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The idea behind this year's biennial is to divorce art from its price tag, something that flies in the face of the rampant commercialism that pervades art galleries at the highest levels. Site Santa Fe yields control of the biennial to a guest curator, and for the seventh edition this year, that duty fell to Lance Fung. He asked a host of galleries around the world to give him the names of their best emerging artists, from which he selected his roster of twenty-two. They were invited to Santa Fe, given a strict budget of $7,500, and told to create something specific to the exhibition space or to another site around the city. Finally, forget the red dots: all of the artwork had to disintegrate or otherwise be destroyed or unmade -- not sold -- at the end of the show.
Someone taking the plunge, Manifest Destiny by Piero Golia
Fung had the exhibition space redesigned by New York architects Billie Tsien and Tod Williams, who cut up the warehouse-like building into sections by installing a set of ramps that meander obliquely through it (watch these videos to get a better picture). Most of that upper space was not utilized by the artists, many of whom preferred to take their work to other sites, and it was left somewhat gloomy and unlit. The ultimate rebellion against the straitjacket of the building design was expressed by Piero Golia, an Italian who now lives in Los Angeles. For Manifest Destiny, he sawed off the end of one of the ramps, daring visitors to jump from it onto a large set of foam mattresses below. I did not try it myself, but I saw other people do it -- someone even put a video of himself jumping on YouTube (see above).
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Zane Fischer, The SITE Stuff (Santa Fe Reporter, July 23) Blake Gopnik, A Site for Thinking Outside the Box (Washington Post, July 6) Peter Goddard, Artists make their mark, then erase it (Toronto Star, June 22) Jori Finkel, Welcome to New Mexico. Now Create. (New York Times, January 27) |
Site Santa Fe remains open to the public until January 4, 2009.
I was just in Santa Fe the week before you and also enjoyed Ssite Santa Fe. I met the woman whose students made the documentary shorts about each artist that were near the entrance and she had one of the red shopping bags that warned the user to stay away from the orchestra. Apparently they gave out 10,000 of the bags at the gallery's opening. I really want one.
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