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« Iain
Baxter: New Spaces. »
LUCY R. LIPPARD
"Iain Baxter: New Spaces", Artscanada, vol. 26,
no. 132-133, June 1969, p.3-7.
"It is the Visual Unknown that challenges the N.E. Thing
researchers. Like researchers anywhere, they seek to add to the world's
store of knowledge — by exploratory research on the frontiers
of basic theory, by product research for results in specific tangible
forms, by production research for processes that yield precise end
products. These probings of the why and how of visual things and their
combinations are efforts to discover distinct properties or effects
and the means of putting them into operation."
(N.E. Thing Company Operations Statement, 1968)
"Ecology as used today is: a science which investigates
organisms in relation to their environment; a philosophy in which
the world of life is interpreted in terms of natural processes; an
art requiring skill and having a plan and a pattern within which many
activities may be centered. . . . This involves an open mind which
is willing to use sensory observations as a basis for mental explanation."
(Angus M. Woodbury, Principles of General Ecology, New York-Toronto,
1954).
"Nobody can commit photography alone. It is possible to have
at least the illusion of reading and writing in isolation, but photography
does not foster such attitudes. If there is any sense in deploring
the growth of corporate and collective art forms such as the film
and the press, it is surely in relation to the previously individualist
technologies that these new forms corrode." (Marshall McLuhan,
Un-derstanding Media, New York, 1964.)
Vancouver is several cities: a big ugly port, a visually unexceptional
residential community, a university town, an up-to-date supermarket
suburbia, container of and contained by magnificent natural scenery.
Baxter works in and out of the various identities offered by his environment.
His endless ideas admit no limitation to an artist's activities. Like
artists all over the world today he is replacing the usual art-making
and appreciating procedures—image identification with reality
through the imitative or decorative object—with a direct and
expanded attack on the idea of art. In his role as President of the
N.E. Thing Company, he can be as commercial as any businessman, as
free as any artist. He has learned from McLuhan that "all meaning
alters with acceleration. . . . Control over change would
seem to consist in moving not with it but ahead of it."
Baxter's obsession with "Visual Sensitivity Information Dynamics"
has led him to extend the electronic "nervous system" into
broader spaces, primarily landscape, or the rural, urban and suburban
outdoors. Such understated, almost non-existent pieces as the rubber
line through low bushes, the chain or yellow string in the forest,
are light, flexible, unconcerned with gravity. They exist not as objects
or volumes to be reckoned with as separate entities, but as devices
for the re-definition or refocusing of the setting in which they are
placed. In the marker pieces, the nails driven into the ground, or
the strewn rubber sections, the explicit graphic quality is interrupted;
in the ski pieces it becomes the delineation of distance and the path
of action.
Dennis Oppenheim says that in his outdoor pieces he is bombarding
existing volumes with new information. Despite the differences between
his and Baxter's approaches, this is a good basic definition of what
generally happens in such work. The new information is patently less
than is expected of art; it is not self-contained (though still limited
by the actual length and breadth of the project); often it is not
static and does not draw attention to itself as a single entity. On
the other hand, many of Baxter's most beautiful pieces do not escape
the object vein at all; they are isolated forms in nature rather than
in a gallery space; they geometricize nature without competing with
it or dominating it in any way. Such geometricization represents the
vestiges of the pictorialism that painting and sculpture have been
subjected to for eons, of the traditional imposition of artificial
or man-made order on less visible natural order. It is a matter of
degree, however. Much of the new work is very general, an extension
of the all-over principle into very low-tension areas.
In this sense some of these works have to do with Impressionism far
more than the 19th century Picturesque with which Sidney Tillim has
unfavorably aligned them (Artforum, December, 1968). Impressionism
more than any other modern style dealt with pure perceptual experience
and with a complete visual field rather than significant form. It
had a non-hierarchical view of nature—the comprehensive broad
glance or scan instead of the single focus, sharing the vagueness
of natural perception. There is a good deal more to the analogy than
that, and to the relationship of Impressionism to the "broken
edge" syndrome of recent art, but in Baxter's case it is worth
touching upon because of his long standing involvement with nature
as a phenomenon rather than as formal source.
