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| Test for Three
Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion by Paul
Pfeiffer, video triptych: videotapes, three paper screens,
projector, metal armature, 2000 |
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Selections from DUMA
On The Moving Edge
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January 2000, the Duke University Museum of Art showed this intriguing
work-in-progress, along with two other pieces by artist Paul Pfeiffer.
Pfeiffer, born in 1966 in Honolulu, raised in the Philippines, studied
at the San Francisco Art Institute. He had just finished a fellowship
at the Whitney Independent artists program. After the show, the
museum acquired the piece, thanks to the generosity of Blake Byrne
'57. One month later, Pfeiffer was selected for the prestigious
2000 Whitney Biennial and included in the even trendier P.S. 1 Contemporary
Art Center's Greater New York show.
Since then, his career has soared. Positive reviews proclaiming
his work to be the cutting edge of digitalized video art appeared
in such publications as The Village Voice, The New York Times, The
New Yorker, and even Newsweek. The art world recognized he was on
to something; Pfeiffer was chosen for the Whitney's first $100,000
Bucksbaum Award for his work in the 2000 Biennial.
The artist has not slowed down since. New York Times art critic
Holland Cotter wrote in a January review: "Paul Pfeiffer...
thinks big but works small, producing short, digitally altered video
loops on tiny monitors. The results could be about many things:
dramatic spectacle as psychological projection, racial invisibility,
sexual charge, homoeroticism. With his tightly controlled fusion
of found images and new technology, Pfeiffer has carved out distinctive
territory. The hands-on, hands-off format he has developed--he has
turned video into a precious object, something compact, dense, and
tightly textured--is clearly a fertile one. And like Andy Warhol,
whom he is said to admire, he seems to know that he has the whole
abject, visionary spectrum of American popular culture as raw material."
DUMA's work, Test for Three Studies for Figures at the Base of
a Crucifixion, directly refers to a 1944 triptych of the same title
by English painter Francis Bacon. Pfeiffer, who says his work is
a continuation of the great painting traditions, presents us with
three figures, actors from commercial films. They are abstracted
from their surroundings and plots and placed against a uniformly
colored backdrop--the same device used by Bacon.
Through intensive editing and computer manipulation, a slip-second
moment in each film, obsessively repeated, represents a form of
physical and psychological torment: the struggle for bodily control
in The Nutty Professor; death, agony, and a cry for mother in Saving
Private Ryan; and sexual ecstasy in Showgirls. We are invited to
contemplate these moving and standing-still images, to connect them
to each other, to past art and contemporary art forms made possible
by new technologies, to place them in the context of our understanding
of our world.
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