Ecstasy
LA MoCA, Los Angeles, USA
Julian Myers
Drug
experiences no longer seem as threatening to our
social fabric as they once did. Rather, in an
unexpected reversal, our present is sewn together
by psychoactive substances, a pharmacopoeia that
includes hormones, birth-control pills,
anti-depressants, caffeine, sleeping pills,
muscle relaxants, pain killers, sexual
enhancements, triple cocktail treatments
and more, to say nothing of such romanticized
controlled substances as cocaine or heroin, which
move through less regulated markets. Although the
30 artists included in Ecstasy are
said to transcend, expand and intervene in everyday
physical and mental conditions, it might be
more accurate to say that sobriety is the
exceptional state.
Ecstasy presented several artists
whose work assumes the signs and materials of
drug culture: Tom Friedmans pills and
caplets, meticulously constructed of play-dough
(Untitled, 1995 and 1997); Roxy Paines
polymer magic mushrooms scattered across the MoCAs
Geffen Contemporary concrete floor (Psilocybe
Cubensis Field, 1997); Klaus Webers
fountain flowing with diluted acid (Public
Fountain LSD Hall, 2003). Rodney Grahams
subtle noir video Halcion Sleep (1994) depicts a
man under the effects of the mood-altering drug
Halcion, grasping his head in the back seat of a
moving car; we watch as tail lights recede into
darkness through the cars rear window.
The shows premise made room for works that
stimulated an altered viewers
pupils through psychedelic eye-popping effects:
recession in space, kaleidoscopic colour, intense
patterning and optical proliferation. These
included Carsten Höllers Upside Down
Mushroom Room (2000), the pulsing target images
of Ann Veronica Janssens video projections
(Donut, 2000), Paul Nobles immense, highly
detailed stoner drawings (Ye Olde Ruin, 20034),
several collages by Fred Tomaselli, and Chiho
Aoshimas quivering anime fairyland (City
Glow, 2005.) Here the remit of the show grew too
inclusive, crowding the exhibition and drawing
together anything colourful or cinematic: Janet
Cardiff, Olafur Eliasson, Franz Ackerman,
Eija-Liisa Ahtila, Pipilotti Rist and more. This
made for the queer spectacle of a show about
drugs jammed with parents and their spun-out
children, with daunting queues for the most
popular rooms. (Queuing is something you do at an
amusement park; a true druggie would flee such a
structured scene.) Some of this work was
affecting such as Sylvie Fleurys
glittering, spangled fibreglass pod 8 (2000) or
Pierre Huyghes romantic clouds of pastel
dry ice fog Lexpédition scintillante, Acte
2 (The Scintillating Expedition, Act 2, 2002)
but the show would have benefited from
clearer distinctions among the forms of
experience on offer. Many works looked like
spectacular business-as-usual, suggesting neither
an altered experience nor a very
specific one.
Ecstasy presumed the autonomy of drug
experiences from the mainstream cultures that
surround them. Missing were considerations of the
powerful markets that oversee the dissemination
and sale of drugs, or of the vibrant visual
culture that surrounds them and gives them
meaning. (Id have loved to see a biomorphic
bong or a Pfizer advertisement inserted among the
various works of high art.) HOMO CRAP
#1 (2005), an installation staged by the
collective assume vivid astro focus (on this
occasion including works by Anna Sew Hoy, Giles
Round and Paloma Mentirosa), was an exception.
Its diorama of Berlins Panorama Bar, a
night-club in a disused power station three miles
outside Berlin, was filled with the paraphernalia
of a very late night out chain curtains,
sadistic-psychedelic-erotic wall paintings,
throbbing speakers wrapped in fleshy polyurethane
and papier-mâché envelopes, a sticky floor
strewn with filthy confetti and dry ice. HOMO
CRAP #1 at least gestured toward the place that
drugs might have as part of a collective social
experience, as well as the wilder sensory side of
altered states in general.
Photographs of political protests lining the
entrance passage linked the installations
hedonistic atmosphere to struggles for human
rights and sexual freedom. Its not escaping
the everyday that matters most but engaging it on
your own terms.
The autonomous approach paid off when the artists
took a self-critical stance: for example in
Charles Rays Tabletop (2003), a still life
whose objects reveal themselves to be slowly,
imperceptibly rotating, or Francis Alÿs
Narcoturismo (Narcotourism, 1996), in which the
artist strolled through the streets of Copenhagen
for a week ingesting a different drug each day.
Ecstasy presented the latter project
as a set of documents, including one that took
the form of a palimpsest: scrawled notes in
erased pencil overlaid by a sober typescript
formalizing their altered findings.
In this work the described experience of
inebriation persists, but in faded form, without
the over-amplified plenitudes found elsewhere in
the exhibition. Here, as elsewhere, ecstatic
experience was obscured by the artists
efforts to articulate it.
Julian Myers |
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