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OPENINGS: Aleksandra Mir
By Tim Griffin
Artforum, Feb 2003
Mir composes an epic of intimate momentsor, better, an anti-epic, providing chapters in a
minor literature written by the light of
spectacular culture.
To get a sense of New Yorkbased artist Aleksandra Mir's ongoing project 'HELLO', recall the final scene
of Fellini's 8 1/2. The film's narrative
unhinges in front of the camera, as all the characters walk onto an abandoned set and join hands in a
long celebratory chain, every one of them
connected: friends, enemies, passing acquaintancesfigures large and small, having inhabited scene
after scene or having appeared only for an
instanta moving frieze of players who made each other possible.
Exhibited in numerous incarnations since 2000, 'HELLO' is so many of these chains. Mir collects thousands
of family snapshots, paparazzi candids,
film stills, pictures of artworks, and flyers and, for each installation, arranges a selection of them
in a long row running along the gallery
walls. Each image features two people posing together (alone or in a crowd), one of whom reappears in
the image beside it, so that every person
turns out to have been relatedif only for the brief moment captured on film. Liza Minnelli air kisses
at a party with Andy Warhol, who hangs
out with Jack Nicholson, who shows up drunk with Harry Dean Stanton; eventually, Pele plays guitar with
Roberto Carlos (the Elvis of the Latin
world). Some juxtapositions produce poetic leaps across genres: David Bowie stands alongside an actor
costumed as Jesus, which leads to the
reproduction of a painted biblical scene, which segues to an image of Rita Hayworth playing Salome
(while Miss Piggy meets Harry Belafonte just
a few paces down the line). Cultural spheres and historical periods are traversed as when, for
example, a picture of Stalin marching with
Trotsky leads to an intimate portrait of Diego Rivera with Frida Kahlo, and of Bill Cosby with Dorthaan
Kirk, wife of '60s avant-garde
saxophonist Roland "Rahsaan" Kirk. (It's a chain that later passes through Sylvester Stallone to reach
Ronald Reagan, and through Duke Ellington
to land on Richard Nixon.)
Mir's project becomes most compelling when ordinary individuals are interspersed among icons, when the
internationally famous meet the locally
infamous or even the unknown. The abstract air of cultural forces-politics, economics, or
otherwisefilters through the specific realities of
commonplace scenes. Series begin to dilate and contract, seeming to breathe. Mir manipulates images, as
have so many artists before her. But
whereas a previous generation played with photographic imagery on the assumption that pictures were
infinitely reproducible and manipulableand
therefore perpetually decontextualizedMir recontextualizes them. She composes an epic of intimate
momentsor, better, an anti-epic: The idea
of a grand narrative gives way to smaller, more idiosyncratic ones, cells whose sequences continually
reach out, each installation providing one
more chapter in a minor literature written by the light of spectacular culture. Along these lines,
'HELLO' has become a regional venture: For her
first solo show in New York, at Gavin Brown's Enterprise in 2001, the series included many faces known
only to the native art circuit. For an
installation at the California College of Arts and Crafts in San Francisco, pictures of beatniks led to
those of Mexican muralists, Clint
Eastwood in Escape from Alcatraz, and Jarrett Mitchell, an artist in residence at CCAC.
These shimmering tensions between intimacy and abstraction, between local and global, between the
person and the public realm, charge Mir's
works. Indeed, while 'HELLO' pokes small holes into the media sphere, making space for individuality, the
individual is as often lost in a sea of
unique surfaces, seeming just one in a continuous field of reproduced faces. Mir's most poignant work
in this vein is Man with Artificial Heart,
a small ink-jet-printed book she mailed to friends last year on Valentine's Day. The volume told the
story of Robert Tools, the first man to be
kept alive, for five months, by a mechanical pump placed in his chest. The text was taken directly from
a New York Times obituary describing the
medical innovation and Tools's eventual death; Mir broke the sentences into verse, so that journalistic
distance accrued the cold poetry of
Auden. The irony of her endeavor was obvious: On the most romantic of holidays, she sent a love letter
about a man who literally lost his heart.
And while she made a mass-media tale into something intimate, transposing wide-distribution newspaper
script into a small edition of stanzas to
be read by one person at a time, her subject, his life distilled as clinical facts, was a man whose
story was eclipsed by history. Similar
pressure points are suggested by Mir's publication 'Living & Loving No. 1: The Biography of Donald
Cappy', 2002, which comprises photographs of
and interviews with a young man who started out in foster homes, drifted through the Marine Corps, and
wound up a security guard at CCAC, where
Mir met him. It's as if one of the personages of 'HELLO' has been delved into at length.
Mir's larger projects are similarly melancholy takes on the public sphere. Invited to create an
installation for a 1998 biennial in Norway, she
produced a film festival: 'Cinema for the Unemployed: Hollywood Disaster Movies 1970-4997'." Showing
movies during the working week, she wryly
took up the idea of unemployment as an economic dead spot within the booming late-'90s world economy
(and, specifically, the almost fully
employed Norway), looking to open up a few hours of unproductive, unprogrammed time at a moment when
new information technologies allowed work
to permeate the boundaries between office and home, public and private, If, as Smithson wrote, "To
spend time in a movie house is to make a
'hole' in one's life," then Mir asked her audiences to make a hole in work in order to create time for
life.
The hole, of course, would exist only for a morning or afternoon, giving 'Cinema for the Unemployed' a
certain vicarious dimensiona turn that
surfaced on a more ambitious scale in Mir's 'First Woman on the Moon', 1999. Aware that the
world-historical event of the moon walk belonged, in a
sense, only to the smallest fraction of culturea few American malesshe asked construction workers
in Holland to help create a moonscape by
the sea on the thirtieth anniversary of the lunar landing. The volunteers sculpted massive craters and
gentle plateaus with bulldozers, invoking
the brave era of Earth art while sculpting a simulacrum of the moon's terrain. At sunset, Mir planted a
single flag in the sand, concluding the
mission. (She was not alone on the scene. "I'm the first black man on the moon," one onlooker said,
joining her in a crater. "I'm the first
German," said another.) Yet all of this activity took place on a beachthe site of childhood fantasies
and adulthood reveries. In a sense, Mir
created the largest sand castle ever, magnifying the universal desire to insert oneself into a grand
narrative. Destined for failure, it was the
stuff of embarrassing fantasy. Nevertheless, Mir was looking to another world in order to re-create,
however momentarily, our own.
Tim Griffin is associate editor of Artforum.
In this ongoing series, writers are invited to introduce the work of artists at the beginning of their
careers.
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