
    than free-for-all, the event just might leave some visitors nostalgic
    for the undisciplined--and occasionally spectacular--displays of years
    past.

    After the satanic heat and Babylonian excess of the last Venice Biennale
    preview, the survivors of 2003 sounded downright catechistic when
    reciting their common hopes for this year's edition: greater thematic
    coherence, a more restrained roster of artists, shorter entry lines,
    fewer on-your-feet screening marathons and--admittedly beyond
    bureaucratic determination--less punishing temperatures in which to
    tackle a citywide event that has become a test of time management and
    physical endurance. Meteorological prayers were answered in full, but,
    as if by the malign volition of a devil who corrupts each wish even as
    he grants it, the desired clarity and numerical abstemiousness (91
    artists in the international group shows compared to 380 in 2003) became
    the attributes of an exhibition that is all but purged of risk and
    surprise. Well-groomed, responsible and as eager to please as a new
    suitor, the 2005 Venice Biennale serves up contemporary art (and some
    less-than-contemporary art) that is market wise, celebrity conscious and
    chary of offending. That the exhibition comes wrapped in a
    self-satisfied mantle of better-late-than-never feminism is cause for
    some dismay.

    It's necessary, of course, to distinguish between the presentations in
    the national pavilions, which are determined by each participating
    country, and the large international group shows, which are curated by
    visual-arts directors appointed by the administrative board that
    oversees the event. Yet throughout all the sections this year, there
    prevails a reassuring air, attributable in part to the sheer familiarity
    and even seniority of many of the participants. For example, four of the
    national pavilions that claim a hefty share of the limelight are
    showcasing high-profile artists age 60 or older, with Prance, Great
    Britain, Spain and the U.S. presenting, respectively, works by Annette
    Messager, Gilbert & George, Antoni Muntadas and Ed Ruscha that are
    unlikely to arouse any controversy. An almost deferential atmosphere
    permeates the two international shows as well, thanks to the relatively
    high number of well-known (and some deceased) artists, and to the
    inclusion of a fair number of works that have already garnered critical
    attention.

    For this outing, the visual-arts directorship saw its first joint
    appointment, that of Maria de Corral and Rosa Martinez, whose
    nationality (Spanish) and gender (female) are likewise unprecedented in
    the organization's history. Installed in and outside the mazelike
    Italian pavilion in the Giardini, de Corral's show of 42 artists, "The
    Experience of Art," is dedicated to mapping the terra firma of art
    today. The presence of Marlene Dumas, Gabriel Orozco, Rachel Whiteread,
    Cildo Meireles, Dan Graham and other landmark figures is reasonable if
    not stirring, while the inclusion of Francis Bacon, Philip Guston, Agnes
    Martin and Juan Munoz arguably carries the enterprise too far into
    retrospection. Martinez's "Always a Little Further," a presentation of
    works by 49 individuals and teams that is intended to be the more
    forward-looking of the two shows, occupies the expansive spaces of the
    Arsenale, the past home of "Aperto," "Utopia Station" and other edgy or
    youthful manifestations. Yet Martinez's roster inexplicably includes
    Samuel Beckett and Louise Bourgeois--inspirational, yes,
    up-to-the-minute, no--along with Jimmie Durham, Olafur Eliasson, Mona
    Hatoum and others who might have easily been at home in de Corral's
    overview of contemporary art's establishment.

    Both group exhibitions include good works, but the overwhelming
    impression is of a project of confirmation spiced with a bit of novelty,
    rather like the audience-survey-driven programming of summer repertory
    theater. Some of the responsibility for this pervasive caution, perhaps
    the lion's share, rests with Davide Croff, the current president of the
    Biennale's board [see "Front Page," Oct. '04]. Croft took the
    step--previously the prerogative of the visual-arts director--of
    articulating the Biennale's prudent theme, which he then entrusted to de
    Corral and Martinez. Moreover, for the first time the board named the
    directors of two successive biennali, with Robert Storr's appointment
    for 2007 preempting a second outing by de Corral and Martinez. The board
    further determined that Storr would be enlightened by the collected
    wisdom of veteran biennial and Documenta curators and other high-profile
    art professionals, a group of whom have been invited to Venice for a
    summit in December.

