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LILIANA
PORTER |
With enchanting
incongruity, Liliana
Porter’s work playfully subverts
convention, disrupts time, and messes with reality. Using a wide range
of media, Porter mixes the absurd with the philosophical, creating
extra-
ordinary situations that lure us unwittingly into the realm of her
idiosyn-
cratic cast of characters. For this exhibition she will present a
new video
entitled "Fox in the Mirror," in addition to photographs,
works on paper,
paintings, 3-dimensional prints, and installations.
Drawing from an eclectic collection of figurines, knickknacks, toys,
and
souvenirs, Porter features these characters in unexpected combinations
and circumstances. The peculiar situations she invents, where disparate
events occur simultaneously, or dissimilar characters interact, wittily
invite political, philosophical and existential interpretation. Her
third and
latest video, “Fox in the Mirror,” with music by Sylvia
Meyer, takes the
concert as its theme. Wind-up toy dancers and musicians perform
amidst a series of droll, incompatible incidents.
Some of the characters are brought out of their two-dimensional rep-
resentations to interact with the real world. Tiny figures on shelves
perform colossal tasks, at once pathetic and hilarious. Photographs
paired with the actual object depicted, though in different form,
bend
reality and reverse time. With masterful simplicity and humor, Porter
blends the real with the representational in hypothetical yet convincing
mini-dramas starring mass-produced, kitsch objects that inadvertently
elicit compassion and laughter.
Liliana Porter was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina and lives in New
York.
Recent solo exhibitions include the Centro Cultural Recoleta, Buenos
Aires; the Museo Castagnino, Rosario, Argentina; Palacio Aguirre,
Cartagena, Spain; and the Phoenix Art Museum, Arizona. Her work is
in
numerous museum collections in Latin America, Europe, and the United
States, including The Museum of Modern Art, New York; The Metropolitan
Museum, New York; Philadelphia Museum of Art; Smithsonian Museum
of American Art; Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego; Daros -
Latinoamerica Collection, Zurich; and Tate Museum, London. |
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Reconstruction (Penguin), 2007
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