Showing posts with label dennis del zotto. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dennis del zotto. Show all posts

May 3, 2014

BLASTA! - a thought about allegory in immersive art



Vlasta Volcano, Signs Along the Road, at Art in General, 1993
A good friend who is Serbian brought to my attention early this year, a piece made by Vlasta Volcano some 20 years ago for a show at Art in General about Yugoslav identity. I must say the "Yugoslav identity" dimension of the work was lost on me when I first encountered it in photos. Volcano was a member of the Immersive scene in Williamsburg, and so my initial response to this work of his was from that perspective. Here’s what I wrote about it almost a year ago:
They are figures, like Rodin or Giacometti, except they appear in abject material in a desolate place. From the bubbling coils of melting rubber, phantoms peel out and spring to life ... on a ghetto beach, oh brave new world. From an artist's hand, light of touch, comes a first-rate exposition in Vlasta's work of a certain ... insouciant minimalism of warehouse art of the time. A very simple process, burn rubber tires on the waterfront. A regular fine art foundry. And why not. If you can manufacture art in shops and factories, it stands to reason that you could make art at the ass end of industry as well, from the refuse. Off the schmelting rubber come leaping lords and hipstresses. Vlasta did not draw or paint, he lit a fire, and he caught our shadows all the same. 
— Ethan, January 6, 2014

1992 to 93 was a very dark time in Yugoslavia, and there were a number of Serbs and Croats in the local art scene. As it happened I fell in with that crowd for a while. My friend Jelena Tomic is Serbian by way of Paris, I introduced her to my old friend Ivan Kustura, who is Croatian and a painter whom I knew from a circle of Greenpoint artists in them mid-80s. And soon we were drinking at Teddy's with eight or nine other Yugoslavians.



Vlasta Volcano, from photos taken between 1990-93.

Volcano is Serbian, and I knew him the way people in close art communities know each other. That is to say, like family, even though we rarely ever spoke with one another. It might be like that in a Serbian village as well, with someone you've never spoken to, but have known for a thousand years. In a big-city avant-garde, you have people from all over the world, who know each other implicitly.

I do recall one funny exchange with Volcano at a subterranean club on the Southside of Williamsburg called El Sensorium, some 20 years ago. Sub-maritime as well, bulging with aquaria, waterfalls, unearthly lighting, dry-ice vapor, and Volcano was wearing a strip of duct tape over his mouth for most of that evening. At some point I caught him without the tape, and I asked him if he thought the phenomenon of fame and celebrity might be an evolutionary precursor to some form of social telepathy that might become highly articulated in another 40 thousand years or so.

“Could be” he said.


Volcano was, after all, an early proponent of transhumanism, in Brooklyn and Belgrade, which are both places where transhumanist aesthetics took shape in the early 90s, concurrently with the philosophical development of transhumanism in California. Volcano was a founder of the group Floating Point Unit, a major branch of Immersionism, and he always struck me as a most chill and immersive sort of dude. I called him “Blasta.” But I am only now decades later connecting with this artist’s work and its position in the Brooklyn movement.





I gather this work is made from burnt or unraveled automobile tires. And it is Rodin-like, in is morphogenic release of energy and material. It is exemplary immersive sculpture. A calculated manipulation of the concrete random. No arty trappings or skills known to the genres. A process shall be deployed, upon such material as is readily available. No rules of the minimalists are broken, and an appreciably different world from theirs is revealed.

In 1998 Craig Owens located the “allegorical impulse” within minimalism and material art, and extended that impulse to the postmodern art that followed. The immersive artists are also allegorical, but they absorbed this irritating chestnut from the history of art in a different way. Brooklyn artists generally turned away form the analytic approach of the 80s, and discovered the synthetic approach. And so, where the allegory of Robert Smithson or Robert Morris is astringent and literate, the immersive sculpture of the 90s can be saturated with allegory and downright baroque. It must be noted, many thousands of people experienced immersive art first as entertainment.

