52ND VENICE BIENNALE
VENICE
JUNE 10-NOVEMBER 21, 2007
The Venice Biennale (La Biennale di Venezia) is a complex affair.
For the first time in its long history, an American, Robert Storr, is
the director. Storr, an independent curator, artist, writer, and Dean of
Yale University, also curated two significant exhibitions of the
Biennale. One takes place in the Arsenale, a former boat building
facility, and the other in the Italian Pavilion, part of the Garden
District (Giardini) of Venice. The Giardini is filled with various
national pavilions that are independently curated. In addition, there
are off-site installations in palazzos, galleries, and alternative
spaces all over the winding paths and canals of Venice.
My focus concerns Storr's Biennale in terms of Global
Modernism--by which I mean the contemporary art scene in light of
countries beyond the nineteenth-century hotbeds of the Industrial
Revolution: England, France, Germany, Italy, and the United States. What
does a Biennale look like that includes work by artists originally from,
for example, China, Colombia, Ghana, and Japan? And, in turn, can
anything be noted about the impact or role of less economically powerful
countries in relation to the bigger muscled states or States?
Not to toe a die-hard Marxian line, but the sheer magnitude of the
spaces, the frightening quantity of money needed to mount the
exhibitions, the necessary economic underpinning for any artist
included, and the massive pilgrimage of dealers, collectors, curators,
and critics for the first few days of the event reinforce the
overwhelming commodity aspect of the entire enterprise. It is a cultural
phenomenon, and it is big business even if the curator is officially in
the nonprofit sector and aims to keep our sights on loftier concerns.
The word "globalization" is associated with international
conglomerations. An artist included in the Biennale automatically
becomes part of international art commerce. The commodity status of his
or her work goes up. I do not mention this in a disparaging way, and it
is not my intention to reduce any work to a mere commodity, but a raw
reality of the Biennale, as elsewhere, may be that meaning is
inseparable from the consumer vortex aspect of contemporary culture.
What distinguishes work by individuals from countries beyond
Western Europe and the U.S.? In some cases, absolutely nothing. One
extensive video installation included ten simultaneous projections of
individuals, often tightly cropped, saying, "I will die." Five
screens were on one wall separated from the other six by a room that
showed less compelling photographs of cemeteries. In the videos, the
younger the subject, the more gleeful the statement. The artist Yang
Zhenzhong is Chinese yet the cultural lines in the work are seamless;
there is no indicator of one particular national affiliation or
identity. We are citizens of the world. We will all die.
On the other hand, some works seemed more particular to the
cultures from which they emerged. For example, materials were sometimes
gleaned from the consumer products of a specific place. In Ghanian El
Anatsui's Dusasa I (2007) and II (2007), the two massive--two
stories high, wide as a small city block--shrouds are made of wired
bottle caps and wrappings. In the current environment, where fortunes
are made in a dematerialized world, in cyberspace, or with high-end
financial leveraging, labor and materiality are oddly anachronistic,
even romantic, in the manner of a decaying building. The beauty, dare I
use the word, is in the odd longing for the values no longer celebrated.
The two giant, intricate, decorative curtains, akin to grand Renaissance
tapestries, are gently draped, allowing the recycled consumer products
(mere metallic wrappers and bottle collars) to reflect the spotlights.
Anatsui uses the detritus of modern societies. There is a morality here
as well as an aesthetic.
Colombian artist Oscar Munoz drew faces in water on cement and
filmed the gray-on-gray drawing as well as the water evaporating. The
image of the faces being created and disappearing were projected
simultaneously so one face emerges as another fades away. In a
Janus-like interpretation, the piece looks to the myth surrounding the
origin of art itself and equally, as noted by Michael Kimmelman, brings
to mind the mysterious disappearances that occurred under some South
American dictatorships. A "the end is near" theme also showed
up in Italian artist Paolo Canevari's film Bouncing Skull (2007),
which shows a boy in front of a bombed out building kicking a ball in
the shape of a skull--or is it a skull? The overall effect is doom and
"gloomish."
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[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Japanese artist Hiroharu Mori added a note of levity. In the center
of the Arsenale hallway, he suspended a large helium balloon sporting a
question mark. In the gallery nook next to it was a video of the balloon
in a park environment, and there was also a bin of small question mark
balloons for the taking in the spirit of Felix Gonzalez-Torres, who
happened to represent the United States at the Biennale this year.
A bit further down the very long Arsenale from Mori's work is
a Dionysian installation of neon lights, Mexican tourist items, and a
banged-up mattress, among other things. This piece by the late U.S.
artist Jason Rhoades struck me the hardest in light of my questions
about Global Modernism. The reason the project had such an impact was
somewhat personal. The week before leaving for the Venice Biennale, I
had been in San Miguel, Mexico, where I had just seen many of
Rhoades's "props"--for example, margarita glasses or mugs
in the shape of female body parts--in the shops of the dusty, colorful
mountain town. In addition, I had noticed the raw, struggling element of
the Mexican city that supported extensive American tourism. And here in
Venice, I was seeing aspects of the tourist economy of Mexico, co-opted
by an American artist and alchemically inserted into another seriously
high-end, tourist economy. It was the only piece in the Arsenale that
was not allowed to be photographed. "Copyrighted," a guard
said to me as I was reprimanded for using my camera. The co-opting had
to stop somewhere. At the most unexpected, chaotic moment, one economy
appeared to be consumed wholesale by another.
This led to a more complete picture of Global Modernism. Sometimes
in an international art scene nationality is irrelevant. At other
intervals, a more personal narrative may be detected, something
particular to a given circumscribed culture. And then, despite
playfulness and open borders, a piece strikes an unexpected note of
imperialism.
LUCY BOWDITCH is associate professor of art history at the College
of Saint Rose in Albany, New York.
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.