• Christine Krol’s Sherman Boxes@ 450 Broadway Gallery – Jamey Hecht

    Date posted: May 9, 2006 Author: jolanta

    Christine Krol’s Sherman Boxes@ 450 Broadway Gallery

    Jamey Hecht

    “O God, I could be bounded in a nut
    shell

    and count myself a king of infinite space,

    were it not that I have bad dreams…”

    HAMLET, Act II, Scene ii

     Joseph Cornell made box art into a viable
    artform that transcended craft. In all their joyful tenderness, his cabinets
    were indirectly descended from 19th Century museum installations, those grim
    specimen cases in which butterflies and moths, for instance, were permanently
    pinned to the back wall. This was a tidy triumph of positivism, that caught so
    many wildly ethereal insects, labeled them in  Latin, and locked them in
    transparent shrines to science. But like all the projects of the Enlightenment,
    this one turned upon its own designers: to reduce nature to an inert field of
    specimens is to imprison oneself in a permanent economy of scarcity. A “natural
    history” like that one develops alongside a “sociology” (a term
    coined by August Comte) whose rigid categories frightened T.S. Eliot: “when
    I am pinned and wriggling on the wall.” At the same moment when Rilke’s
    panther paces in his cage and sees “all bars and no world,” Max Weber
    calls modern urban life “an iron cage.”

     How is the human imagination to perform
    the remainder of its freedom? By doing what Jean Genet does in his prison novels:
    make love in jail. Do as Buckminster Fuller and Biosphere 2 have done, and build
    Eden in a sealed dome. Install a soaring, playful, elegant assemblage of artistic
    insight inside the confines of a box.

     Cornell’s work seems to silently accuse
    art history of a Victorian reductive rationalism, with particular contempt for
    the 20th Century art criticism that ought to know better. If it isn’t part
    of a movement, it’s outsider art; if it doesn’t achieve novelty, it’s
    servile; if it’s lovely, it can’t be beautiful; if it’s beautiful,
    it can’t be deep; if it reaches for sublimity, it’s too naïve;
    unless it’s creepy, it’s effete. It’s as if Cornell and Max Ernst
    were saying, “you want it all in little boxes? All right, I’ll give
    you your boxes.” Theirs are always open, always generously surreal, and
    adverse to the taxonomical project shared by museums of art and museums of natural
    history.

     Christine Krol’s box collages are
    distinguished from those of her contemporaries (e.g. Marcy Baker, Nicole Tuggle)
    by their spatial magnitudes and by their historical memory. Each collage is constructed
    on the two (upper and lower) inner surfaces of an empty Nat  Sherman cigarette
    box, which measures 4.5” x 3.” These are tiny, fragile objects compared
    to Cornell’s wooden constructions, and they don’t accommodate three-dimensional
    elements. Their physical smallness intensifies the enormous volume of the represented
    space internal to the picture. Big paintings can’t do this; they seem like
    mere windows, but a tiny image of a big landscape, or the sky, or a whale, seems
    to give on a grand distance like the eyepiece of a telescope.

     The characteristic subject matter of this
    work is the diversity of environments in which people find themselves. But there’s
    no catalogue of juxtaposed snapshots, nor a randomized montage of the urban and
    the rural. Instead, elements of nature and culture from various centuries are
    composed into a sort of family that populates the box; and beyond this, the entire
    set of boxes constitutes an extended family. Each box seems to configure a matrix
    of atmospheric experiences and emotional smells that might comprise an individual
    personality. Quietly alien to any contemporary art movement, Krol’s collage
    project might best be compared to those eleven pictures made by eleven artists
    in the 1946 competition whose subject was “The Temptation of Saint Anthony.”
    There we find Dali, Ernst, and  Leonora Carrington making visually giant
    moments in physically small places.  

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