By Joseph R. Wolin
Published: January 1, 2009
Okiishi, 30, works in photography and video, making awkward and deliberately amateurish quasi-narratives inflected by pop culture. E.lliotT.: Children of the New Age (2004), for instance, mashes up references to Spielberg's E.T. and the Heaven's Gate suicide cult in a cryptic domestic drama, acted woodenly by a slightly androgynous man (played by Mauss) and woman. The work Mauss and Okiishi make together shares the open-endedness and unpretentious disinterest in definitive statements that characterize their individual production. At Gavin Brown's Enterprise in New York in the spring of 2007, the artists presented One Season in Hell, an installation based on Rimbaud's narcotic poem. Okiishi fed the original French through Google's online translator and used the results to write his own text, full of blunts, jock itch, Volvos, wigger boys, Karl Lagerfeld, and South Park. Mauss annotated and overlaid the words with his drawing, and the illustrated pages were framed and hung around the perimeter of the gallery. A performance, Vorstellungsklavier, found Okiishi playing an upright piano while a rough video montage was projected on its back. He repeated it at the Künstlerhaus Stuttgart, this time with footage of the first performance projected on the piano; by its third iteration, back in New York, the projection had become a mise en abyme of projections within projections, the live and recorded music merging with ambient sounds in an echoing cacophony. Elliptical, glancing, contingent, the artists' collaborations, like their solo efforts, evince an oblique, yet nonetheless heartfelt, consideration of shared interests, histories, and lives. Their professional relationship seems to answer a question Okiishi posed in an interview: "How do you move from love to aesthetics? "Ken Okiishi + Nick Mauss" originally appeared in the December 2008 / January 2009 issue of Modern Painters. For a complete list of articles from this issue available on ARTINFO, see Modern Painters' December 2008 / January 2009 Table of Contents.
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