    One recalls past editions directed by Achille Bonito Oliva, Jean Clair
    and Harald Szeemann as expressions of strong and compelling, though
    certainly not infallible, curatorial vision. Francesco Bonami's 2003
    extravaganza, engorged and unfocused, seems to have been the last straw,
    the Heaven's Gate of biennali. The potential consequences of the
    administration's clipping the director's wings and casting a net of
    circumspection over all operations were nearly ignored in last summer's
    stir over the superficially radical step of appointing de Corral and
    Martinez. But in truth, the designation of a woman or women to direct
    the Biennale was so belated, the curators' resumes are so long and
    distinguished, and the outcome, after all, is so mainstream, that this
    appointment really has caused no more of a ripple than, say, last year's
    casting of Denzel Washington in the wan remake of The Manchurian
    Candidate: the public, as they say, was ready for it.

    Grrrrrrl Power and (A Few) Bad Boys

    De Corral and Martinez open each section of the international show with
    an assertive graphic display: a digitally printed vinyl mural (called a
    "wall tattoo" in the catalogue) by Barbara Kruger on the facade of the
    Italian pavilion, and enormous posters by the Guerrilla Girls in the
    Arsenale. Thus we enter, lashed by the irony of one ("YOU MAKE HISTORY
    WHEN YOU DO BUSINESS"; "ADMIT NOTHING. BLAME EVERYONE") and prodded by
    the sarcasm of the others ("Where are the women artists of Venice?
    Underneath the men"). Two ceiling-hung pieces by younger women follow
    the works of the veteran feminists. Above the entrance foyer of the
    Italian pavilion is suspended Monica Bonvicini's Blind Shot (2004), a
    menacing-looking but ultimately pointless jack hammer that cycles on
    like a thunderous automatic weapon every two minutes or so. In the
    Arsenale is Joana Vasconcelos's The Bride (2001), an enormous teardrop
    of a chandelier that proves, upon inspection, to be made of tampons
    (14,000 of them) on a steel armature.

    Contributing to the Biennale's current of feminist triumphalism--the
    title of Pilar Albarracin's flamenco video, I Will Dance On Your Grave,
    may say it best--are the unprecedented numerical strength of women
    artists in both shows (less remarked upon is the equally dramatic spike
    in the representation of artists from Iberia and Latin America) and the
    awarding of three of the Biennale's four Golden Lions to women artists.
    Kruger received the award for lifetime achievement, and Annette
    Messager, the first woman to represent France in Venice, was cited for
    the outstanding national pavilion. The Golden Lions reserved for the
    international show were apportioned between the two sections. Germany's
    Thomas Schutte, in de Corral's survey, was recognized for his supremely
    accomplished ensemble of framed engraved heads and pedestal-borne
    metamorphic figures, the latter acquiring supplemental gravitas from the
    adjacent hanging of Francis Bacon's tortured anatomies. Regina Jose
    Galindo, a Guatemalan artist from Martinez's roster, was declared the
    best participant under 35 for her viscerally political performance
    videos.

    As a feminist declaration, however, much of this feels more wishful and
    nostalgic than pungent and present. Posters by the Guerrilla Girls, a
    20-year-old collective ("fighting discrimination with facts, humor and
    fake fur since 1985") tick off a series of distressing statistics (fewer
    than 40 of the roughly 1,240 artworks on view in six major museums of
    Venice are by women; only 9 percent of the artists in the 1995 Biennale
    were women). But it all seems like so much crabby shop talk when, far
    from the spotlight, in the little pavilion of the Republic of Armenia in
    Palazzo Zenobio, Diana Hakobian's three-channel video, Logic of Power
    (2005), offers an altogether more sobering and consequential-seeming set
    of numbers about deaths resulting from illegal abortions, the depressed
    level of women's wages and the denial of higher education to women in
    much of the world. While the Guerrilla Girls have updated their
    iconography to include bimbo-of-the-moment Pamela Anderson and the
    terror-alert color code system remade into an index of the Bush
    administration's hostility to women, their construction of the gender
    problem nevertheless feels dated, and the humor has grown slack.

