Installation view: ' Storylines: Contemporary Art at the Guggenheim,' Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, June 5–September 9, 2015. Photo: David Heald. All photos courtesy of Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York
Matthew Barney. 'Cremaster 4' (1994–95)
In a room just above the ground floor was an enigmatic sculpture of an industrial plant, a dog resting its head near the large chimney pipe beside which were two seemingly flattened chairs. The piece was Mark Manders's The Camouflaged Factory. Looking the piece up in my book, I connected Manders to the writer Francisco Goldman. Here the writer proffered a memoiristic essay about growing up near the factory of the Tillotson Rubber Company and the improbable fate of its owner.On the Creators Project: The New Guggenheim Will Be a Black Lighthouse
Maurizio Cattelan. 'Daddy, Daddy' (2008)
Charles Bock. 'Dandy' (2006)
Watch VICE Art Talk with Vito Acconci:
Compared with the narrative pull of the films, the visual work, when I returned to it, at times appeared foreign and static. I was grateful for the anthology in my hands, content to let other people observe for me and report back. On Danh Vo's Lot 20. Two Kennedy Administration Cabinet Room Chairs , novelist Michael Cunningham notes that we are looking at the actual chairs that once occupied the office Robert McNamara, the secretary of defense for Kennedy and Johnson. The works were bidded off at Sotheby's, to which Vo was the winning bidder. I was looking at history as art.
One notable literary installation by an artist was Agnieszka Kurant's Phantom Library, a shelf assembled by the artist containing unwritten literature, books such those mentioned in alterior texts by Richard Brautigan, The Culinary Dostoevsky, and by Roberto Bolaño, Lottery Man . "Though the texts are currently blank inside," notes curator Katherine Brinson in a video, "Agnieska has commissioned a number of working authors to write full-length texts that will fill the books." I pondered whether Kurant had revived the Oulipian genre of potential literature, and if so, how finite the works included might be.They were perfectly good chairs, but not in any way extraordinary; they were deemed to be worth $146,500 because of the powerful posteriors that once occupied them, and the events they'd mutely witnessed.
Danh Vo. 'Lot 20. Two Kennedy Administration Cabinet Room Chairs' (2013)
Agnieszka Kurant. 'The Phantom Library' (2013)
Matthew Barney. 'Cremaster 3' (2002)