Lauren Szold was making her seminal immersive work in Williamsburg in 1990 and 91. When I interviewed her at that time, she spoke about meaning embedded in raw material. She said she tried to avoid obvious cultural references; loaded objects and symbols plucked wholesale from the culture. It is characteristic of a lot of immersive work that narrative is ingrained in the material and the process, but not forced through symbolism. Dennis Del Zotto's polystyrene structures come to mind, as does the “plastic fog” of Frank Shifreen at the Flytrap in 1991. And of course many of the schemes of Lalalandia are exemplary in this regard.

The catch here with using the word “allegory” in this connection, is that this word has a precise meaning in literature and art. It means to tell one story by means of another. Usually, this means to recover some aspect of the past, of history usually, and pitch it as a new “story” that can be comprehended by a present-day audience. Napoleon as Caesar for example. But when we get into modern uses of allegory, the concept has been harnessed to other similes. Allegory is a resilient and flexible attribute of aesthetic experience; it may not always appear in a sharp “this-for-that” formulation. Allegory may be mixed in with the aggregate, so to speak, of a morphogenic and immersive art.

Volcano's work here is an example of allegory in immersive sculpture. It clearly suggests a lively narrative space, but it just as easily can stand for nothing but process and material.


Volcano, early- to mid-90s, with friends. Brooklyn or lower Manhattan. Photo by Megan Raddant
See my Facebook album on Immersionism






March 15, 2012

Immersionism


Song of Fuaa a production by multipolyomni
early 1990s. From an album by DJ Olive

Immersionism is a cultural movement that took shape in Williamsburg, Brooklyn in the early 1990s. It bears some affinity to the ideas of Buckminster Fuller, to Relational Aesthetics, paganism, and multi-media art. Here are a few articles and albums that I and some others have assembled on Immersionism:

Articles

Immersionism: Manifesto and Introduction with further links, February 13, 2011

Bernard Carey of Yale Radio talks with Immersionist pioneer Ebon Fisher, July 2016

The Omnisensorialists 1991-1999, by V Owen Bush, January 19, 2012

Immersionism and Relational Aesthetics, March 19, 2012

Go with the Flow (pdf download), Domus, February 1998. Suzan Wines coins the term "immersive environments" in this article.

The Cat's Head, Constructing Utopia in Brooklyn and Dublin (pdf download), TDR, Fall 1993. Melanie Hahn investigates early appearances of immersive culture.

The Inflatable Man – Dennis Del Zotto and the Williamsburg Scene, June 7, 2006

Discourse sur la Moutarde: the evolution of warehouse events in Williamsburg (pdf download 622 KB), Breukelen Magazine, Winter 1993

Williamsburg's Arcadian Past, NY Observer, Zachary Woolfe on Billy Basinsky, November 2011

David Brody's 4-part series, From Biofreak to Organism, 2001 (pdf download)

Facebook albums of key immersive laboratories

Immersionism: Warehouse Events in Williamsburg, 1989-98

The Lizard's Tail

Lalalandia 

Nerve Circle

Mustard

The Federation of Ongolia

The Inflatable Man, immersive pioneer Dennis Del Zotto

Multipolyomni

The Sayanayas

Google spreadsheet on immersive events and players

June 7, 2006

Dennis Del Zotto's Starry Night



Dennis Del Zotto, Starry Night
polystyrene with holes and back-lighting



Seid umschlungen, Millionen!
Diesen Kuss der ganzen Welt!
Brüder - über'm Sternenzelt*
Muss ein lieber Vater wohnen.


— Schiller, Ode to Joy, 1785



* Sternenzelt: literally, star tent


This sculpture by Dennis Del Zotto has a good story to tell. An inflatable was installed outdoors on the street at a neighborhood festival on South 11th Street in 1996 (The Human Fest). A crowd of local children entered the inflatable and were dancing. The groundsheet portion, between the dancing feet and the coarse pavement, incurred little holes.


