Showing posts with label installation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label installation. Show all posts

Friday, April 22, 2011

Michael C. McMillen, Train of Thought, at the Oakland Museum of California, 16 April - 14 August 2011

Southern California artist, Michael C. McMillen is an engineer of space and a visual commentator on the passage of time. Hailing from UCLA he began with works on paper and painting, but soon realized that those media were not adequate enough for his means.
His sculptures, installations and films are multi-sensory experiences momentarily enveloping and transporting the viewer from their present realities.

Early sculptures as well as work recently on view at LA Louver Gallery are architectural hybrids or transportation devices that seem to have had their day. The vessels especially evoke the passing of time and of decay. These machines were once on the cutting edge of technology, markers of the new, modern advances of man. However, as time passes the cutting edge becomes mundane, common place, and sometimes slips into the realm of the obsolete.




Now on view at the Oakland Museum of California, McMillen's artwork from the last 40 years is available to see for the first time as a complete exhibition. The exhibition includes drawing, painting, sculpture, film, as well as two large scale installations, The
Pavilion of Rain, first installed in 1987, and Lighthouse, a more recent work.

Pavilion of Rain, 1987

On the eve of this important retrospective, Mr. McMillen takes a moment to answer some general questions about himself and his work.

What is your birthday and where did you grow up?

I was born in Los Angeles in 1946 and grew up in Santa Monica when it was still a blue-collar town. Lots of light manufacturing, the aerospace industry and motion picture production were big employers at the time.


What are some of your major influences or inspirations?

I initially wanted to be a scientist or inventor so followed that path into college but at a critical point had an epiphany that what I really wanted to do was to invent experiences, to tell stories in effect through the medium of art. Both of my parents were artists, so I grew up surrounded with the materials of the craft. Drawing was a common language that I learned along with writing.


What drew you to sculpture and installation art specifically?

Although I love to paint and draw, I found that three dimensional work allowed me to address more senses than a painting allowed me to. Also, I really love the physical elements of construction. In recent years I have utilized film making as a way to introduce a time based element into my work. I utilize sight, texture, scale, sound, smell and movement to transport the viewer out of their 'comfort zone' and into unexpected settings and situations. A new way of seeing, a sort of time travel.


What gives you ideas for your work? How does a new project evolve?

The ideas are constantly flowing through my head. To state the obvious, we are all affected by our time and history- but it is out of this inescapable milieu that I find the situations, stories and paradoxes that I want to share and present. A project can start with a word, phrase, image, or concept- each one is different.


Can you tell me a little bit about your working process?

My working process is fairly simple. I design the work to utilize available materials when possible. It is a combination of fabrication and assemblage work which, if done properly, produces a seamless experience for the viewer. The viewer is the last element in the process as it is they who must experience the work and finish the equation with their unique response to the object/experience. My narratives are open and are not locked into a single reading.

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In conjunction with the exhibition, a comprehensive catalog has been published by the museum in association with DelMonico Books, Prestel Publishing, New York.

Oakland Museum of California website

Monday, December 13, 2010

Charles LeDray: workworkworkworkwork At the Whitney Museum of American Art (Nov. 2010 - Feb. 2011)


workworkworkworkwork is a retrospective exhibition that brings together numerous bodies of work by New York artist Charles LeDray. Master miniaturist, LeDray, has spent the last two decades creating an arsenal of intricately crafted, everyday objects on a very small scale. The title of the show refers to an earlier project. In 1991, after creating a trove of handmade miniature items like clothing, magazines, books and many other household items, LeDray displayed the work on a Manhattan sidewalk. He presented the items randomly, like someone’s possessions in a sidewalk sale. The work on view at the Whitney Museum also includes hand-stitched clothing, paperback books, and daily objects, as well as wheel-thrown tiny ceramics and meticulously carved human bone sculptures such as buttons or furniture. The featurepresentation of the exhibition is the artist’s most recent work, Men’s Suits, (2006-2009), an installation of three vignettes of second hand shops.

Upon entry into the exhibition the viewer confronts Village People (2003-2006), little hats of all kinds lining the length of the wall, high above eye level. All kinds of hats in miniature are represented such as the sombrero, cowboy, safari, or Indian headdress. These hats obviously refer to the different roles we play in our lives. Our identities become presented through such roles, developed through our professions, interests, or responsibilities.

