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Situation part 2: ‘Make Love’- Not war with Sarah Lucas

After having introduced her audience to Miss Jumbo Savaloy, Sarah Lucas has invited us back to Situation, for the second instalment, in order to Make Love!

(Sarah Lucas, exhibition view. Left to right, Hard NUD, 2012, Priére de Toucher wallpaper, 2012, Enjoy God, 2011, Get Off Your Horse, 2012, Make Love. 2012.)

I want to begin by talking about hanging. Sarah Lucas is always hanging, literally and metaphorically. Double meanings are central in the work, where multiple meanings are exposed as what language naturally does. Hanging things from above, so the lower part dangles free, in many of the sculptures, an element of the assemblage remains static in the air, immanent and ready to drop. 

As a noun, ‘hang’ describes the presentation of an art-work, in this sense all the work is ‘hung’. Secondly, the hang causes a downward droop, like the sagging of the weight in the foot of the stocking, caused by stuffing.

‘Hang’ has a number of connoting phrases, all are suggestive of the aesthetic presentation and content of the works. To ‘get the hang’ implies learning how to operate something, with this reading, we may conclude that the artist is getting the hang of her subject, or her audience, or chosen material. ‘Hanging by a thread’ determines a precarious state, perhaps Lucas is hanging by a thread in the masculine world of art, or could the ‘hang’ be risky. It’s a chance when you Make Love! 

So ‘hang fire’ means hold on. With the works in Make Love, the artist arrests the viewer and requires a pause from them, ‘hang fire… look at this!’ ‘Hang in the air’ implies something remains unresolved, but literally describes the physical status of the object in relation to the gallery. ‘Hang Loose’ relates to refrain from taking something too seriously, Lucas knowingly and notoriously mocks masculine art-world constructs in her work, visual puns are rife. 

‘Hang someone out to dry’ implies leaving someone in a vulnerable ‘Situation’, often Lucas is exposing male spectators, offering them exactly what they want to see. You want tits? Here they are (As in MumMum). You want to fuck me? Here I am, ready to be mounted (as in the chair pieces Make Love).

‘Hang tough’ is to remain firmly resolved, Lucas marks her territory and hangs tough against the male dominated world in which she practices. Lastly, ‘letting it all hang out’ describes relaxation and inhibition, Lucas is nonchalant, it’s all there for the viewer to see, no deeper readings or meanings, there is so much to ‘hang on to’.

(Sarah Lucas, Magic Mary, 2012)

Hanging from the ceiling of Situation, a sculpture resembles a female figure comprising a coat hanger (for upper body), light bulbs (for breasts), the familiar bucket (for vagina) and a coil-shaped red bulb for a groin. An assemblage suspended over a rug. Magic Mary relies on metonyms, the substitution of one object for another. Lucas mystifies ordinary objects, they remain adequate, and have the ability to force the audience to see sex in everything present. The red, potentially ‘Fire Bucket’ crotch leads to all sort of associations based on sexual heat, this woman’s ‘Sex is on fire’ or at least it has been as she appears burnt out, spent. A comment perhaps, like ones Lucas has made before about the expendability of women, their service as the thing through which everything is flushed (see also Lucas’s 1999 piece Human Toilet II’). The rug appears occupied and sacred, not to be walked on, it’s position indicating the vertiginous condition of visuality, where the viewer looks down on the work of art.

So what else does Lucas hang? She hangs fried eggs (frequently, Woman in a Tub, 2000), and boobs made out of cigarettes, hang in a bra (It Sucks, 1999). She hangs pictures of herself to form a mobile (Me Suspended, 1993) She hangs objects infected with tits (Nice Tits and MumMum, 2012). Potentially, as my Nan would say, she ‘hangs her hat up’ to her audience! 

