On ViewHill Art Foundation Three Christs, Sleeping Mime, and the Last Supper; Pagan Paradise: Charles Ray and the Hill CollectionSeptember 28 February 15, 2020New York

Charles Ray is a slippery artist for me. In the time that I have been engaging with his work, I have often been surprised by what gives me pause, and by what I find myself returning to days, sometimes even years, after I have seen it. So often, it is something slight: witnessing the slow ripples created by the edges of a womans fur sleeve as it dragged through Ink Box (1986), installed in Rays 1998 Whitney retrospective; observing the sheen of flowing ink in 1987s Ink Line and becoming aware, before even reading the title or anything about it, that the line moved. I wondered what, if anything, would strike me when I visited the Hill Art Foundations current exhibition, Three Christs, Sleeping Mime, and the Last Supper; Pagan Paradise, which is curated by Ray from the Foundations collection and features, in addition to four of his own pieces, intimately-scaled bronzes made by Italian, French, and Netherlandish sculptors of the 16th and 17th centuries.

While viewing the show I was confident that Golden Jewelry (undated), a tiny shriveled apple, complete with gold stem, gifted by the artist to his wife, would make the greatest impact. But no: what I have been turning over, again and again, is Rays recumbent Mime (2014), and more precisely, the sleeping Mimes soft-soled shoes. They are aluminum, as is the rest of the sculpture, and presumably metallurgically stiff, but visually they are also undeniably ductile and respond believably to the figures bony feet. Similarly, the aluminum cot on which Mime rests strains and bows under his weight: we can notice these effects if we get down on our hands and knees because the sculpture does not sit flat on a podium. Instead, it rests lightly on the floor on the four legs of the cot, rendered fully in the round, even underneath. And then there is the fact that these qualities were not made by the artist at all. Rather, Mime was carved by a robot, as Ray writes in an essay that accompanies the exhibition. Any visible hand is purely metallic, the materials or the non-human makers.

The effects created by the surface finish of Mime are further explored in a sterling silver sculpture nearby, Mountain Lion Attacking Dog (2018), which Ray describes as an essay in mark making. This work portrays, through different methods of chasing, the respective pelts of its animal protagonists. Rays attention to such technical challenges also creates a dialogue with the Renaissance and Baroque sculptures he has selected to appear in the exhibition. The installation is a lesson in withholding: there are only nine pieces included over the two floors, with every wall-mounted object given its own wall and each sculpture in the round provided its own generous floor space. As a result, we can draw quite close to objects that would more often be seen sharing cases with others.

This decision provides opportunities to note, for example, the ripping flesh of Barthelemy Prieurs Lion Devouring a Doe (probably cast before 1583), the fact that the grotesque figure in Adriaen de Vriess Bacchic Man: Lomazzo Personifying the Accademia della Val di Blenio(cast circa 1578-1580) wears a mask (seen from a distance, this is very difficult to understand), or the varying patina of Alessandro Algardis Christ at the Column (circa 1630s), molten chocolate across Christs back, but lighter and more mottled at the knees and the back of his legs. This suggests the touch and caress of an earlier owner (or owners), and, while we cant embrace the sculpture ourselves, Christ at the Column, in the company of Mime, encourages us to imagine the materials properties and the strangely animated suppleness that is at play here. Algardis Corpus Christi (circa 1646), suspended high and alone on the gallerys stark white wall, emphasizes its figures enunciated fingers and toesas Ray comments, the Algardi Christs are depicted as if alive, and this articulation is mimicked in the splayed toes of Rays attacked Dog. Antonio Susinis gilded bronze Cristo Morto (circa 1590-1615) is hung at head height so that we can easily make out his bulging eyes. This Christ is truly dead, or so the artist makes the sculpture and its bronze mediumone I just described as livingseem.

Materiality, finish, the artists hand or lack thereof, and the imitative potential of sculpture: Ray is, in this installation of his work and its important bronze precedents, presenting a philosophical discussion of sculptural possibility. In his essay, Ray asks, Does my mime sleep, or does he mime sleep? and his question is justified: sculpture can only ever mime the real. Mime does not sleep or dream; the apple will never fully rot; statues of Christ are neither living nor dead; and the dog and doe let out no heaven-rending scream.

Go here to read the rest:
Three Christs, Sleeping Mime, and the Last Supper; Pagan Paradise - Brooklyn Rail

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