February 2007
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This month, with the exhibition Picasso and American Art, SFMOMA reshuffles the deck of name-brand, crowd-drawing artists obligatory in major museums. More than a hundred works by Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, Jasper Johns, and other famous artists will be on view, played off more than 20 Picasso masterpieces. But for those of us who also care to know what artists are doing now, the museum’s exhibition of SECA Art Award winners is the show to see.
Every two years, in consultation with the museum’s Society for the Encouragement of Contemporary Art, SFMOMA’s curators honor four or five emerging Bay Area artists with the prestigious SECA prize. The group show that follows often quickens careers, as in the case of Barry McGee (1996), Gay Outlaw (1998), and John Bankston (2002). More important, this exhibition delivers the curatorial equivalent of a state-of-the-union address. Working in paint and assemblage, video and installation and performance, this year’s laureates appear to have little in common. Fundamentally, though, Leslie Shows, Amy Franceschini, Mitzi Pederson, Sarah Cain, and Kota Ezawa have the same preoccupation, reflecting a central concern of the museum: how to express something meaningfully in our media-saturated society. From making news to opting out entirely, these artists present an impressive range of possibilities.
Leslie Shows, the most formidable of the lesser-known artists, takes the most direct approach. Her motivations are unequivocally political, the stuff of op-ed columns channeled through the spectacle of art. In large, mixed-media paintings, she explores our impact on the environment by envisioning the wreckage. She constructs garbage dumps from magazine scraps and turns slicks of acrylic paint into unpopulated landscapes. The total absence of humans in her paintings suggests an extinction of the species. We witness the destruction from afar, unable to question, let alone intervene, as if we were an unborn generation consoled by visions of the ruined world we’ll never have to endure.
Shows’s paintings are not didactic. They’re too strange, and exquisite, to serve as mere illustrations in an antipollution campaign. They are not a Ten Commandments but a Book of Revelation.
For Old Testament certainty, see Amy Franceschini, who makes art in the interest of sustainable living. Unabashedly dogmatic, her work runs a gamut from installation to performance, frequently bleeding into activism. Recently, she has been working to bring indigenous life back to areas of Silicon Valley destroyed by the toxins associated with making computer chips. Part Johnny Appleseed, part Maria Montessori, she strives to green the valley and convey technology’s impact by having others garden with her.
Laudable goals, of course, but they aren’t enhanced by labeling the project Gardening Superfund Sites and calling it art. Franceschini has argued that “art remains more open than activism” and “allows for more mobility without constraints of ‘right’ and ‘wrong.’” Yet
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