Amongst hard angular breezeblocks, squashy spongy, stuffed-hosiery body parts emerge from within and without. Although the blocks are erect, standing vertically, we are eternally now reminded of Carl Andre’s impotent horizontal stack. A white vest stretched over the bricks of Enjoy God forces us to see the sculpture as a figure, how can it be anything other then bodily representational when it wears clothes? Lucas’s gleefully acrid one-liners are present one hundred times over, mocking, satirising, joking, its all there. Sexual innuendo takes precedence as an exchange between Lucas and her spectator, titillation over sensuality; the artist refuses the burden of direct and literal representation. Something is always present to mean something else. 

Women sitting on chairs feature as familiar icons in popular culture, and are present in Lucas’s vernacular too. She presents a pair of female figures both seated on matching wooden chairs, they draw influence from her Bunnies, but are now pert and alert, not droopy. The figures comprise of tits (no surprise, always in abundance with Lucas), a pair of lean legs, stretching to the floor and on the back of the chair, a bum. One of the stocking figures has their legs stretched wide open, the other has them firmly closed, the eternal juxtaposition of the Madonna and the whore. 

(Sarah Lucas, Make Love, 2012, diptych, two chairs, tights, kapok, linen string, wire, 95.5x135x58cm)

Stockings are representative of female subjugation as abjection. Woman seated on a chair, legs-akimbo reminds us most famously of Sharon Stone in Basic Instinct (1992), who, while sitting on the ‘hot seat’, flashes her crotch to policemen, treading the line between sexual liberation and danger. Secondly the inseparability of the chair and the female speak of lap dancing, where seductive women use furniture as a prop, disabling their subject into a position of passivity. This notion of seduction, the sexual chair dance, recalls a scene in Tarantino’s Death Proof (2007). Both films troubled censors, upon their release, with strong sexualised violence. And this filmic culture is no doubt a concern for Lucas, as her gender representations concentrate both on the media and art history. In feminist studies the female form is looked at for the way it refuses to be a sign in a narrative of masculinity. I’m confronted doubly with my own associations with nude female figures on wooden chairs in that, for me, they may also signify the pose of a life model. 

The political questions surrounding the work of Sarah Lucas, relate to what it means for a woman to be rude. Rudeness is always there in the work, it permeates the entire atmosphere of the exhibition. Is it difficult to conceive it possible for a woman to become obsessed with sex? Everything refers to human body parts in someway. The body is often fragmented. The works are hardly ever not about sex, and to top that, she mocks and points to male disgust at female sexuality, and satirises masculinity in art. Lucas’s sculptures forge an identification with the spectator, who views the pieces as distorted images of themselves. So which of the chair dancing figures purports to be a distorted view of me? Am I a legs open or a legs closed kind of a girl? 

(Sarah Lucas, ‘Make Love’ at Sadie Coles Situation, 17 March - 9 June 2012)

http://www.sadiecoles.com/artists-web-app/lucas#

Post by: Alison Humphrey ( http://alisonhumphrey.tumblr.com/ )

    • #sarah lucas
    • #fyeahwomen
    • #female artist
    • #art
    • #sadie coles
    • #situation
    • #make love
  • 10 months ago
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Interview with Anne Percoco

Anne Percoco was born in Boston and lives and works in Jersey City. She received her B.A from Drew University, attended Rutgers for her M.F.A., and has had solo exhibitions at such locations as A.I.R Gallery and NUTUREart. Below is a recent interview with the artist. For more information on her work, check out her website and her blog. 

Jessica Scherlag for Fyeahwomenartists: Many of your art projects take place in public, in nature, and in countries that you have visited. How do you feel about the sometimes “temporary” nature of public art/your work? 

Anne Percoco: It comes with the territory of making site and situation-based work. On one level, it’s a relief not to have to keep track of and store large sculptures. However, documentation is critical for these pieces because it’s the only thing that most people will see. Usually I do the photography myself or get help from talented friends. Sometimes there’s a backstory that can’t be communicated through photographs. In that case, I’ll often put together a little book.

Anne PercocoIndra’s Cloud; site-specific performance in Vrindavan, India; plastic water bottles, plastic rope, boat; 8 x 6 x 14 feet; 2008.

FY: I am fascinated by your use and reuse of found objects. What draws you to your materials?

