• The Art Couple – John Perreault

    Date posted: June 19, 2006 Author: jolanta

    The Art Couple

    John Perreault

     
     
     

    Ilya and Emilia Kabakov, The Empty Museum, (inside view) 2004. Installation, sound, light.

    Ilya and Emilia Kabakov, The Empty Museum, (inside view) 2004. Installation, sound, light.
     
     
     
    When an established artist becomes an artist couple, what
    does this mean? Does the work change? Why is it always the wife who gets added
    on to the famous husband’s career, and when there’s not one husband appended to
    a woman’s? The Soviet/post-Soviet "conceptual" artist Ilya Kabakov
    and his wife Emilia are now publicly a husband-and-wife team. They join the
    illustrious ranks of the late Ed Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz; Claes
    Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen; Christo and Jeanne-Claude.

     

    Although it might be an interesting study, we are not
    considering Newton and Helen Harrison, who have always been a team, as have
    Gilbert and George. The latter are British, and as far as we know are rather
    like Gilbert and Sullivan, only more so: not married to each other in any sense
    of the word. Furthermore, we can’t put those other Soviet/post-Soviet
    conceptualists, Kolmar and Melamid, in any matrimonial boat. I also know two
    brothers, Einar and Jamex de la Torre, working in glass-based assemblage,
    who function as a team but, unlike the others mentioned, also make art under
    separate signatures.

     

    In the case of the Kabakovs, the Oldenburgs, the Christos,
    and, before them, the Kienholzs, the partnership came well on into the
    husband’s career, probably to acknowledge the ongoing contributions of the wife
    and, I would venture to guess, to make ownership, copyright and possession of
    artworks airtight. But who knows what darkness or devotion lurks in the
    congruently beating hearts of couples – of any persuasion. As far as I am
    concerned, anything that contests the hegemony of single-person authorship and
    gives someone his or her fair due is a step in the right direction.

     

    Furthermore, I have observed that artworks may change when
    studio assistants change, and that often the artist is more like the
    auteur/movie director than the sole agent. Perhaps every artwork should have
    the label equivalent of a movie crawl. Carpentry, welding, prep-work,
    lighting, color mixing, photography, and the writing of didactic
    statements should all be credited. Preliminary drawings or digital work also
    require some acknowledgement. And how about a nod to the hidden world of
    secretaries, bookkeepers, and just plain gofers? In any case, here’s an
    assignment for some future graduate student: in all four cases of the married
    art couples cited above, did the work change after the double byline emerged?

     

    As a start, we now know Ilya and Emilia Kabakov have been
    working together since 1989. She too endured life in the U.S.S.R. A graduate of
    the Moscow Music Conservatory, she later made her way to the West. The Kabakovs
    have lived in New York since 1992. Ilya made installations before as well as
    after 1989. Looking through the documentation in Amei Wallach’s Ilya
    Kabakov: The Man Who Never Threw Anything Away
    (Abrams, 1996), I can see a sort of zigzag progression from language-laden and
    intentionally cluttered works to this year’s The Empty Museum
    style=’font-style:normal’> at the SculptureCenter.

     

    This oddly spectacular new installation can be classed with,
    and may be an outgrowth of, Kabakov’s Incident at the Museum, or Water Music
    (1992) or The Life of Flies
    style=’font-style:normal’> of the same year, which represented "a series
    of halls in a scholarly provincial Soviet museum that receives few
    visitors." Incident at the Museum, which was at the Feldman Gallery in New York, displayed fake
    paintings by a "re-discovered" Russian modernist by the name of
    Stepan Yakovlevich Koshelev and looked extremely convincing. The flash-point
    however is that there were buckets and tarps everywhere and water dripping from
    the ceiling. In The Empty Museum,
    there is no water. In fact, there are no paintings, only spotlights on the deep
    red walls.

     

    If Kabakov’s wife has influenced him to move beyond
    the somewhat cluttered and "literary" installations of the
    past, she surely should be applauded. It is not that I have anything
    against smudging the border between art and literature. I just don’t like it
    when there’s so much narrative that I yearn for a book rather than an
    exhibition. You might say that Kabakov has – rather, the Kabakovs have –
    stopped being a novelist (a mixture of Dostoyevsky and Kafka) and become a
    poet. This grammatical awkwardness through which we have just passed is another
    reason why art coupledom is resisted. Language balks.

     

    The Empty Museum
    takes up nearly the entirety of the SculptureCenter space. You see the metal
    studs and wallboard construction all around the outside of the built room. I
    find this satisfying in a sculptural way, just as I have always preferred the
    photos of Glen Seator’s 1999 Check Cashing Store
    style=’font-style:normal’> that show the gallery side rather than the street
    side of that jolting replica. From the street, the work looked so real that
    some people tried to get inside to cash checks, whereas from the gallery it was
    all beams and wallboard. I like seeing how things are made, which is my
    traditional, pro-sculpture side. Of course, installations are usually lumped
    with sculpture, prompting me to define sculpture as anything that is not
    painting.

     

    Actually, the first thing you see of The Empty Museum
    style=’font-style:normal’> is a door ajar. It doesn’t open beyond a certain
    point, so you have to edge your way in, where, embraced by Bach’s Passacaglia
    style=’font-style:normal’>, you can rest on the Victorian seating in the middle
    of the room and contemplate … nothing. Well, not exactly nothing. You can
    meditate upon the spotlights. You can gaze upon moldings or on the two sealed
    exit doors. You contemplate the absence of paintings and what that might mean.
    The Kabakovs finally let you make up your own story and your own meanings. Here
    are some of mine:

     

    The paintings have been removed because they are on loan to
    some casino in Las Vegas; because they were recently discovered as fakes;
    because war has broken out and they are in storage for safe-keeping. They have
    been removed because suddenly it has been discovered paintings are not art. Or,
    to the contrary, they were too controversial and excited the museum-goers to
    weird sexual acts, revolution, sabotage, and sudden bouts of lethargy.

     

    Or – and this is my favorite – the paintings were not
    removed: they merely steadily diminished in size. The huge numbers of
    people looking at them day after day robbed them of their auras and they shrank
    to nothing. Or maybe they disappeared because not enough people were
    looking at them. People make auras, infuse objects with mana.

     

    So, after all, The Empty Museum
    style=’font-style:normal’> is not really like Yves Klein’s notorious empty
    gallery of 1958 (Le Vide/The Void).
    That great French mystic was trying to exhibit the Void or Nothingness, rather
    than nothing. The Kabakovs are a bit more down to earth. They offer a
    "Total Installation," meaning an artwork you step inside of and
    thereby enter another world. This new world is one where paintings simply – or
    not so simply – disappear, have disappeared. I smell a kind of nostalgia.

     

    Or is The Empty Museum
    antinostalgia? A certain very powerful wing of the art world has an
    overwhelming nostalgia for painting, so overwhelming that really bad painting
    is embraced just for the sake of upholding painting. Then too I also like that The
    Empty Museum, a work about painting as it
    is institutionalized, is in a sculpture space. Is there a painting space that
    can return the favor?

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