September 16 to October 21, 2006
JOHN
NEFF\ images \ info below
Pornographic Pantograph with Allusion to Juan Sanchez Cotan
(In Progress, Patent Pending)

Pornographic Pantograph with Allusion to Juan Sanchez Cotan
(In Progress, Patent Pending)
By JOHN NEFF
Western Exhibitions
1821 W Hubbard, Suite 202
Chicago, IL 60622
Show Dates: September 16 October 21, 2006
Opening Reception: Saturday, September 16, 6 to 9pm
Gallery Hours: Wednesday - Saturday: 12 to 6pm
EXTENDED PRESS RELEASE
Western Exhibitions, recently relocated to 1821 W Hubbard Suite 202,
is proud to present John Neff's new project Pornographic
Pantograph with Allusion to Juan Sanchez Cotan (In Progress, Patent
Pending). A "studio view," the exhibition includes preparatory
blueprints, maquettes, presentation mannequins and patent application
materials related to the Pornographic Pantograph, a sculpto-graphic
device that Neff has been developing since 2001. When completed (projected
prototype completion date fall 2007), the Pantograph will be a machine
that enables users to replicate and re-photograph poses observed in
gay male pornographic digital images using live models. Pantographs,
long used by mechanical draftsmen and now being supplanted by digital
technologies, are tools used to copy, reduce and enlarge building
plans, production diagrams and other two-dimensional images.
The preparatory blueprints,
unique cyanotypes,
are printed from negatives derived from existing gay online pornography
but include a broad range of stylistic references. The blueprint layouts
mimic the design of pornographic websites. Superimposed over the photographic
images, mechanical / technical drawings trace models' poses. These
tracings will serve as guidelines for the design of the various body
clamps, reinforcements and restraints that will be the primary mechanical
components of the completed device. Pseudo-Victorian
photograms of diseased flowers and foliage and common weeds around
the edges of the blueprints allude to both the first published book
of photography (Anna
Atkin's 1843
British Algae: Cyanotype Impressions) and to the characterization
of sexually expressed homosexuality as an undesirable, marginal abnormality.
Also included in the
exhibition is a 1:5.75 scale maquette of the pantographic device,
constructed in steel using parts from existing body-sculpting objects
(exercise machines, medical instruments, office furniture). When produced
as a production unit, the pantographic device will be large enough
to constrain and control the physical movement of at least three full-size
male bodies. A plaster cast of a head of cabbage hangs on a string
within the maquette's "viewing window." The cabbage serves
several functions: it is a stand-in for the figure of the model (much
as fruit and carcasses are often used in industrial safety tests);
it makes explicit the cross-genre nature of the pantographic device
(it is both a still life and a figurative composition); it expresses
the title's "allusion" to sixteenth century Spanish still-life
painter Juan
Sanchez Cotan; and it refers to the German novelist Heinrich
Boll's report (made by a priest in his novel The
Clown) that cabbage was once believed to quell the passions.
The two mannequins, both cast from the artist's body, represent a
seated figure looking directly at the pantographic device maquette
and a standing figure facing the exhibition visitor. The seated figure
is cast using plaster bandages in the manner of the late American
sculptor George
Segal. The cast components are assembled as fragments on an armature
constructed of used wheelchair parts (using a technique similar to
the method employed by conservationists attempting the reconstruction
of figurative sculptures from Antiquity). The standing figure "presents"
the exhibition to viewers, gesturing towards the other sculptures
and towards an enlarged copy of the show's press release. The standing
figure's vertical orientation and address to the viewer are in every
way the opposite of the incomplete, silent, "absorptive"
white figure.
Pornographic Pantograph
With Allusion to Juan Sanchez Cotan (In Progress, Patent Pending)
also includes studio artifacts from the production of the exhibition,
including a series of "studio snapshots" (some overlain,
in the style of an art magazine advertisements, with exhibition information)
and negatives and production molds. Contrary, however, to many "process
oriented" sculptural and installation works now being exhibited,
the Pantograph as a device will arrive at a point of definitive completion.
The current presentation is a "studio view" of the in-progress
work, but the idea of the device itself exhibits a will to formal
autonomy at odds with the self-consciously
theatrical (to borrow a term from art critic and historian Michael
Fried), open-ended nature of much contemporary "sculpture-in-process."
(Work in the tradition of Robert
Morris' Continuous
Project Altered Daily and Robert
Smithson's Non-Sites).
The theatrical work, by definition, is always incomplete in itself,
acknowledging and depending, as it does, on the presence of an observer.
Pornography, with its multiple and overlapping solicitations and denials
of vision, is a subject complicatedly enmeshed in the absorption /
theatricality opposition.
Art is in the midst
of a crisis of appearances, one that arises -- simultaneously and
relatedly -- out of the neo-avant-garde's rejection of the formal
autonomy of the work of art (however contingent) and the rise the
spectacle as a primary means of socio-political control in the West.
Precipitated by the knowledge that today all things appear first as
their exchange value, this crisis is all the more deeply felt in an
artistic context of radical questioning of the stability of individual
"acts of culture," a context that undermines - or preempts
- emphatic self-definitions. Much serious contemporary art uncritically
adopts a theatrical relationship to its viewers in an effort to respond
to, resolve or intensify the crisis of appearances. The will to formal
autonomy, on the other hand, necessarily entails an indifferent, conflicted
or troubled relationship between the artwork / situation / device
and an observer. In the context of a commercial contemporary art gallery,
these statements are insane but necessary.
Historically, the Pantograph
stands (humbly) in a long line of systematically sensual artworks
stretching from Pontormo
to the present. This tradition marries methodical - sometimes quasi-scientific
- formal experimentation with a keen appreciation of the "excesses"
of vision and body, those experiences that evade and respond inconclusively
to analytical interpretation. The seventeenth century Spanish monk
Juan
Sanchez Cotan, for example, composed a series of still life paintings
in which pieces of ripe fruit and vegetables hang from strings in
dark window frames. These lush images were composed according to strict
algorithmic formulae. On a page titled "Vegetables
as Threat" posted in February 2003 on the website Vanitysite.com
(since replaced, interestingly, by a pornographic hosting site) this
mysterious claim was made: "Juan Sanchez Cotan's fatal obsession
with vegetables led him to a hellish impasse, which he escaped only
by the total renunciation of this world for a rigidly cloistered life."
In relation Neff's
own oeuvre, the Pantograph project extends the interests of his installation
pieces and works on paper. Like the Pantograph, the installations
Vexations (1997) and White (1998), and the sets Empty
Space (1999), Figure / Ground and Repetitions (both 2001),
dealt with the relationship of flat images to three-dimensional space,
the seduction of identical things, and the problem of the beholder's
role (or lack thereof) in the creation of an artwork's "meaning."
The artist's works on paper, notably those included in Papers
on Work: Collages and Explanations (2002) have a two-fold
action: they are simultaneously clear, concise expressions of a given
set of rules and completely irrational objects.