Turn Away
Nov 1999 - Jan 2000
Building 4, Second floor
Denise Marika's work combines video and sculpture by embedding a moving image in a physical structure. Performing with her own body, the artist records activities or personal rituals. Her work concentrates on a nude figure or figures repeatedly performing a task, thus exploring issues of power, control and vulnerability. The physical forms into which the images are embedded or projected structure these actions. The conceptual nature of this approach owes much to the work of Bruce Nauman, whose 1970 Green Light Corridor and 1971 Yellow Triangle Room shared a gallery with Marika's Turn Away at MASS MoCA.
Turn Away (1991) is comprised of two sculptural elements: a five-sided (8'x8'x20') plywood box and a long copper drawer at the far end that houses three video monitors. Museum visitors are drawn into the plywood box to see the images on the monitors. The monitors show Marika's nude figure lying in the drawer as if in a coffin. She lies on her side facing the visitors, opens her eyes slightly, and quickly turns away. The action is repeated endlessly. Already confined, (within the plywood box, the copper drawer, and the TV monitors), the figure further confines herself socially by turning away from the visitor.
Denise Marika, Turn Away (1991)
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