frieze

Current Shows RSS

Tetsumi Kudo

Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York, USA

imagePhotograph ©Chris Burke

Tetsumi Kudo’s work has influenced artists including Paul McCarthy and Mike Kelley, though, outside of Europe and Japan, his work remains more influential than it is widely known.  The current exhibition at Andrea Rosen – which precedes a major retrospective at the Walker Art Center this autumn – is part of what appears to be an organized initiative to introduce Kudo’s work to an American audience.

Kudo, who died in 1990, fashioned a world of DayGlo horror that counters chaos with control. Accordingly, this exhibition (adroitly curated by Joshua Mack in collaboration with Hiroko Kudo) transforms the gallery into a hellish hothouse: thermometers take the temperature of protuberances rising out of the soil; penis-faced parakeets sit in a cage like unhappy products of genetic experimentation (Your Portrait, 1965-66). 

image

Photograph ©Chris Burke

These sculptures, in which genitalia and dismembered body parts appear with mind-numbing regularity, depict a rapidly unraveling psyche.  Indeed, unraveling skeins of thread are the dominant motif of The Survival of the Avant-Garde (1985), which reduces the human figure to just a skull, genitalia and a mess of coloured threads. 

At the core of Kudo’s contemporary appeal is this explosive sense of disorder and disintegration.  But for all the grim and often unexpected humour of his work – penises sprout from plants and a loose collection of eyeballs rattle around at the bottom of a pail – the work arises out of a firmly considered political and ideological position.

Kudo’s early work is often explicitly political, staging itself in response to Western capitalism and in particular the American post-war occupation of Japan – Philosophy of Impotence (1961) was made in direct response to the 1960 signing of the United States Japan Security Treaty.  His later work is perhaps less obviously ideological, but it retains (and also transforms) some of the same themes of occupation, resistance and control.

In this current exhibition, these key ideas are applied to the relentless paradoxes of sexual drive.  On one level, Kudo presents human sexuality as a matter of all-consuming drive – senseless, tormented, and essentially removed from the self.  But what is crucial here are the two primary settings that occupy Kudo’s sculpture, and through which he considers the quandary of sexual drive: the garden and the cage.  These are both symbols of the domestication of the natural, and the degree to which the resulting sculptures are at once rampant and contained suggests a confrontation between drive and its social suppression.  Ultimately, both drive and the fabric of the life it disrupts are irrevocably compromised; the consideration of that mutual state of uneasy concession is what makes Kudo’s work cohere beyond pure drive, in a realm of complex emotion. 

Katie Kitamura


Responses

There are no responses yet for this article.


Add a Response

Sorry, only subscribers and registered users may leave responses. Please log in or register.

Please Login

About this review

Published on 10/07/08
by Katie Kitamura


Current Shows in this city

Previous Shows in this city

Other Articles by Katie Kitamura

RSS Feeds RSS

Contemporary Fine Arts
Gagosian Gallery
Gladstone Gallery
White Cube
Lisson Gallery
Hauser and Wirth
Modern Art Oxford
David Kordansky Gallery
Sorcha Dallas
Frith Street Gallery
Stephen Friedman
ACCA
Herald Street
Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo
Witte de With
Maureen Paley


Listings September 2008

Download the September 2008 exhibition listings from the latest issue (PDF)

Subscribe to frieze

Receive frieze magazine to your door, from only £29 for 8 issues a year.

Subscribe

Podcasts

Cultural Cartography: Roni Horn - Added on 13/10/07
Roni Horn presents a keynote lecture exploring ideas of site- specificity and seriality

Listen or Download

Frieze Mailing List

For news from Frieze join the mailing list






Publications

Frieze Art Fair Yearbook 2007-8
UK £16.95. The latest edition of the Frieze Art Fair Yearbook

Buy Now

Podcasts

The Expanded Gallery: Mass Forms for Private Consumption - Added on 13/10/07
What cultural value do industrial design, graphics and film bring to the spaces of the gallery and the museum?

Listen or Download