»Blacked Out. George Cup
& Steve Elliott.
Retrospective«
by Naoko Kaltschmidt
in: Springerin Vienna, Issue 1 - 2009
Wolfsburg. Consigned to oblivion: the German-American artistic duo
George Cup & Steve Elliot. The two native Lower Saxonians had
numbered "since the early nineteen-sixties among the influential
catalysts of American Minimal Art" (catalogue), but after sharing a
professional and private life for decades, they underwent a doubly
tragic rupture: George Cup died under mysterious circumstances,
and Steve Elliott was accused of the murder and placed under arrest.
From that point on, their common oeuvre was completely ignored
because of the long-unresolved question as to Elliott's guilt and
incrimination. Any further art-historical examination was utterly
blocked on the institutional level?even though their works were
already represented in renowned collections such as that of the
Guggenheim Museum. Elliott's rehabilitation and release finally
occurred in 2007 but, for him as well, the first survey exhibition,
organized in Germany, came too late: The artist died several months
before the opening.
This is a historical revision which is too lovely to be true. For it is a
matter here of a "retrospective conceived as an artistic project," as
the program text so discreetly indicates, one whose protagonists
have in fact been completely fabricated. The truly virtuoso storyteller
goes by the name of Dirk Dietrich Hennig (born 1967), lives and
works in Hannover, and prefers to operate?as is hardly
surprising?under pseudonyms. Since 1998 this conceptual artist has
undertaken various "historical interventions" in an art-historical
context; he thereby addresses the very public which seeks the
sensational and the constantly new, the catching of whose attention
represents so great a challenge. Comparable to the sharp-witted
stirring-up of confusion by Orson Welles who, in his famous radio
adaptation of H.G. Wells' "The War of the Worlds" (1898/1938) or in
the late, no less cynical film-essay "F for Fake" (1974), used
documentarily disguised fiction to give impressive impact to the
mechanisms of the respective medium, Hennig is fundamentally
concerned with stagings of art. Inextricably entwined with this
endeavor is a penetrating investigation with regard to the art world, to
established measures of value, and to the practices of the exhibition
process.
Hennig took great care with the meticulously arranged retrospective
"George Cup & Steve Elliott." With close attention to detail, two
collections were feigned whose individual items are now being
presented for the first time in this exhibition?a witty commentary on
what has recently once again become an influential parameter in the
art world, namely that patronage which frequently goes hand in hand
with eccentricity and self-stylization. The exclusivity which is
purported here, along with a partial obscurity with regard to the
provenance of the artifacts, suggests one thing above
all?authenticity. Circumspection and competence in the handling of
historical material are conveyed by the indication that the "original" 8-
mm film is being presented for this show only in a digitalized version.
Even a "research center" dedicated to the two artists has been set up
(only on the virtual level, of course). The extreme effort has been
particularly rewarding with respect to quasi para-textual areas such
as press mailings, exhibition labels and, not least of all, the catalogue
which only upon close scrutiny reveals the deception behind it: The
assumption is not totally false that there may be recognized here a
certain spitefulness towards all those who skim over texts fleetingly,
half-heartedly, and with only a superficial interest, without reading
them critically; on the other hand, this counterfeiting is so perfectly
achieved that it is actually quite difficult to become mistrustful. But
Hennig is concerned precisely with this aspect of doubt, of the
recapitulation and relativization concerning one's own
knowledge?and with the conditionalities and inadmissabilities
inherent to canonized and consensual truths.
One only does full justice to Hennig's works, however, upon
examining not only these aspects of institutional criticism, but also
the various, well-thought-out components constituting an oeuvre of
this type. For in spite of all rigorously conceptual orientation, practical
execution most certainly plays an important role in the case of
Hennig. In addition to several display-cases which "archivally"
contain "historical documents" such as contemporary art-magazines,
contact prints as well as black-and-white photographs featuring, for
instance, Cup and Warhol, there is an abundant offering of
everything which excites the heart of the art connoisseur: painting
and over-painting, works on paper, objects and installations, but also
artist-books, video- and experimental-films and sketches. These
diverse groups of works are adroitly integrated into the asserted, real
context. Oskar Fischinger's abstract film compositions, Russian
Constructivism, and also American Color-Field Painting are
synthesized into a thoroughly independent variant of Minimal Art.
This gives rise to diverse declinations of a reduced formal vocabulary
whose depersonalized gesture is of course an excellent match for the
deconstruction of authorship at work here. The plastic qualities of the
paint, the overcoming of the flat canvas all the way to object art and
installational modes of presentation, as well as the space-related,
sometimes exaggerated utilization of sources of light?Hennig makes
masterful use of all these components with the help of a well-
informed background-knowledge in art history. Quite impressive, for
example, is the light projection in "Lightsquare Projection #3, 1972,"
which may clearly be understood as a sort of continuation of that
which Mark Rothko had in mind with his paintings. Thus connections
and cross-references are interwoven out of a?genuine?historical
tradition, whereby the immense significance of reception itself
becomes the theme. Even Leonardo da Vinci's "Mona Lisa" only
acquired its recognition as a masterpiece with iconic status through
the praises sung by Walter Pater. Hennig's consummate artistry lies,
not only in his utilization of the mechanisms inherent to the game of
art through a dazzling mastery of its rules, but also in his
transformation of these insights into what is a fantastically effective
dramaturgy for spinning a richly resonant tale.
Translated by George Frederick Takis
Original source: https://www.springerin.at/2009/1/review/blacked-out-
george-cup-steve-elliott-retrospektive/
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