The next day Del Zotto installed the same sheet of plastic at his studio in Greenpoint. This time he installed the piece "upside down" — that is, as a canope´ rather than as a drop cloth — and consequently "discovered" the pin holes. A night sky was caused by the small punctures now back-lit from above. Even the slight undulation of the plastic, from the oscillations of the fan keeping the plastic aloft, was an uncanny effect. The sculpture imparted the feeling of being out under the night sky. It is a characteristic of Del Zotto's work, the immersive experience that they create. It is well known that accident is often a crucial part of authentic works of art. The "stars" in this sculpture were an authentic accident. The result was riveting and uncanny.

Two years later the piece was installed as the ceiling of the chapel in the Inflatable City at the Federation of Ongolia on North 11th Street. And so this sculpture progressed from South 11th to North 11th, first as a floor, then as a ceiling.

The piece is to the Williamsburg Immersionist movement what the Duomo in Florence is to the Renaissance. No less inflated a comparison will really make the point. For like the Duomo it is a patchwork of different events from a certain span of time. Not, for example, a single coherent work such as Brunelleschi’s Basilica of Santo Spirito in Florence, or for that matter one of Del Zotto’s many inflatables conceived and built for a single place and time.


Del Zotto's Starry Night originated on what was once a tucked-away corner of industrial Williamsburg, on a street already known for some bizarre events (hurling live TV sets off of rooftops and such). The banal sheet of plastic, whose aesthetic value is nil by many standards, contains the stamp of a time and place in the history of a local artistic movement. That is, the history of a certain demimonde. But it also contains literally the stamp of the feet of children, of innocent "locals" from the culture that precedes the artists.


In this way Del Zotto is a natural storyteller in material, who maneuvers a slice of social history through a sheet of polystyrene. Later he unfolds the damage that the local children have done to his sculpture, and even grumbles as he does so, with his famous testiness that endears him to his fellow artists. He now exposes the substrate for a second time to a different social chemistry, a nightclub. And the stars come out.


Allegory is a "sticky" attribute of concrete art; it has long vexed concrete and conceptual art. The argument has been made that the “allegorical impulse” of postmodernism began in the work of earth artists such as Robert Smithson ruminating on the meaning of ruins and other features of landscape.


Local children dance upon the shrine of bohemia, mocking it, puncturing it. And then, when the sheet is unfolded later in a nightclub, the same children laugh at us again as "stars.” They mock our hubris, our own aspirations to stardom. They turn the scene upside down, as it were.


But it is also possible to dismiss any corny story in connection with a work like this; that is, we don't have to receive the piece as symbolic. It is a concrete work, and as such also lends itself to the modernist suppression of allegory. Who are we to say it tells a story. We should appreciate it in the stoic spirit of minimalism, and not impute a narrative to the piece. For in essence it is a plastic sheet processed by an event, and revealed to another event. Orientation is involved, up and down, the floor and the ceiling, and the light and darkness of space.


Ethan Pettit, June 2006

Also see Dennis Del Zotto and the Williamsburg Scene





The Inflatable Man


Dennis Del Zotto and the Williamsburg Scene


Del Zotto in Organic TV: a New York Moment Galapagos, 1997
Screen grab from Japanese TV

Dennis Del Zotto is an artist of pitch-perfect economy and timing. He is one of the most well-liked and respected artists to come out of Williamsburg in the early 90’s, where his work was a fixture of the warehouse culture of new media and immersive art. Production outfits in the neighborhood at the time were Lalalandia, Keep Refrigerated, El Sensorium, Hit & Run Theater, The Lizard's Tail, Organism, and many more. Del Zotto collaborated with “illbient” electro-pioneers Gregor Asch (aka DJ Olive), Ignatio Platas, and Lloop Manalog (the three of whom comprise the band called We. He has worked with Jeff Gompertz at fakeshop and Ongolia, and with Robert Elmes at the first incarnation of Galapagos, the iconic Williamsburg nightclub now located in Dumbo.