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Tuesday, July 26, 2016

Nairy Baghramian at Marian Goodman


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Dental anatomy, some of our first experiences of being medically manipulated and on a regular basis while awake a man drilling holes into your skull's open mouth and drooling. A pump and vacuum system to suck the spit so it doesn't fall down your throat and choke you. While most medical instruments are at pains to round themselves into soft contours reminiscent of the bodies they attend the dental is stainless medieval, which like horror films preoccupation with the torture reminding us of our corporeal selves. Torture is eased by the promise of death, the dental gives no such respite. Duchamp himself hired a dental mechanic in creating Étant donnés, using dental plastic to invoke the body in one of four "erotic sculptures." All which were negatives of the body, and none too specific, but overwhelmingly sexual. The biomorphic ambiguity invokes the body better than any specific image, the ambiguous evokes feelings which we relate to corporeality rather a concrete image we would relate to as information. It's why what is unseen has such stronger potential in torture scenes, ears cropped or arms chainsawed. We don't actually get to see our teeth be worked, but we feel the drill, the needle prick, the picking, scraping and pressure of tools near our soft sensitive gums, our bodies' manipulator, our strong associations with the dental.

Nairy Baghramian at Marian Goodman


See too: Nancy Lupo at Swiss InstituteNairy Baghramian at Museo Tamayo , Klara Lidén Alicia Frankovich at KuratorMartin Wong at P.P.O.WK.r.m. Mooney at Pied-á-terreHenrik Olesen at Reena SpaulingsErwin Wurm at Kunstmuseum WolfsburgMichael E. Smith at Zero