Rineke Dijkstra: A Retrospective at the Guggenheim Museum

Hilton Head Island, S.C., USA, June 24, 1992.  Chromogenic print, 117cm x 94 cm.  Courtesy the artist and Marian Goodman Gallery, New York and Paris.  Copywrite Rineke Dijkstra
Hilton Head Island, S.C., USA, June 24, 1992. Chromogenic print, 117cm x 94 cm. Courtesy the artist and Marian Goodman Gallery, New York and Paris. Copywrite Rineke Dijkstra

Adolescent awkwardness has been Dutch photographer Rineke Dijkstra’s stock in trade, starting in the early 90s with photos of gangly youngsters on the beach and continuing through series focusing on young mothers, bullfighters, dancers and more.  The surprise delivered by her retrospective, which opens June 29th at the Guggenheim Museum, is the marked shift in her subjects’ confidence level from the 90s to the present day; her career now memorializes a time before reality TV and social media primed kids for their moment in front of the camera.

The show opens with young bathers from South Carolina to Croatia posed on the beach and brilliantly lit to highlight pimples, pores and, most notably, bodies still in formation, often in ill-fitting or unflattering swimsuits.  Nearly nude, the teens have nowhere to hide, and the tension is palpable, whether the subject is a pretty blonde in an orange bikini or her less manicured Belgian counterpart, whose robotic stance – hands to her sides, palms flat on her thighs – suggests she’s itching to get away.

Rineke Dijkstra, De Panne, Belgium, August 7, 1992.  Photograph on paper, 1370 x 1070mm.  Collection of the Tate Modern.
Rineke Dijkstra, De Panne, Belgium, August 7, 1992. Photograph on paper, 1370 x 1070mm. Collection of the Tate Modern.

 

Other subjects kept returning to Dijkstra, notably ‘Almerisa,’ who we meet as a six year old Bosnia refuge in a portrait taken at a Dutch asylum center.  Two years later, her blank stare has changed to a smile, later to a knowing expression, and in her teen years to a challenging look.  She gains confidence, fills out and by the time she’s twenty has her own baby.  As amazing as Almerisa’s physical transformation happened to be (her morphing style choices make it hard to tell she’s the same girl sometimes) distilling her life into an image every year or so denies the complexities and variation of her experience.  Watching Almerisa grow up is frustrating as we’re left to guess at what or who influenced her shifting appearance, how she assimilated or challenged her new Dutch environment.

 

In her pictures of Almerisa, or the Israeli twins Chen and Efrat, whose faces and characters undergo a remarkable change from tame tweens to club vixens and finally to softer featured young ladies in white tank tops, the teen age years look like a scary time without giving a great deal of insight into how the difficulties were navigated.  From our after-the-face perspective, Dijkstra’s subjects are survivors. Somehow, sass and sullenness eventually departed, leaving young women who look more in control of their identities and self-presentation.

 

Almerisa, Zoetermeer, The Netherlands. January 4, 2008
Almerisa, Zoetermeer, The Netherlands. January 4, 2008

Dijkstra’s more contemporary subjects seem to have missed out on this phase, however.  ‘The Buzz Club,’ A video from ’96-97 shot in a Liverpool club shows young people swaying or dancing with restraint to a beat.  A little over a decade later, a second video titled ‘The Krazyhouse’ and also shot in Liverpool features five confident teens who could be in trails for ‘Britain’s Got Talent’ so confident and practiced are their moves.

 

Rineke Dijkstra Almerisa, Asylum Center Leiden, Leiden, Netherlands, March 14, 1994 Chromogenic print, 94 x 75 cm Courtesy the artist and Marian Goodman Gallery, New York and Paris © Rineke Dijkstra
Rineke Dijkstra Almerisa, Asylum Center Leiden, Leiden, Netherlands, March 14, 1994 Chromogenic print, 94 x 75 cm Courtesy the artist and Marian Goodman Gallery, New York and Paris © Rineke Dijkstra

In contrast to earlier work, in which impending transitions created drama (bullfighters range from gormless to wise, Olivier, the model-handsome French legionnaire developed from a sad-looking, vulnerable boy to a hardened man) or individuals like the bathers symbolized a moment of change, it’s become harder to see past the teens’ practiced exteriors.  Though they’re more self-possessed, Dijkstra’s recent subjects can still elicit sympathy and concern via the daring cut of a dress or greasy-haired headbanging.  But they, like a group of students thoughtfully considering Picasso paintings in one of Dijkstra’s more recent videos, have evolved into having, or at least appearing to have, more of their own agency, an upbeat final impression conveyed in the show’s final galleries.

Rineke Dijkstra The Krazyhouse (Megan, Simon, Nicky, Philip, Dee), Liverpool, UK, 2009	 Four-channel HD video projection, with sound, 32 min., looped Courtesy the artist and Marian Goodman Gallery, New York and Paris © Rineke Dijkstra
Rineke Dijkstra The Krazyhouse (Megan, Simon, Nicky, Philip, Dee), Liverpool, UK, 2009 Four-channel HD video projection, with sound, 32 min., looped Courtesy the artist and Marian Goodman Gallery, New York and Paris © Rineke Dijkstra

Mark Dion at the Explorers Club

Mark Dion at The Explorers Club
Mark Dion at The Explorers Club

The big draw of Mark Dion’s exhibition at the members-only, Upper East Side Explorers Club is, unsurprisingly, the club itself.  But Dion seems to have anticipated the distractions posed by the club’s exclusivity and the exotic appeal of its artifact displays from around the world by offering an installation of all-white sculptures that literally contrasts its colorful surroundings.