    Is there something in the nature of triumph delayed that makes a bit of
    slackness inevitable? Is it possible to match the initial jolt delivered
    by Kruger, or by her sister text-messager Jenny Holzer, represented in
    the Italian pavilion by a dramatic, Flavinesque corner piece? The punch
    line of Vasconcelos's feminine hygiene fixture seems like a small
    "gotcha!" when one thinks of the shocking absorbent armory arrayed by
    Judy Chicago in her 1972 Menstruation Bathroom for Womanhouse in L.A.
    The videos of Galindo--whom we see shaving her body hair and striding
    nude through town, walking through basins of blood and in close-up
    footage of her hymenoplasty--strike one as too serf-consciously beholden
    to Marina Abramovic, Ana Mendieta and Orlan. Meanwhile, in Runa Islam's
    film Be The First To See What You See As You See It (2004), the
    affectless young woman who tentatively coaxes pieces of period china
    (tired emblems of women's domestic entrapment and presumed fragility)
    off their platforms to a crash landing is a mere Stepford vandal
    compared to the delirious slugger Pipilotti Rist, who demolished the
    windows of parked cars with a long-stemmed red flower in an
    unforgettable video in the 1997 Biennale. Even Eija-Liisa Ahtila, the
    author of tart, tough minidramas probing the psychological and sexual
    pressures that bear down on women and families, is represented in the
    Italian pavilion by a cloying work, The Hour of Prayer (2005), a
    four-screen projection in which a blonde Nordic beauty, grieving over
    the death of her fluffy dog Luca, escapes to dusty, crowded Benin, where
    the church bell-triggered barking of the lean local mutts becomes a
    healing canine ritual.

    With the curators showcasing women artists, you can't resist searching
    for constructions of gender in the works of the men they selected. For
    example, William Kentridge's installation in the Italian pavilion's
    elevated gallery is an affecting visualization of two realms of
    enchantment--the intimate space of the studio and the vast reaches of
    the Milky Way--that pays tribute to the early days of film-making.
    Still, the presence in these projections of an elusive nude model/muse
    and Kentridge's imagining of the galaxy as great coiling spermlike
    streams invoke the hoary erotic tradition of Courbet, Rodin and Matisse.
    More overtly testosterone-fueled is Willie Doherty's Non-Specific Threat
    (2004), a looped game of chicken in which the camera circles an utterly
    impassive yet stereotypically tough-looking man. It's not clear whether
    man or camera is the more predatory, since the menacing voiceover--"I
    have contaminated you"; "You create me"--could be speaking for either.
    Robin Rhode (who may owe something to fellow South African Kentridge for
    his halting, low-tech method and incorporation of hand-drawn elements)
    is perhaps the most evolved male in de Corral's show, with his
    PBS-friendy videos of children at play. Bruce Nauman remains the baddest
    boy on the block with Shit in Your Hat--Head on a Chair, which offers a
    thoroughly gratifying lesson in mime abuse. (Did de Corral reach back to
    that work from 1990 merely because it's in the collection of the
    Fundacion "la Caixa," which she directed from 1981 to '91?)

    Some highly caffeinated guy art can be found over at the Arsenale, too,
    with John Bock's obsessive-expulsive installation (the site of a preview
    performance on the durable topos of taming a feral child) incorporating
    athletic equipment, projectors and battered teddy bears, and the videos
    of Blue Noses, a Moscow-based group whose unapologetically sexist antics
    with naked girls, baguette phalluses and a mechanical alligator are
    displayed on 12 monitors arranged face-up in a circle of cardboard
    boxes. For a sharp behavioral alternative, C-prints, videos and garments
    on mannequins capture the gender-bending outrageousness of performance
    artist and super-size model Leigh Bowery. During the Biennale, Bowery
    can be seen as painted by Lucian Freud in a retrospective at the Museo
    Correr.

