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3.14 / Sidesplitting
May 3, 2012. The “fragmentation, unfamiliarity, and unknowableness” that Rob Marks ascribes to embodiment in his shotgun review of Stephen De Staebler’s sculptures echoes across much of the performative work from the 1970s that make an appearance in this issue. Produced during a time when systems, language, and actions were the prevailing concerns of Conceptual art practice, as Terri Cohn notes in her review of “State of Mind” at the UC Berkeley Art Museum, these works treat the body as a precarious or malleable object and highlight the inherent instability of an identity rooted in a physical self. They have a tendency to disrupt and critique, but in ways that are farcical, so as Bas Jan Ader plummets off the roof or Martha Wilson photographs herself in drag, we laugh even as their actions call the notion of subjectivity into question. Laughter is a form of rupture, after all; it can irrevocably change the way we perceive a situation or person, but it seems that’s okay as long as we’re in on the joke. Enjoy—PM
Shotgun Review was founded in 2005. Most of our current regular contributors began their relationship with Art Practical as writers for Shotgun Review. Since October 2009, all shotgun reviews have appeared as part of the issues for Art Practical, but you can see the site's archive here.
Back Issues
3.4 / Of Friction, Of Location, Of Context
Features
Aesthetic Events in Occupation
The Cheese Stands Alone: The Trouble with Funny Art
Profiles and Reviews
Walid Raad
Reviews
Better a Live Ass Than a Dead Lion
Cheap Trick Part 2
From London: Frieze Art Fair
Pissarro’s People
Richard Serra Drawing: A Retrospective
Think Art - Act Science
!Women Art Revolution
Shotgun Reviews
From Los Angeles: Selections from Pacific Standard Time
IMMATERIAL
Rex Ray: New Work
Richard Serra Drawing: A Retrospective
3.3 / Make Big Demands
Features
A Larger Stage
On Seeing and Being Seen
Profiles and Reviews
Martha Wilson
Reviews
From Los Angeles: Now Dig This!
From New York: The Creative Time Summit
Run Off
We Bought The Seagram Building
You Can’t Make Art by Making Art: Artists Reflect on the Legacy of David Ireland
Shotgun Reviews
A Child’s View from Gaza
Better a Live Ass Than a Dead Lion
Somewhere
Next Deadline for Shotguns: October 25, 2011
3.2 / Occupy the Art World
Features
Questions I Haven’t Found Answers for as an Artist
Interview with Pablo Helguera
Profiles and Reviews
Allen Ruppersberg
Reviews
HERE.
Kurt Schwitters: Color and Collage
Kurt Schwitters: Color and Collage
Residency Projects II
From Beijing: The Peach Colony
Shotgun Reviews
Ever After
Ever After
Manifest 770
Pastures
Stick Like Glue
Next Deadline for Shotguns: October 25, 2011
3.1 / Shotgun!










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