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Frieze
The Four Corners of the Earth (1998) is an installation
of four large circular canvases, each wedged into the corners of the darkened
exhibition space. Projected onto these are four different photographic
views of a cheaply manufactured globe of the earth. The ports of the four
projectors are masked, causing the circular images of the globes to correspond
exactly with the edges of the canvases and creating a sort of trompe l'oeil
effect. The images are grandly luminous, hint at divine symmetry and create
an empowered feeling of euphoric space and clarity.
This benevolent spiritual feeling is transient, though. The serene pleasure
of the piece is eroded by the anxious assumption that Four Corners
is
not what it seems, and will turn out to be like other Wallinger works,
such as Angel (1997), On the Operating Table (a.k.a Logos) (1998) and
Hymn (1997). These are clever, sarcastically chippy boot swings at credulous
faith, institutional religion and identity. Responding with misplaced
serenity to Four Corners
is indeed a boot swing, but an unbalanced
one. Apart from restating the already well established absurdities of
map making the abstract representation of nations in text and colours
that have no geographical basis Wallinger's conceptualisations
and observations seem confused. A wall text provides an exhausting jumble
sale of references, some of which are useful or stimulating, but many
are of strained significance.
We are informed, for example, that the diameter of each canvas is 86 inches,
which is the diameter of an outstretched Wallinger in the position of
Leonardo da Vinci's Vitruvian Man (1511). We are also told that the
globe depicted in Holbein's Ambassador's (1533) has at its centre
the home of John de Dinteville, one of the men portrayed, who also commissioned
the painting. The four globe views chosen by Wallinger are apparently
of the earth's 'corners' where gravitational pull (as discovered
by the John Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory in 1965), is measurably
greater. Additionally, we are told that the astronaut Buzz Aldrin, when
asked if he had any regrets about his mission on the moon, replied 'I
wish I had looked out of the window more'. Wallinger also draws our
attention to the shadows we cast of ourselves onto the globes, when unavoidably
obstructing the projectors when we walk around, which is presumably a
point about the making and unmaking of God in our own image.
Wallinger's list takes pleasure in pointing out the prosaic farts
and proud misapprehensions we make as we seek the profound in time and
space. In so doing, he reminds us of the vanities of our spiritual impulses,
our anthropocentrism, transient nationalisms and general arse scratching
while playing God. Four Corners
is largely about Wallinger's
dislike of the lies of perception, whether spiritual, political or visual.
With good humour, though, the artist also includes himself as victim of
the comic, universal human gravitation toward self-aggrandisement. At
the centre of the Vitruvian diagram, Wallinger's testicles, penis
and navel coincide with the dead centre of each of the globes where
gravity is most pronounced thus creating a fresh contemplative
space.
The beauty of the installation and its thoughtful wonder is eclipsed by
Wallinger's huffings and puffings at credulous spirituality and nationalism.
But whereas he has previously taken as his target the institutional texts
and dumbo orthodoxies of organised religion, particularly Christianity,
Four Corners
seeks to challenge the primary spiritual impulse itself,
and in so doing, takes a pop at the ineffable. The ineffable is a separate
matter from religious institutionalism though: it takes a punch better
and is not quite as deserving of a good beating as the church might be.
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