4 minute read
SUPPLY AND DEMAND
from Frieze Week NY 2023
by frieze.com
In 2016, writing in the New York Times, Roberta Smith compared works in Josh Kline’s show, “Unemployment” at 47 Canal in New York, to “one-liners with many clauses, all sobering, but obvious and dull.” e exhibition included Kline’s series “Productivity Gains”, for which the artist used scans of unemployed people living in Baltimore to produce 3D-printed sculptures of their bodies. e life-size objects, folded fetal-style, sealed in plastic bags and spread across the gallery floor, posit the jobless middle class as economic waste products. In another series, transparent plastic orbs, spiked to resemble viruses and hung like waist-high chandeliers, housed cardboard boxes packed with o ce supplies and other e ects of the newly laid o . Its title: “Contagious Unemployment”.
An ArtNews headline, au contraire, hailed “Unemployment” as “a Brilliant, High-Concept riller”; an approving Artforum reviewer said Kline “merges social science with science fiction”. Alternatively, as one museum worker put it to me recently, Kline makes “obvious Anthropocene boy art”. To me, it sometimes looks like crapitalism art, recalling the visual language of Adbusters, the “Journal of the Mental Environment”. For example, in his 2020 show “Alternative Facts” at Various Small Fires in Seoul, Kline cast Samsung and LG televisions and wrapped them in American and Blue Lives Matter flags. Reality Television 16 (2020), from the American flag series, was doused in white epoxy—“the skin color of Fox’s primary viewership”, a gallery director told writer Travis Diehl during a Zoom tour reported in Art in America e lone Blue Lives Matter piece on display, meanwhile, was titled Fox and Friends 5 (2020). Kline’s art is, in other words, the sort that induces you to nudge your neighbor in the ribs and trade expressions of forlorn apprehension, which, perhaps, then curdle into satisfaction. Whether it’s a one-liner or not: surely, we get the joke. e press release for Kline’s first US museum survey, “Project for a New American Century”, on view at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York during Frieze Week, states that, “at its core, Kline’s prescient practice is focused on work and class, exploring how today’s most urgent social and political issues— climate change, automation, disease and the weakening of democracy—impact the people who make up the labor force.”
If anyone should be aware of work and class as “urgent” issues, it’s the Whitney, whose unionized workers agreed to a tentative first contract on March 6 this year, after 18 months of negotiations. is welcome development spared Kline the awkwardness of exhibiting explicitly activist art amidst a labor-management stando . Had the negotiating been ongoing, I wonder if his approach would have landed di erently. Is it possible that art about “work and class” is, in fact, best delivered as a series of one-liners? Might some artists be right in prizing bluntness over subtlety, in the hope of raising consciousness among viewers, confronting audiences with capitalism’s rapaciousness and implicating them in its production of our bleak future? If people go to art museums to be consumed, don’t they also want to feel that they have consumed an accessible critique of themselves and broader power structures? (To feel themselves confronted, to bear witness to being implicated ). To register as e ective, and thus a ectively gratifying, the critique must be digestible by its audience. But what enters a body tends to leave it. If the message, that something must be done, remains for a few hours or days, excretion can return its consumer to their baseline: apparently necessary participation in and acceptance of the world as it is. ey dissipate their own obviousness, launder their meaning, restate and re-e ace themselves: futility and plainness flip to perseverance and emptiness, and back again. Still, some moments call not for complexity, but directness: Kanders stepped down six days after eight artists withdrew from the show. (Kline was not among them.)
“Now the highest aspiration of avowedly radical work is its own display.” e statement is from Hannah Black, Ciarán Finlayson and Tobi Haslett’s 2019 manifesto, “ e Tear Gas Biennial”, published by Artforum, which argued for ousting then-vice chair of the Whitney board Warren Kanders (in response to his ownership of a company that manufactures and sells tear gas and other armaments used to suppress protests in the US and elsewhere), and for artists to withdraw their work to further that end. At that year’s Biennial, Kline showed a series of framed black and white, LED-lit photographs, including images of a Ronald Reagan statue and Twitter’s San Francisco headquarters. Water pumped through the frames slowly erases the images of political and corporate power until, blank, they are replaced by fresh photographs. I like these works.
Kline’s work is most a ecting, and paradoxically at its bleakest, when it is most hopeful. In Hope and Freedom (2016), Kline’s video of a deepfaked Obama, the President makes very un-Obama-like demands for systemic change; and in Kline’s faux commercials for universal basic income, Universal Early Retirement (Spots #1 and #2) (2016), also included in “Unemployment”, diverse beneficiaries, freed from need, pursue their interests without thought for monetary gain. ese visions, so dissonant with our reality, garnish Kline’s mournfulness with a rich, twisted optimism, like a dollop of caviar dropped on a Lunchable.
As one-liners go, “hope” still lands.
Paul McAdory is a writer and editor from Mississippi, US. He lives in Brooklyn, NY.
“Josh Kline: Project for a New American Century” is on view at the Whitney Museum, New York City, through to August 13, 2023.
Opposite Josh Kline, Desperation Dilation, 2016. Collection of Bobby and Eleanor Cayre.
Courtesy: © Josh Kline and 47 Canal, New York.
Photography: Joerg Lohse
Since its founding in 1976 by a group of individuals including Lucy Lippard, Sol LeWitt and Pat Steir, New York’s Printed Matter, Inc. has built a reputation as the world’s leading non-profit organization dedicated to artists’ books. Its main location just a 10-minute walk from the fair, Printed Matter Inc. will also host a pop-up on the ground floor of e Shed throughout the duration of Frieze New York.
For 18 years, artist Mary Lum served on the Printed Matter board of directors, and in 2012 joined its advisory council. Herself a maker of artist books, her multidisciplinary practice is rooted in urban living, drawing influence from Cubism, the Russian Constructivists and the psychogeography of the Situationist International. Wandering through cities to mentally collect images of overlooked details of the cityscape, in her collages Lum reconfigures these fragments into new abstract forms with fresh meanings. Professor Emerita of painting and drawing at Bennington College, Lum is the 2023 recipient of the College Art Association’s Distinguished Teaching of Art Award.