AP: Conceptually, I’m interested in to materials that are widely considered to be worthless: phone books, junk, plastic waste, natural materials, etc. This allows me to deal with questions of value. The way we assign value or valuelessness to things is arbitrary—it’s usually based on our own agenda and not on the material itself. By recontextualizing waste materials, I can find great value in them. Also, the way our waste disposal systems are structured does not account for the fact that we live in a closed system. As we know (but sometimes forget), nothing disappears, even if it vanishes from sight. I’m happy to bring our waste back into our view and our thoughts. I’m aesthetically drawn to these materials as well. Often, their wear and tear and texture is beautiful; it tells of an object’s history, which then becomes part of my work and enriches it. I also enjoy the process of collecting/gleaning, as this gives me an excuse to explore my surroundings. Finally, these materials are usually free or very cheap. There are so many benefits!

The Life Instinct; 9 x 9 x 9 feet; three chairs, a bike rack, styrofoam, old TVs, cardboard, string, tape, woven reeds, tree branches, cloth, the top of a garbage can, egg cartons, paper, plastic bags, CDs, and cushions; 2012.

FY: How has your participation in residencies impacted you?

AP: It’s an incredible privilege to have the space and time to focus (e.g. Vermont Studio Center), and the networking and exhibition opportunities sometimes provided are valuable (Residency Unlimited). I find international residencies to be especially fruitful. Being in another country allows me to step outside of my own culture, which is like taking off blinders. In India, I created a residency situation for myself with the NGO Friends of Vrindavan, and I also attended Sandarbh Artists Workshop and Bangalore Artists Center. In the Netherlands, I participated in a residency at Extrapool, co-organized by Sandarbh. I’ve got a residency at SOHO20 Gallery, in Chelsea, coming up in the fall!

Weather Shield for a Migrant Dwelling; site-specific intervention in Partapur, India; plastic food wrappers & packaging tape; 8 x 5.5 x 8.5 feet; 2009.

FY: If you could go back in time knowing what you know now, what advice would you give to yourself 5 years ago?

AP: Every time I’m working towards a deadline, there is an unpleasant period of self-doubt before I figure out what to do. This can last for weeks or even months. I’ve learned that this is unavoidable and to trust myself and my process - to welcome the uncertainty. Nothing comes into the world fully formed.

FY: What creative people inspire you?

AP: Francis Alys, Mierle Laderman-Ukeles, Ann Hamilton, Robert Smithson, Fischli & Weiss, and Rebecca Solnit.

Field Studies; collage from NY and NJ phone books; 14 x 8.75”; 2011.

FY: Did you always know you wanted to be an artist? What did you want to be growing up?

AP: I was into lots of different things growing up, and I didn’t feel pressure to choose. I think I started focusing on art towards the end of high school. In college I double majored in Art and Art History and minored in Chinese!

FY: What upcoming projects are you working on?

AP: This summer I’m starting a shrine project in Jersey City. This will involve building shrines out of found materials, dedicated to infrastructural elements in abandoned, overgrown junkspaces. There might be an augmented reality project in the works as well. I’m also thinking about what to put in the Bronx AIM Biennial next summer.

Kilmer Shrines, Site 5; site-specific project in Piscataway, New Jersey; wood & found materials; 2’ x 2’ x 3.5’, 2007-8.

    • #anne percoco
    • #jessica scherlag
    • #female artist
    • #contemporary artist
    • #interview
  • 11 months ago
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Reformers, 2004Oil on canvas 
Artist of the Day : Dana Schutz
(via Dana Schutz - Artist’s Profile - The Saatchi Gallery)
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Reformers, 2004
Oil on canvas 

Artist of the Day : Dana Schutz

(via Dana Schutz - Artist’s Profile - The Saatchi Gallery)

Source: saatchi-gallery.co.uk

    • #Dana Schutz
    • #artist of the day
    • #female artist
    • #woman artist
    • #art
    • #art history
    • #contemporary
    • #American
    • #painting
    • #oil on canvas
  • 1 year ago
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