With his history of creating museum-like displays that question how we categorize information and pursue scientific enquiry, Dion seems like the perfect artist for the Clark Art Institute’s commission to commemorate the 100th anniversary of a publication by Singer Sewing Machine heir Robert Sterling Clark (whose brother’s old residence now houses the club) documenting his 1908 specimen-gathering expedition to northern China.

Mark Dion at The Explorers Club
Mark Dion at The Explorers Club

Dion responded by crafting a catalogue of items representing those taken on the Clark expedition, including barrels and boxes of supplies, tools arranged carefully on a long table, a Chinese rock squirrel scaled up to eight times its normal size, a wild boar and a cooking fire.  Sculpted in white celluclay (and white furry material for the squirrel), each item stands out as particularly unnatural amid the ‘Trophy Room’s’ hunting lodge décor.

The barrels recall Gary Simmons’ white backwoods liquor brewing stills, both of which take objects out of context to question the context itself, while the huge squirrel is hard to take seriously, looking like a giant stuffed animal from the polar regions.  Removed from their native locations and uses, Dion’s whited-out objects are made unavoidably strange, and they resist absorption into a narrative of daring discovery.

Mark Dion at The Explorers Club
Mark Dion at The Explorers Club

June 16th Tour (2-4pm) – Best Contemporary Art in Chelsea

Dana Schutz, Piano in the Rain, 2012, oil on canvas.  Courtesy of Friedrich Petzel Gallery.
Dana Schutz, Piano in the Rain, 2012, oil on canvas. Courtesy of Friedrich Petzel Gallery.

Join art critic, college teacher and tour guide, Merrily Kerr on a small group gallery tour (limited to ten or fewer participants) for an intimate exploration of New York’s best art.  At each venue, Merrily gives information on the galleries themselves and the artwork on display – questions and conversation are encouraged!

Tours last two hours and take place regardless of the weather.  Advance registration is required to reserve your place and can be made by contacting Merrily at:  merrilykerr@nyc.rr.com.

Our itinerary will showcase eight of the most important and talked about exhibitions of the moment, including an energizing mix of artwork in different media by emerging talents and internationally acclaimed artists.

Meet at 508 West 26th Street. Tour departs at 2pm. $40 pp in cash or check on the day.

June 9th Tour (2-4pm) – Best Contemporary Art on the Lower East Side

 

Michael DeLucia at 11 Rivington
Michael DeLucia at 11 Rivington

Join art critic, college teacher and tour guide, Merrily Kerr on a small group gallery tour (limited to ten or fewer participants) for an intimate exploration of New York’s best art.  At each venue, Merrily gives information on the galleries themselves and the artwork on display – questions and conversation are encouraged!

Tours last two hours and take place regardless of the weather.  Advance registration is required to reserve your place and can be made by contacting Merrily at:  merrilykerr@nyc.rr.com.

Our tour will include exhibitions at veteran downtown galleries and outside-the-box projects, guaranteeing a lively mix of unconventional artwork and unique spaces.

Meet in front of 235 Bowery (The New Museum). Tour departs at 2pm. $40pp in cash or check on the day.


 

Elizabeth McAlpine at Laurel Gitlen

Elizabeth McAlpine at Laurel Gitlen
Elizabeth McAlpine at Laurel Gitlen

No artist stereotype is as persistent as the garret-living starving artist, but a runner up with a more contemporary feel must be the artist trapped in the studio, ruminating on his or her surroundings.  Bruce Nauman’s floor-pacing, wall-bouncing videos from the 60s and ‘Mapping the Studio…’ from ’01 give the artist’s space itself a role in the creative process.  Jeanne Silverthorne casts her studio floor as a means of ‘archaeology’ while artists like Ellen Altfest have created meticulous renderings of paint-splattered floors, plants and views from the window of her studio.

London-based artist Elizabeth McAlpine also reproduces scenes from the studio, but obscures their origins in ‘The Map of Exactitude,’ her first New York solo show.   The exhibition features mysteriously shaped sculptures combining organic and geometric forms and even more eccentric-looking framed images on paper that hint at architectural diagrams which, in a way, they are.  McAlpine’s sculptures are actually casts of the ceilings and corners of another artist’s studio, which she then made into pinhole cameras with multiple tiny openings.

Elizabeth McAlpine at Laurel Gitlen
Elizabeth McAlpine at Laurel Gitlen

Photosensitive paper folded to the dimensions of the casts’ interiors records multiple views that are often so abstract, they don’t really give much insight into a place that is intended for art making.  Instead, McAlpine puts the artistic process itself on display by exhibiting her tools and the resulting images – sculpture-like cameras – on equal footing.   Using the peculiarities of the space to make artwork about the space could be obnoxiously self-referential, but comes across instead as a thoughtful reflection on the process of pursuing ideas and discerning meaning in the studio.

Elizabeth McAlpine at Laurel Gitlen, 261 Broome Street, Show extended through July 1, 2012.