Musée Magazine No. 14

Page 5

E D I TO R ’ S L E T T E R

b y An d re a Bl a nch

The thought of doing a Science issue made me uneasy. Be-

epic proportions. Good friends, Steve Miller and Longo,

sides dissecting frogs and dating an immunologist, I was

discuss everything from nuclear bombs, to wave theory,

completely out of my comfort zone. Though, I realized,

to the blackboard in Einstein’s office. Pioneer and video

as new discoveries and images abound on a daily basis,

veteran, Bill Viola, with the assistance and support of his

science is the new sexy.

partner and executive studio director, Kira Perov, takes a

To produce this issue I called on my panel of experts:

more spiritual route, meditating on universal and ephem-

Steve Miller, a multi-media artist with numerous solo mu-

eral themes that come to life in his work. With a slew of

seum exhibitions, the author of several books, and who

imitators, no one shapes time quite as masterfully as he.

has worked in this area longer than anyone else I know –

At a friend’s cocktail party, I was introduced to Adam

without his help this issue would not be what it is; Marvin

Fuss. The Beatle’s quote, ‘I get by with a little help from

Heiferman, photography expert, curator, this issue’s guest

my friends,’ seems to be a running theme in the making

editor, and author of Photography Changes Everything; and

of this issue. Through Fuss’s work we return to traditional

Arthur Miller, author of Einstein, Picasso and Insights of Ge-

methods of photography. He created the largest daguerre-

nius, to name a few, who knows more about art than any

otype ever made and employs camera-less work – a har-

physicist I’ve encountered.

kening back to early photo-gram techniques.

I was having dinner with my friend William J. Simmons

Our younger artists, can be found on the pulse of the public

who writes for such publications as Art Forum, Interview,

scene. The self-taught Fabien Oefner relies on an inherent

and Crush Fanzine, etc. Upon mentioning the possibility of

swiss-precision to execute scientifically impressive works.

this ‘Science’ issue, he suggested the artist Lynn Hershman

His 2013 TEDTalk garnered him 2 million views and com-

Leeson: groundbreaker, innovator, MacArthur Award ge-

mercial projects with such iconic brands as Ferrari. Our

nius, and one of the original artists – and woman – to work

youngest featured artist, Rachel Rose, wowed me at The

in technology, who, today, is finally getting her due.

Whitney, upon the opening of her first solo exhibition in

The issue had to show, as I said, that science is sexy. It

the U.S. Her video-work that I saw there is mesmerizing.

needs to speak to the appeal and interest that science has

We step into a voyeuristic world with the brilliant Olivier

in our present-day. Belgian artist Wim Delvoye came to

Chanarin and Adam Broomberg, in their newest book Spirit

mind. His sex x-rays, with titles such as Lick, Blow, Kiss,

is a Bone. They create hollow, mask-like portraits taken from

are compelling and audacious. They view sexual acts

Russian facial-recognition software that produce an eerie,

through the internal composition of the body, making us

otherworldly effect. Our cover artist Shamus Clisset, uses the

see – quite literally – sex in an entirely different way.

character Fake Shamus to enter ‘magically’ rendered worlds.

I had seen Tal Danino and Vik Muniz’s presentation of Pe-

Wacky science-fiction and looming predictions of our plan-

tri, a project with Le Bernardaud, which imposes bacteria-

et’s future meet on digitally rendered landscapes where Fake

dwelling petri dishes onto porcelain dinnerware. Danino

Shamus, Clisset’s alter-ego, wears many costumes.

and Muniz’s collaboration becomes an important resource

Isaac Newton once said, “Energy is neither created nor

for the public and art world. As Delvoye re-visualizes sex,

destroyed, but transferred into different forms,” which

Danino and Muniz encourage us to see and think about

is why this issue feels powerful and essential. I love the

bacteria differently.

process of discovery, which is what this issue is all about:

One may ask, why Robert Longo? Why not Robert Longo?

a new, rich territory for making art. We can’t know where

His art so deftly transforms photographs into hyper-real-

this energy will take us in the future, but I know I want to

istic drawings: sculptural excavations in charcoal of truly

be there to see it.

Robert Longo. Untitled (Home, Earth 3), 2005.

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