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Review: 'Love & Theft' makes compelling connections Print E-mail
By Ivy Cooper, Beacon art critic   
Posted 6:00 pm Thu., 1.21.10

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'Kate Moss Rorschach'

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Asher Penn, Kate Moss Rorschach, 2009. Photocopy and acrylic on paper in 300 parts, 8.5 x 11 inches each. 

Matthew Strauss has come up with another intriguing theme connecting work by some of the most serious contemporary artists working today.

"Love & Theft" features art by Mike Bidlo, Dutes Miller, Asher Penn and Sara Greenberger Rafferty, none of whom you're likely to have heard of unless you regularly thumb through ArtForum, but all of whom make work that involves appropriation and complex cultural commentary.

Penn fills a wall (shown above) with photocopied images of Kate Moss, covered in red Rorschach-style blotches (all of which look like uteruses, but maybe that's just me ...).

Miller's collages of homoerotic magazine images are beautifully fractured, frustrating the gratification usually afforded by pornography but offering up instead a titillating prismatic view of lusty flesh.

Bidlo appropriates an appropriation, remaking versions of Robert Rauschenberg's famous "Erased de Kooning Drawing" from the 1950s and zeroing in on the fetishization of the absent.

'Joyce'

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Sara Greenberger Rafferty, Joyce, 2009. C-print mounted to Plexiglas, 24 x 20 x 1/8 inches.

Rafferty's C-prints are sublime: they present B-grade idols of the 1970s (Joyce DeWitt, Vicki Lawrence, Valerie Harper) looking worked-over and water-damaged, like those magazines and record albums that get soaked in flooded basements.

All of these works engage in appropriation, but more than that, they point up what appropriation's good for: revealing the economics of desire, possession and loss that mark both high art and popular culture.

When: Through Feb. 13

Where: White Flag Projects, 4568 Manchester Ave.

Information: 314-531-3442, www.whiteflagprojects.org

Image of Penn work courtesy of White Flag Projects;  Image of Rafferty's courtesy of White Flag Projects and Rachel Uffner Gallery, NY.

Ivy Cooper, a professor of art at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, is the Beacon's art critic. To reach her, contact Beacon features and commentary editor Donna Korando.

 

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 The musical direction of "The Mikado" was by Amy Kaiser; Craig Terry was conductor-accompanist. All proceeds from ticket sales benefitted the Beacon.
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