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Comments/Context: The mobile phone tower is an excellent example of one of the necessary evils of modern life. While most people demand better coverage for their phones, town zoning boards and local residents aggressively fight the telecommunications companies to prevent the construction of massive eyesores that are visible from miles around. Both sides would like to somehow make these towers "invisible", and the current solution favored by many is to dress the towers up to look like trees, so they blend in better with the surrounding environment. Or at least that's the intention.
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The towers themselves are disguised as a dizzying array of species: there are palms and cypress, cacti and multiple types of evergreens, some with perfectly symmetrical branches, others with quirks and random limbs to make them look less fake. While a few do a satisfying job of blending into the environment, most have been transformed into caricatures of the natural world, odd sculptural forms that border on the absurd; it's quite easy to wander around this show giggling at the insanity of it all.
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Overall, this project contains a convincing mix of conceptual inversion and clever ridiculousness. As such, it has an element of fun that will broaden its appeal far beyond the usual crowd of ardent Becher adherents.
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Collector's POV: The prints in this show are priced as follows: the 60x50 prints are $9000 each, while the 24x20 prints are $2750 or $4000 (including the frame). Voit's work has no secondary market history, so gallery retail is likely the only option for interested collectors at this point.
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While I did like the large scale images quite well as individual pieces, I think these images will be most successful when hung together in groups. For those museums and collectors who are amassing a representative sample of the Düsseldorf school (or are planning the comprehensive retrospective for a decade from now), it seems obvious that a grid of 4, 6 or 8 of these small prints would be an important acquisition, especially since they represent the next generation of idea refinement (from the Bechers to Ruff to Voit).
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Rating: * (one star) GOOD (rating system described here)
Transit Hub:
Robert Voit, New Trees
Through March 6th
Through March 6th
1 comment:
A very interesting series which is at once a documentary and a parody of the times we happen to be living in. It makes these ridiculous edifices into road side attractions. It also seems to highlight how we feel guilt for destroying the beauty of nature, yet we aren't really willing to do much about it. Still I wonder how many people who live near these objects fail to notice them in there daily existence.
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