Not all, but most, of LeDray’s works are experiments with men’s clothing. Lining the gallery walls are miniature outfits, suits, and uniforms, tailored to perfection. But this is not a fashion show. Surprisingly, LeDray never had formal training. He learned to sew from his mother as a child. The work he creates is scaled down, perhaps so the objects are not mistaken for commodities, but, instead, are subjects for introspection. The clothing we wear is the way inwhich we present and protect ourselves in the world. These works serve as substitutes for human presence, almost breathing on their own. Clothes that have been through life do not stay pristine. LeDray’s articles of clothing show such signs of life as tatters, stains, holes, missing buttons, and patched denim. Much of the work is quite literal, while other clothes are wittily or humorously abstracted or altered.

The series Men’s Suits (2006-2009), is a presentation of three small-scale scenes of second-hand clothing shops. One scene presents what looks like the back room of a store with hangers, laundry bags, a ladder and piles of clothes in disarray. The second is a public second hand or vintage shop, fully stocked, with coats, jackets, pants, shirts, gloves, belts and more. The third is a specialty section of a men’s shop, featuring an array of tiny ties, each a different pattern, from paisley to plaid. For this project LeDray spent three years painstakingly hand sewing miniature suits, shirts, and accessories, as well as crafting furniture, clothes hangers, laundry bags and shopping carts. The work is astounding in its realism. The miniature adult clothes are small - too small for any real person to wear - but they are not so small to seem like toys. The fabrics are not cheap and flimsy like doll’s clothes. One can tell that the materials have been carefully chosen, cut from real clothes. Small and wonderful, the work is delightful, but not necessarily cute. Blue jeans and jackets look worn, as if real life had been carried out in them. The vignettes are startlingly believable, causing a suspension of disbelief. One wonders about the lives of people who might have worn these clothes or who might choose to purchase them. This sensation is reminiscent of visiting preserved historical places, such as Versailles, Monticello, or the Anne Frank house, as they manage to transport the viewer to the environment and give a realistic sense of the lives that were lived there. This sensation, however, is momentary. The viewer is not completely enveloped, but towers above the scenes. One quickly returns to reality and the vignettes begin to feel like oversized dioramas.



These installations give an eerie perspective into human experience and our everyday lives. First, the scale (about one–third the scale of actual life) evokes the loneliness of knowing how small our lives are in comparison to the immensity of the universe. Second, one cannot help but feel a sense of futility. These coats, gloves, pants and collared shirts are so perfectly made, but no one will ever actually get the pleasure of wearing them. One thinks of the hours spent toiling away - planning, cutting, folding, ironing, and stitching…stitching…stitching. It brings to mind the hours and hours we all spend at work, or school, or on hobbies or projects - the labors of love and necessity. But when a task is complete, then what? It’s done – on to the next thing. One cannot help but sometimes wonder, what is it all for?

Wonder and disbelief are heightened when viewing Charles LeDray’s intricate ceramics. Presented in 6-7 ft. tall multi-tiered vitrines Throwing Shadows and Milk and Honey show thousands of delicate, porcelain vessels. The shapes of the vessels vary greatly and no form is spared. There are amphoras, urns, decanters, carafes, jugs, bowls, etc. One wonders what these tiny containers hold. Are they vessels for the hopes and dreams of the living or little reliquaries for something lost?

Lastly, there are the sculptures, such as an ivory finger bone with a gold wedding band or stacked furniture, carved from human bone. Again these inspire feelings of loss or futility. These types of objects may be the most morbid in his oeuvre, yet they do not fail to fascinate.

Witty and humorous, though often melancholy, the work is a delight. Though we are mortal, the gift of life is for living. Each person finds meaning in their own way, through how they choose to live and spend their time. One must do something to keep busy and Charles LeDray’s hands have not been idle. He has created an entire tiny universe of objects that manages to give grand insight into real human experience.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Compact Spaces: Christine Hill and Andrea Zittel

As some of you may know, I am about to move from Los Angeles to New York, with a short pit-stop in my hometown of Memphis, TN. To prepare for the huge move across the country I have been packing up my worldly possessions (books; artworks - mine, others', framed, flat, rolled; sewing, knitting & art supplies; books; bedding; spring and summer wardrobe-as is suitable all year round in LA; more books) and coordinating for the transport of these said items.
As I struggle with the complications and burdens of owning stuff I am attracted to a simpler way of life. I have been recently intrigued by Andrea Zittel's compartments and Chritine Hill's trunks.

Andrea Zittel

Andrea Zittel

If only it was so simple to own next to nothing and to have all the basic necessities for living; an apartment and all the tools and clothes needed for your career; all folding neatly into an oversized suitcase. You can basically fit these under the plane on your next flight to anywhere!

Christine Hill

Christine Hill

Change is hard because of the difficultly in giving up comfort in order to jump into the dark waters of the unknown. Though I admit that my possessions are important to me, I think change would be somewhat easier if it wasn't for the 2000 lb crate full of stuff hanging on when you jump.