Issue No. 28 – Control

What is the nature of control? The desire for it—and to be free of it—are essential parts of both life and art.

Tom Burr at Bortolami Gallery

Image above: © Tom Burr, Untitled (from 42nd Street Structures), 1995 / courtesy of Bortolami Gallery

 

Bortolami Gallery presented Circa, an exhibition of Tom Burr presenting both works from the 1990s and new works.

Tom Burr’s work interrogates intimacy and what lies at the intersection of public and private. The exhibition will pair two of the artist’s iconic photographic series. Palm Beach Views defines private properties in terms of non-public spaces while Unearthing the public restrooms explores liminal spaces where desire could be satisfied, although clandestinely. Driven by an archeological interest, Tom Burr archived public restrooms in playgrounds and parks as a testament to the disappearance of cruising grounds, in the process of being closed by the city.

TB7007Image above: © Tom Burr, Palm Beach Views, 1999 / courtesy of Bortolami Gallery

 

For this exhibition, Burr will also recreate his second “earthwork” Circa ’77. Installed initially at the Kunsthalle Zürich in 1995, this piece recreates to scale a section of the Platzspitz, a riverside park flanking the Swiss National Museum in Zürich, as it might have looked circa 1977. During that period the park was unpopular with the general public, its dim lighting and dense vegetation limiting visibility and creating areas of isolation. Gay men actively invested in the park, modifying its topography to create new zones for meeting. This is the period that just preceded the Platzspitz’s infamous use as a needle park in the 1980s, which later prompted the massive clean up of the area in the mid 1990s. It is this clean up of the park that prompted Burr’s work.

On view in a corner of the gallery will be two wooden partitions from the exhibition 42nd Street Structures, which took place at American Fine Arts in 1995. Echoing the compartmentalized privacy of the extinct peep shows and forgotten porno bookstores of Times Square, these will respond to a previously unexhibited ensemble of Polaroid images capturing the facades of 42nd Street in the early ‘90s and recording their programmed dismantlement.

circa77Image above: © Tom Burr, Circa '77, 1995 / courtesy of Bortolami Gallery

In the second room, the artist will present Grips, a new body of work consisting of plates of steel, varying in size and shape. Some of these plates are secured onto the surface of others, while some feature printed information, and enact a play between raw and finished surfaces. All will repose on a ledge installed a foot off the ground, with the plates framing, overlapping and reflecting one another. Their levitation annuls the threat their weight poses. The distribution of the plates in the space redefines the structural lines of the room while their familiar scale evokes both bodily and architectural form. Through their form and imagery, the works in Grips explore this specific material, the body, the artist and audience, and the various manifestations of being held tightly in place.

A brochure will be published in conjuction with the exhibition featuring a critical text by Alex Kitnick.

burr4Image above: ©  Untitled (from 42nd Street Structures), 1995 / courtesy of Bortolami Gallery

Tom Burr (b. 1963 in New Haven, Connecticut) lives and works in New York. He has shown extensively throughout Europe and the United States. Current projects include to expose, to show, to demonstrate, to inform, to offer, a group exhibition at MuMOK in Vienna, Austria. His most recent exhibitions include a major large-scale site specific work commissioned on the occasion Köln Skulptur #8 in Köln, Germany and a public installation for Lustwarande ’15 in Tilburg, Netherlands. Concurrently to this exhibition, an anthology of the artist’s writings will be published by Frac Champagne-Ardenne, France in collaboration with Sternberg Press. Burr attended the Whitney Independent Study Program and the School of Visual Arts in New York.

Jan Dibbets at Peter Freeman, Inc.

Lucie Awards: Text and Photos by Rose Hartman