Baxter is not and never has been a formalist. Unlike most of his American
colleagues he comes into photography not from a minimal-serial background,
and into the new landscape not from single structures that out-grew
their formats or collapsed and disintegrated into their spaces, but
from science into art, from a fundamental interest in the physical
make-up of his surroundings, which led to a fusion of surroundings
and information about them. In college he had courses in ecology,
the study of organisms in relation to their environment. Ecology is
sometimes called external physiology, and physiology, internal ecology.
The eco-system approach, in which animal and vegetable organisms (humans
too) are considered as an interacting unit, is just being explored
by artists. The Pulsa group at Yale (see Arts/canada, December,
1968) is involved with a subliminal or physiological reaction to the
ways in which it can rhythmically focus the energy latent in the environment.
Richard Serra had an exhibition in Rome in 1966 that consisted of
real animals making their own environments; Charles Ross reflects
the environment in prisms and calls his work ecologies. The various
earthworks artists (or geomorphologists) are also more or less concerned
with ecology, though in practice they can be poles apart. Baxter's
optimistic embracing of the dynamics of rapid change is directly opposed
to Robert Smithson's entropy or energy drain approach to earth, history
and time; in between the two are infinite differences of degree and
sensibility.
(Smithson is from industrial New Jersey; Baxter from the rural West.
There are two schools or approaches to ecology, the first, associated
with Europe, is called "static," and is attributed to Europe's
restricted areas of study, the long-accomplished destruction or modification
natural communities; the second, associated with America, is called
"dynamic" and is attributed to our remaining vast areas
where natural variation can be observed on a large scale and under
a variety of circumstances. A basic difference between Smithson and
Baxter is found in their reactions to space. Smithson contemplates
finity; Baxter welcomes infinity; Smithson's "primal ooze"
is deathlike but time defying; it traps but preserves; Baxter's art
is fertile but ephemeral.)
When a sheet of glass is inserted into a clean snowbank, its transparency
is exploited in several different ways; in the equally sensual and
visual implications of the ice-like glass slicing invisibly through
the white snow, and in the top section showing over the surface making
visible but somehow less sensuously direct the same experience. A
double-sided mirror, slightly tilted so as to reflect nothing but
the grass in which it rests, becomes a part of the lawn except for
the fact that it provides a specific point in which to focus the general
experience. These rectangular impositions on the landscape (like Smithson's
mirror paths and his use of enlarged photographs set in the landscape
they depict and then rephotographed, and like Jim Rosenquist's inset
panels of sky on sky, grass on grass, grisaille grass on coloured
grass) are unintentional reprisals of Magritte's original statement
of the ambiguity between reality and depicted reality. Once this paradox
has been taken off canvas and placed in the subject itself, however,
the ramifications change. For that matter, Baxter's poured paint project
and grease pieces deal with materials in or on a receptacle or surface,
as do many paintings. But the point of view is no longer fixed, and
change, rather than the Magrittean dreamlike state or the gestural
painter's "still" of previous action, is re-instated. (At
the same time, the documentary photograph reinstates the fixed viewpoint.)
From a formal point of view, Baxter's elemental pieces are less interesting
than those of some of his colleagues. He is less concerned with immense
scale, with a work's "presence," for instance, than with
rapid comment on a situation, location, or idea. His interest in the
aerial view, or flat floor work, does not come out of the gradual
removal of abstract sculpture from the vertical (totemic) to the horizontal
(landscape) plane, but from his own preoccupation with all varieties
of visual information and ways of recording it. His approach is usually
fragmentary. He is a cheerful eclectic, and as such seriously offends
the sensibility geared to the singlemindedness of esthetic pursuit,
confounds those devoted to categories. His equally active mind and
eye are unencumbered by consistency or specialization. Along with
his art-as-art (the inflated landscapes etc.), he makes art-about-art
(the "extensions," ranging from the extended Noland continuing
stripes as ribbons and the extended Flavin that incorporates all the
lights in Vancouver, to the extended Larry Weiner in which the original
reads "An object tossed from one country to another"; Baxter's
Canadian extension reads: ", and back again." He makes non-Art:
ACTS or Aesthetically Claimed Things, which are photographs from anything—real
landscape or industrial objects, pages of books, works of art, Indian
mounds, supermarkets, signs, etc. The ACTS resolve the frustration
artists feel in the face of an industrial landscape or even art of
the past which is financially impossible to rival; the photographs
are stamped ACT and an accompanying certificate declares these things
have "met the stringent requirements of sensitivity information
as set forth by the N.E. Thing Co." He also makes anti-Art, or
Aesthetically Rejected Things (ART) which do not meet those stringent
requirements.
