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This Article
was part of a cover feature entitled "NEW ART NEW ARTISTS:
A SPECIAL REPORT"
Whats new this
year? For the season we called on ten critics and curators we find
dependabley prescient when it comes to identifiying nw ideas and
new art and asked them to introduce the work of a youn artist they
feel shows special promise for the year ahead"
FIRST
TAKE COLUMN BY CHRISTOPHER MILES
ARTFORUM, JANUARY 2003
Gregory
Kucera
When I first met Gregory Kucera, he had recently returned to Los
Angeles from a stint in Prague working on Czech TV commercials and
was earning his MFA at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena,
covering tuition by doing freelance video production. I was organizing
a video show, under deadlines, and I needed technical support. That
was all I wanted of him. It seemed like a situation best handled
with the just-fix-my-car-and-let's-not-get-too-familiar attitude,
as I knew I'd be making several visits to his studio and I feared
it was only a matter of time before he'd ask me to look at his work.
But in conversations we had while waiting for files to load and
discs to burn, I realized that Kucera's keyboard wizardry and buzzing
equipment played second fiddle to a keen intellect interested in
overlapping questions about duration, simultaneity, location, motion,
point of view, and perspective, and in how shifting these factors
might influence spatiotemporal perception, experiential comprehension,
memory organization, and the construction/conception of self. It
was only a matter of time before I started asking to see his work.
What hooked me was Living, 2001, a video in which the image of the
artist multiplies and his various selves communally hang out, share
consolation, exchange advice, bicker, redecorate, clean house, goof
off, lie around naked, and play with power tools. Occasionally,
Kucera's selves fade in and out, or into one another, or jerk/skip
as if they've hit a glitch--effects, be they deliberate or happily
accidental, that slyly implicate imaging and its means in the formulation
of identity and leave you considering the merging and splitting,
unfolding and enfolding, as well as doubting and delusion, involved
in grappling with the self. What kept me hooked was Tina: Spatiotemporal
Reconstruction #2, 2001, for which Kucera enlisted an actress to
perform one end of an emotionally charged telephone conversation
shot in numerous takes in four different locations. Kucera spliced
together snippets of each to reconstruct the conversation, producing
a continuous video narrative just jittery enough to confirm that
the singular moment is in fact the product of multiple or parallel
experiences, records, recollections.
Kucera's base is in video, but his output, guided by a curiosity
about encoding information in images and objects, has spanned a
variety of video display formats, as well as manifestations more
akin to photography, painting, and sculpture. In addition to Living,
Kucera's recent solo debut at I-20 in New York included four pieces
that echo or bear traces of one another. Line and Flight, 2002,
is a four-channel video with monitors offering directional perspectives
(north, south, east, west) from a point of view that switches between
that of a pedestrian standing in the middle of an urban avenue and
that of someone hurtling through the air upside down along the same
corridor. Temporal Relief: LA Extruded, Inverted, 2002, would be
a good minimalist cube were it not clad with computer-milled bas-relief
panels that, depending on one's stance relative to the physical
space of their concave/convex contours, shift between reading as
total abstractions and as spatially inverted (background forward)
illusionistic representations of the four views from Line and Flight.
Two large digital prints, Eyeballer #1 and Eyeballer #2, 2002, meanwhile
take samples of the images from Line and Flight and stretch and
blur the representations into banded quasi abstractions.
Stretched and
blurred (and taken for a good spin) is something like how I feel
when I look at Kucera's work, and I expect this pleasurable and
compelling disorientation to continue: When last I checked, Kucera's
drawing board included plans for a cast-concrete tornado based on
meteorological storm data and another video/photo/sculpture combo
project taking inspiration for its mind/body/space/time slippage
from the LA freeway system.
An artist and writer based in Los Angeles, Christopher Miles teaches
at California State University, Long Beach. A contributor to Artforum,
Artext, and Flaunt, he is currently at work on a book of essays
and art criticism.
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