- RACHEL HARRISON
CAR
STEREO
PARKWAY
- Installation
View Transmission Gallery, Scotland April 16 to May 14, 2005






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Review by Mick Peter
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The space was
decorated with garlands of gaudy foil bunting, the kind you
expect to find demarcating the boundaries of a used car
dealership. The routes through this garish noise were
determined by boxes of various shapes and sizes. Fonts
emblazoned on these jumbled cardboard building blocks
invited the piecing together of a sculptural poison pen
letter. Any possible narrative connections were hopelessly
fleeting. Reframed by the act of collecting these materials
in the locality of the gallery the texts of lowly crisp
packaging became exotic and ‘foreign’. Here Rachel
Harrison's Car Stereo Parkway (2005) Orchestrated the
improvised grafting of objects to other objects, a tactic of
shifting connections similar to the brutality of a ‘cut and
shut job’ (the practice of welding together written-off
automobiles to make a new and illegal whole.
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A wall of these
boxes greeted the viewer, and from underneath this edifice a
pair of glam platform boots emerged. The crocodile skin
surface partially transformed these disembodied appendages
into an urban version of a snake in a woodpile. Only on
navigating your way round this obstacle did the boots’
position seem to be the result of an accident or possibly a
hugely wayward stage dive. Like the unfortunate carriers of
extravagantly large panes of glass in TV car chases, the
boxes appeared to be designed to absorb an immanent impact.
Their stacking and arrangement in the space seemed to be
all about latent energy, and the objects lurking behind and
around the wall offered some confirmation of this theory. As
if a toxic tanker had slewed across the road and spewed its
radioactive load of coloured gloop over the innocent
bystanders, a barely recognisable figure, wearing a blobby
red mantle, occupied the corner of the gallery. Sprouting
from what I surmised was the head end was a fantastic,
tumescent, prosthetic nose, replete with elastic retaining
strap. This schnozzle was reminiscent of Willie Murphy’s
Tricky Dick drawings from the late sixties, sagging male
genitalia as Richard Nixon’s droopy jowls and bulbous nose.
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The Watergate
era informed much of the show. The perception of the public
personas of slightly ludicrous individuals, constructed or
otherwise, was a repeated motif. Pompous rock band Kiss
were entrusted with carrying a substantial part of this
dimension of the work. Harrison’s approach was once again
esoteric in approaching the familiar heavy metal genre. The
slightly hermetic tactic of her transubstantiation of the
received meaning about the band was both disorientating and
thrilling. Although most people are familiar with the
slightly ludicrous spectacle of Gene Simmons and co.
Harrison’s more tangential reframing showed a Kiss most
people would barely recognise in a video projection from
atop an upturned box plinth . Heavily edited footage
juxtaposed interview sequences of abject hilarity with
Harrison’s ‘adverts’, images of cleaning materials shown,
like the boxes, as part of her dreamlike anti-logic. The
result was one of the most bewildering reassignments of
domesticity since Queen’s I Want To Break Free video
(1983), in which high camp spilled over into a cross
dressing stadium rock band doing domestic chores. Harrison’s
video sequences seemed to be selected on the basis of
maximum graininess making a kitsch music phenomenon seem
like a bootleg that could be of great importance to the
discerning collector.
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Bonus tracks, so to speak, were provided by the show’s expansion into the
basement of the gallery, where one encountered a stage maquette and an unlikely audience for the whole extravaganza. Potatoes, sprouting away merrily in the gloom, stood in for a muddy and adulant festival crowd slowly going
to seed with their heavily made-up hard-rocking heroes. Harrison’s process of excessive repetitiveness reminded me
of revelations about Stanley Kubrick’s estate after the director’s death, and of one anecdote in particular.
Journalist Jon Ronson, on entering Kubrick’s library, was amazed by the number of books. Only when he took a closer
look did he realise, ”Bloody hell. Every book in this room is about Napoleon”. If Napoleon were substituted for Kiss, a
model of Harrison’s joined-up thinking could be constructed. The mass of materials and the repetition of families of
objects in her show were a device reflecting not a compulsive act, but rather a kind of Brechtian alienation
effect, the startling feeling of having the everyday represented while revealing all the mechanisms behind its
enactment.
Courtesy of Greene Naftali Gallery, New
York //
www.greenenaftaligallery.com
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