Arts Publications
Topic: RSS FeedElke Krystufek - Brief Article
ArtForum, March, 2000 by Elizabeth Janus
CENTRE GENEVOIS DE GRAVURE CONTEMPORAINE
Elke Krystufek's art gives a contemporary twist to that nineteenth-century notion of the artist as narcissist. Over the past several years she has produced a seemingly endless stream of close-up self-portraits, made by photographing her face, naked body, or torso--always reflected in a mirror--and then copying the images onto canvas in an aggressively expressionist style. Clearly indebted to women's body art from the '70s as well as the exhibitionism of the Viennese Actionists, Krystufek also shares affinities with the more confessional art of a contemporary like Tracey Emin, who likewise lays bare her angst about her own sexuality with an unflinching eye and brutal self-scrutiny.
In her latest work, Krystufek appears to be looking into the roots of a critical period of psychosexual development, the passage from childhood to adolescence. For this exhibition, "In the Arms of Luck," she presents more than forty new works--all from 1999--including photographs, videos, and paintings, but also a group of store mannequins (infants, children, and adolescents) dressed in various combinations of wigs and flea-market finds along with T-shirts designed by the artist. On the shirts, Krystufek has printed photographs of herself, often in poses suggestive of amateur pornography and sporting the same wig as the mannequin. The shirts also carry phrases like "stop pressurin' me" or "make me wanna scream," taken from songs by pop idol Michael Jackson and evoking cliche visions of adolescent alienation. The mannequins and the video monitors have been placed in front of or next to paintings and photographs, some of which bear the same images as the shirts, but this time montaged onto reproductions of kit schy, painted sea- and landscapes or photographs by other artists, such as Rineke Dijkstra or Zoe Leonard.
The sheer visual bulimia of the exhibition and the continual cross-referencing among media suggest that Krystufek conceived the show as a multi-room installation rather than a selection of individual pieces, a point also reinforced by the videos. In one, titled It's a Small World, the artist is shown setting up a photo shoot with a naked doll on her bed as the title song plays in the background. In another, TV footage from a documentary on a Viennese collector of pornographic memorabilia is mixed with the artist's tape of her own visit to Disneyland. Moving through the exhibition, there is a constant shift between a feeling of sexual tension (as well as a vague undercurrent of pedophilia) and one of boredom with the utterly banal images of childhood innocence, which together create a clash that even Dr. Freud would have appreciated.
Krystufek has completely ingested American popular culture and infused it with the now legendary Viennese tendency toward jarring theatrical excess. She then spits out the results in the form of her own peculiar brand of contemporary iconography. Psychological implications aside, it is a vision imbued with some of the lessons of second-wave feminism, particularly those taught by predecessors like Valie Export, who contested the sublimation of male fears of female sexuality. Yet Krystufek doesn't seem to buy into the movement's politics. This ambivalence is what makes her work compelling. It raises questions about the pertinence of using one's own private anxieties to make the rest of us confront ours.
- 5 Rules for Immediate Annuities
- Death in the Family: 12 Things to Do Now
- Dumbest Things You Do With Your Money
- 6 Online Networking Mistakes to Avoid
- 401(k) Mistakes to Avoid
- 5 Economic Scenarios to Keep You Up at Night
- The Real ‘Best Places to Retire’
- Best Credit Cards for You
- 12 Tough Questions to Ask Your Parents
- The Real ‘Best Colleges’
- Home Buyer Tax Credit: How to Cash In
- Why You Shouldn't Bash Cash
- 8 Phony 'Bargains' and Better Alternatives
- Danger: 3 Debit Card Scams to Avoid
- 6 Myths About Gas Mileage
- 29 Fees We Hate Most
- Quick and Easy Ways to Boost Returns
- Best Stocks to Buy Now
- Lower Your Taxes: 10 Moves to Make Now
- New Jobs: 8 Lessons from Real-Life Career Switchers
- The New Job Market: Who Wins and Who Loses?
- Health Care Reform's Public Option: Everything You Need to Know
- Volunteer Work When Unemployed: Should You Work for Free?
- Whose Recovery Is This?
- Long-Term-Care Insurance: 4 Biggest Risks to Avoid
Content provided in partnership with
Most Recent Arts Articles
Most Recent Arts Publications
Most Popular Arts Articles
- What makes a successful business person? Business people who are tops in their field have a lot in common, and art professionals can learn a lot from their successes and strategies
- Emily Watson - IVTR
- Toni Cade Bambara's use of African American Vernacular English in "The Lesson"
- The Arnolfini double portrait: a simple solution
- The voucher - play - The Literature of Democratic Spain: 1975-1992