    Fundamentally more tame and far too satisfied with its own leering
    naughtiness is Francesco Vezzoli's Trailer for a Remake of Gore Vidal's
    Caligula (2005), which is playing to packed houses in the Italian
    pavilion. A steamy come-on for a fictional remake of the legendary smut
    chestnut of 1979, the video features Helen Mirren and Adriana Asti (who
    appeared in the original) hamming it up with Courtney Love, Karen Black,
    Milla Jovovich, Benicio Del Toro, Barbara Bouchet and Vidal himself.
    Notwithstanding long-term support received from the Fondazione Prada
    (which organized the concurrent collateral show of Vezzoli's work on
    view at the Fondazione Cini), the artist turned to Donatella Versace for
    costumes that are the last word in imperial glare. During the preview
    days, only Candice Breitz's videos, Mother and Father (both 2005), came
    close to Vezzoli's in audience draw, and they, too, feature Hollywood
    actors and actresses, though the stars are not co-conspirators but
    rather the digital raw material of highly edited sequences that mock the
    cliches of family life.

    Some Politics, Some Installations, Lots of Video

    Compared to biennali past, you have to look hard in the Arsenale to
    avoid concluding that the world is in pretty good shape, AIDS has been
    cured and stability has been achieved in the world's trouble spots. The
    Guantanamo Initiative of Christoph Buchel and Gianni Motti (the latter
    also one of four artists representing Switzerland) requires a small
    detour to a shipping container parked outside the building. Launched
    last year, the documentation-rich project calls upon the Castro
    government--which does not recognize U.S. rights to Guantanamo and has
    not cashed checks paid on the lease since 1959--to seize the base, with
    its controversial military-run prison, and convert it into a cultural
    center. For Palabras/Words (2005), within the Arsenale, the Cuban-born
    Diango Hernandez arranges a tangle of wires and fallen electrical poles,
    a symbol of failed planning and broken promises, through which we view a
    projection of vintage news images and a scroll of the names of former
    Communist-bloc nations and their leaders. Fidel Castro is the last
    intransigent survivor of the lot.

    If the Buchel-Motti initiative is quixotic, Emily Jacir's Ramallah/New
    York (2004-05), which juxtaposes footage of the ordinary activities of
    small businesses in both cities, is, sad to say, altogether too
    reasonable in its plea for mutual understanding. Meanwhile, Gregor
    Schneider's desire to construct a black cloth-draped, metal cubic
    structure that resembles the Ka'ba, the centerpiece of Islam's holiest
    shrine in Mecca, is inexcusably naive. Wounded by the Biennale's refusal
    to back his plan (the administration not surprisingly concluded that the
    piece, to be sited in the city's congested tourist heartland, the Piazza
    San Marco, could be offensive to Muslims), Schneider is showing a video
    in the Arsenale with an animation of his proposal and an explication of
    his soft-headed conviction that East and West can find common ground in
    their shared preoccupation with simple formal elements (think Tony
    Smith's Die). Schneider seems rather more sulky than idealistic in the
    Biennale catalogue, where his six alotted pages have been printed in
    solid black.

    Kidlat Tahimik, from the Philippines, and Sergio Vega, a Buenos
    Aires-born and Gainesville-based artist, offer their own insights into
    cultural difference. A favorite of film buffs, Tahimik's The Perfumed
    Nightmare (1977) follows the disillusionment of a young Filippino taxi
    driver who dreams of traveling to the American paradise--Florida--to
    become an astronaut. Transferred to video, the work is screened in the
    Arsenale above an ad hoc installation that incorporates burned "relics"
    from the artist's fire-ravaged studio and some dubious artifacts--like
    the statue of a "wind goddess" who faces a headless Marilyn Monroe
    statuette with her skirt lifted by the draft from a subway grating--that
    gently mock the equivalences people discern across cultures.

    Referencing a different paradise, Vega's hot-hued ensemble comprises a
    number of individual objects, environments and photo-and-text-based
    pieces that debunk--though not without affection--the centuries-old myth
    of Brazil as a tropical paradise. Despite some discordant notes struck
    by shantytown views with irate chickens and dogs, the installation is
    wholly seductive, with inviting chairs, spongy floor cushions and bossa
    nova grooves from vintage LPs. The environment is surely more relaxing
    than the other participatory works by Brazil's Rivane Neuenschwander,
    who invites visitors to type wordless love letters on "modified"
    typewriters; by the Centre of Attention, a London-based collective that
    allows you to recline on a mortuary bier after you've scored your own
    funeral with music downloaded from the Internet; and by Mariko Mori, who
    has dusted off her brain wave interface pod for those in need of a quick
    kip--by appointment only.
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