Marlie Mul.
Too, Jian-Xing
Marlie Mul's exhibition "Your Wet Sleeve in My Neck"
had something green and full of potential about it. In the
gallery's street-level space was a low-lying sculpture diagonally
laid out in serpentine form. This piece had the smack of an
extravagantly long wind instrument or hookah pipe, but in fact it had no
passage for air. It consisted of lightly polished, solid-wood spindles
set on the floor, joined end to end with straight or bent segments of
clear PVC tubing. Each rod had a lathe-turned design for what would
appear to be anachronistic stair balusters--twisted spirals, orbs,
tapered ends and all--and was marbled like the endpapers of an
antiquarian book--that is, they were dipped in a bath laced with
marbling inks. A jealously guarded trade secret in the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries, marbling is today a quaint but widespread hobby.
The finish is applied to everything from fingernails to fishing rods.
Mul's piece is called Me (connected) (all works 2010), but it
conjures up less an artist's self-portrait than the tricky, watery
process of capturing a floating design on a lathe-turned surface. This
outlandish combination of forms and techniques had a presence chat
fairly jumped right off the floor it lay upon.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The arrangement of these baluster-like rods within the exhibition
space, moreover, seemed to point viewers to the cramped stairway leading
to the second floor. There, three marbled spindles, collectively titled
Sticks (Blue, Yellow, Terracotta), were placed squarely on the floor.
Two were positioned parallel to each other, and the third lay diagonally
further away and perpendicular to them. Mixed in with Sticks were the
pieces She (angle) and She (parallel), both of which consisted of two
unpolished and unpainted turned wood spindles connected by a loop of
PVC. One wondered why certain sticks were Me, others She, and still
others just Sticks. Mul's rods brought to mind Andre Cadere's
bars, which were painted to form mathematical color permutations with an
error slipped in and which he would carry around everywhere. But here it
was as if Mul had replaced Cadere's clear use of color with smoky
illusion, his minimal and unusable round sticks with potentially
functional decorative uprights, and his literal and performative presence with personifying titles.
Mul manages to make the preposterous seem sensible. Across the way
was the triumphant ugly duckling of the show: Fraiche commeune rose
(curvature with two connection parts) (Fresh as a Rose), a
quarter-circle arc that swept counterclockwise from ceiling to floor,
formed by three Styrofoam parts connected by two homely wads of spray
polyurethane foam, a DIY material that dries instantly, freshly freezing
moments of random form--much like marbling ink pulled out of water. And
where spray foam is usually hidden or its excess cut away, here it forms
two rosebuds of sorts that keep the whole kit and caboodle from toppling
over. With this sculpture, Mul blithely took the broad and spacious
route vis-a-vis modernist mores of geometric shapes in space.
GALERIE LUCILE CORTY