The idea of claiming non-art objects as art and relegating art objects
to non-art status, is of course Duchamp's and has been expanded by
Warhol; and the claim of non-portable objects from life has occurred
to several artists in the past few years. (Ed Ruscha's books, like
26 Gasoline Stations and Various Small Fires and Milk, which attack
the idea from an especially deadpan angle, were particularly original
and influential.) Baxter, however, carries the conception further
than most people would care to; I suspect the ACT department will
continue forever, and be contagious, because there is something highly
satisfying about keeping an alert eye open to every aspect of the
environment. Everyone interested in looking has played the parlor
car game in which sights and similarities to art in the environment
are pointed out; when these "things" are conscientiously
recorded, the experience is retained.
Baxter's approach to photography, his recognition of its special importance
to an isolated, reproduction-oriented art culture, and the degree
of extension and intension (to use the names of two NETCo. departments)
to which he has taken it, is unique. Because the photograph does reinstate
the fixed viewpoint, flux is only re-admitted through multiplicity.
(Everyone in the Baxter family, including the five and eight year
olds, takes movies and photos.) By commenting on all art and all things,
by having no one style except openness, Baxter defies several of the
limitations that plague the art world and artist today. His approach
defies the ownership syndrome and may encourage a reformed collector,
or a patron (usually young and mobile), who does not need or even
want to amass bulky precious objects that have to be stored or resold
when they accumulate, but is willing to set into motion an artist's
idea about his environment and thereby participate in the kind of
rapid aesthetic change that makes art and life in the 60s both exciting
and frustrating. The photograph satisfies the vestiges of the acquisitory
urge. The anonymous collector who wants no record whatsoever of his
purchase is as rare as the anonymous artist who takes no credit for
his work (Baxter tried this for a while too, masquerading with a friend
as "IT" and having two anonymous exhibitions in 1966).
Ideas that are rapidly transmissible and photographic cross-references
and information about objects or sites are more stimulating to the
isolated artist than the reproductions of objects that are fundamentally
un-reproducible, objects intended primarily as physical presences.
These actually arrive in the provinces very late and in the meantime
are reproduced with a low level of comprehensibility. Baxter has independently
had a lot of the same ideas as New York artists, at the same time,
without knowing theirs; the reverse is also true. Such ideas are in
the air as the result of general conditions of prevailing style and
thought pattern, but the provincial artist cannot get his information
to others fast enough for its impact to be felt, partly due to lack
of critics sophisticated enough to be published on a national scale.
Consequently, the original artist in isolated areas often comes out
looking derivative. If at least one art magazine were given over to
visual and verbal information with a minimum of opinion and transitions,
and no reviews or judgements, and that magazine were cheap and frequent,
covering all areas of the continent (and, with a certain still unavoidable
lag, the rest of the world), then the power grip of the art "centres"
could be considerably diminished and the chances for the artist outside
those centres to participate in general aesthetic decisions would
be far greater.
Baxter is not overly worried about his image, since it is fragmented
to begin with, but he is excited about ideas and about ways of participating
more closely in the idea network that forms current art thought. The
corporate set-up, NETCo., (officially registered as a company) enables
him to work partially outside the usual art channels. The profusion
of non-formal, often corny projects that he conceives at the same
time as those projects which have a real significance, repel purists
in any area — formalist, conceptualist, or Dada-pop. Baxter
is, however, probably the prototype of the new artist, a product of
the McLubricated era but also of the vast natural landscape in which
he lives. Like the archetypal artist, however, he is concerned with
ways of seeing, and seeing the natural and the artificial environment,
and he is concerned with communicating these ways so that others see
more clearly the world about them. |