Art review: David Horvitz at 2nd Cannons Publications*
“Rarely Seen Bas Jan Ader Film,” by New York-based artist
David Horvitz — the centerpiece of his exhibition of the same name at 2nd Cannons
Publications — is one of these homages: a five-second video featuring a grainy
black-and-white film clip of a man riding a bicycle into the ocean — an
allusion to Ader’s famous film “Fall II,” in which he rides a bicycle into an
Amsterdam canal, as well as to the nature of his presumed death.
Horvitz’s aim in the piece goes beyond catharsis, however,
to address broader questions of authorship and influence, as well as to pose a
subtle but pointed critique of the economic ideologies governing visual art and
electronic media. His methods are good-natured and playful but canny. The
resulting project is a succinct conceptual puzzle that channels the spirit of
his predecessor and his predecessor’s then-peers, Bruce Nauman and Chris Burden.
Horvitz posted his video on YouTube in 2007 under the false
aegis of Patrick Painter Gallery, which represents Ader’s estate,
characterizing it as a posthumously discovered work. The gallery objected, and
the video was deleted. An “exchange of e-mails” transpired, according to the
2nd Cannons press release, but Horvitz apparently won: The video is up now,
under a slightly different name, along with a handful of somewhat befuddled
comments.
closet-sized space, along with two
additional components: a flip-book version of the video, published by 2nd
Cannons, and a fold-out newsprint poster emblazoned on one side with an image
of the sea taken from a beach in southern England — the expected destination of
Ader’s ill-fated final journey — and, on the other, a long, first-person
passage of text describing a trip to Coney Island. (In this and in other recent
works, Horvitz displays a fascination for the phenomenology of travel and
geographical distance.)
In a clear nod to both the art market and the entertainment
industry — two industries struggling with varying degrees of success to uphold
the terms of an object-based economy in the face of rapidly evolving
circumstances — he goes out of his way to make the video freely available: on
You Tube, on his own website and on the gallery’s website. The flip book is
cheap ($10) and the fold out free.
-- Holly Myers
2nd Cannons Publications, 510 Bernard St., Los Angeles, (323) 267-0650, through Aug. 8. Fridays and Saturday, noon-6 p.m.
Top: "Rarely Seen Bas Jan Ader Film," 2007. Bottom: Untitled, 2009. 2 sided newsprint. Credit: Courtesy of 2nd Cannons Publications









nice writing Holy
Posted by: ;) | July 16, 2009 at 08:22 PM
David is one of my favorite artists.
Thanks.
Posted by: Erica | July 20, 2009 at 10:33 AM