March 24, 2011.
The line between reality and unreality is always frayed. As artists toy with artifice and plant red herrings, we find the rug pulled from beneath us and are left with only a work's physical or psychological presence to orient ourselves—in Bill Berkson's words, we must feel the mud underneath our feet. So it is that Mary Anne Kluth finds a greater reality in an artificial rock present in space than a video recording of an actual, earth-born rock; and John Zarobell searches in vain for a revealing self-portrait of Hasan Elahi contained in one hundred television monitors that play out the minutiae of the artist's daily life. Similarly, Jonn Herschend uses multimedia to cast veils: as his narratives are turned on their heads, viewers are left to set their own parameters for reality. Among the twists and turns of a whirligig ride, we must trust ourselves to find some level ground. —TT