Joe Sola: Atlanta College of Art Gallery.
Auslander, Philip
Jacques Lacan once observed, "In the human being, virile display itself appears as feminine." The title of Joe Sola's
recent exhibition, "Taking a Bullet," first mounted at Los
Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, hints at a similar paradox. Sola
evokes memories of Hollywood genre films, suggesting that the person
offering up the ultimate sacrifice is most likely to be either a
man's male buddy or a femme fatale. The gesture itself--the refusal
to get out of harm's way--combines stereo-typically masculine
action with stereotypically feminine passivity, and this dialectic is at
the heart of Sola's project.
The centerpiece of the show, the performance/installation Male
Fashion Models Make Conceptual Art, 2006, takes a swipe at the
archetypal dyad of the dynamic masculine artist and his inert feminine
model. As the title suggests, Sola hired five male models to make art at
the exhibition's opening. The only instructions Sola gave his
performers were to use all of the materials available and to work for a
prescribed period. The content of the work-within-the-work was devised
entirely by the models themselves, who thus became artists--of a sort.
The result approximated a large, garish Rauschenberg Combine,
incorporating a diverse array of elements laid out on a horizontal
platform. Any assumption that models necessarily lack critical
self-awareness was debunked by an assemblage that included articles of
clothing, texts demanding that viewers interrogate their own desire to
look, and an Oldenburgian burger-and-fries sculpture. Whatever the
work's other achievements or shortcomings, its spectacle of a group
of beautiful men hard at work was clearly appreciated by those attending
the opening. Even when assuming the active role of artist, the models
thus remained eroticized objects of the viewers' gaze.
In interacting with these and other icons of hypermasculinity, Sola
always marks his own masculinity as different from theirs. In a
monitor-based video Riding with Adult Video Performers, 2002, the artist
rides a roller coaster with a group of male porn stars, but it is
obvious even in this context that he is a breed apart. His physique does
not resemble the performers' and his ebullient enjoyment contrasts
with their more restrained reactions. For the other monitor-based video
in the show, Saint Henry Composition, 2001, Sola allowed himself to be
used as a tackling dummy by a high school football team and was
inevitably knocked over by the uniformed players. By presenting himself
as either more emotionally expressive or physically passive than the
more "masculine" men with whom he interacts, Sola becomes
their feminized Other.
He takes a more active role in the projected video Studio Visit,
2005, the most engaging work here. This documents a series of visits by
art-world professionals, including Artforum contributor Jan Tumlir and
LA Louver gallery's Peter Goulds and Chris Pate, to Sola's Los
Angeles studio. Each time, after showing his guests around and asking
them if they would like to see a new performance, the artist suddenly
takes a flying leap out of a closed window, crashing through the
(breakaway) glass and leaving those present bemused. Here, Sola emulates
that archetypal movie scene in which the desperate protagonist seizes a
slim chance to escape a threatening situation. Particularly likable is
the moment just before each leap when Sola feigns interest in the
conversation while visibly planning his dive to freedom. (Perhaps this
video provides the backstory to Yves Klein's Leap Into the Void,
1960. Is it possible that a curator was responsible for driving Klein
out the window?)
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
That Sola repeats a physically demanding action many times in both
Saint Henry Composition and Studio Visit suggests a connection to
endurance art. But whereas that genre emphasized the body's
material presence, Sola's primary concern is the way in which
cultural phenomena still disseminate standards of masculine behavior
that real men feel obliged to live up to.