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Unearthing Ant Farm: a quarter century after the disbanding of Ant Farm, a traveling exhibition pieces together the history of this group of iconoclastic, media-obsessed artists

Art in America, Jan, 2005 by Melissa E. Feldman

Ant Farm may be largely unknown to the general public, but many people, even those with little interest in contemporary art, will be familiar with the image of 10 vintage Cadillacs half-buried nose down in a field. Cadillac Ranch (1974), which still stands rusting and graffiti-covered in Amarillo, Tex., may be the only indelible image created by this renegade, hippie-era artistic collaborative. Indeed, "Ant Farm 1968-1978," organized by the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, demonstrates that while visual punch and graphics were definitely their bag, Ant Farm members were less concerned with manufacturing images than they were with grass-roots political activism that involved the local public and the mass media. Many of their projects were never actually produced and take the form of elaborate blueprints or stylish graphics with explanatory texts that resemble commercial art. Others were so ephemeral as to be inconsequential. The show's co-curator Steve Seid describes their "processual" approach to videos made on road trips as mementos rather than works "polished for posterity."

Founded in San Francisco in 1968, Ant Farm was the brainchild of architecture post-grads Chip Lord and Doug Michels. Over the course of a 10-year lifespan (the group disbanded in 1978, following a studio fire that destroyed much of its work), membership expanded and shrank--according to friendships, changing interests and such things as spiritual sabbaticals in India--but Lord and Michels, along with Curtis Schreier, remained its core. (1) They started out as an architecture and design group, and occasionally they did build buildings, but for the most part Ant Farm's activities belonged to the most experimental art forms of the day: performance, video, installation and environmental art. While contemporaries such as Vito Acconci and Bruce Nauman were experimenting with low-tech, body-centered forms, Ant Farm promoted a mod, space-age sensibility and often embraced the latest technologies. From videos and performances spoofing corporate culture and the media to Dolphin Embassy (1976), which promoted man-to-sea mammal communication, Ant Farm's work dealt with critiquing the present and envisioning the future. The collective was also ahead of its time in its multi-tasking, interdisciplinary approach. Graphic design, PR, publishing, teaching and engineering, among other areas of expertise, all came under its artistic umbrella.

Ant Farm projects of a single year give an idea of the group's broad range. In 1972 they designed the award-winning House of the Century, an outlandish home on a lake in Texas that looks like a bulbous nose and eyes, and launched Top Value Television (TVTV, in collaboration with the video collective Raindance) to provide alternative coverage of the political conventions of that year. Meanwhile, in Houston, they created an unusual time capsule for the opening of the Contemporary Arts Museum's new building: a refrigerator ("open door to the American dream") stocked with everything from false eyelashes to NoDoz. The fridge also stored Ant Farm's Videotapes of the museum's opening parties and humdrum scenes of Houston. The catalogue for the present exhibition takes on this diversity one discipline or medium at a time (architecture, inflatable structures, video), and an interview by co-curator Constance M. Lewallen with Ant Farm's three "principals" (Lord, Michels and Schreier) provides a chatty chronology. (The interview's significance as a historical document has been amplified by Michels's sudden death just six months before the exhibition was to open in Berkeley.) While conjuring the zeitgeist so vividly you could smell the patchouli oil, the catalogue unfortunately has little to say about the group's relationship to Conceptual art and other kindred movements of the time.

In its early days, Ant Farm hit the road with a tour of "architectural performances" during which the group unfurled its anti-architectural "inflatables," inexpensive, portable shelters made of vinyl that provided the stage for lectures and "happenings" (read: hanging out, sometimes naked). Anyone who wanted to make his or her own inflatable could buy Ant Farm's Inflatocookbook. The group traveled in the Media Van (1971), a customized Chevy complete with a bubble skylight for videotaping readside scenery. Influenced by Buckminster Fuller, Le Corbusier and Archigram, Ant Farm explored utopian notions of how communities might function and communicate. For example, Truckstop Network (1970) was a proposed system of neighborhoods for "new nomads" like themselves who would be connected by television and computer. The system was designed to provide everything Dora electricity and day care to astrology classes. Freedomland (1973) proposed a mall (or "electro-video landscape" in Ant Farm-speak) for teenagers, combining an interior park with shopping and leisure activities--available on foot, but also on television in Ant Farm's precursor to the Shopping Network--all under one big plastic bubble roof. In a farcical non sequitur typical of their work, the structure was also supposed to house the world's largest snake.

 

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