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Currently Reading: Mark Dion, 1997, Phaidon, London.

Survey by Lisa Graziose Corrin, Interview by Miwon Kwon, Focus by Norman Bryson, Artist’s Choice text by John Berger, Writings by Mark Dion.

Overview

Mark Dion (b.1961) is an American artist who takes on the roles of explorer, biochemist, detective and archaeologist to make his art

His research and collections are presented in installational still lifes that combine lab equipment, artefacts and taxidermy animals

Since the 1980s, Dion has constructed the laboratories and museum caches of the great historical naturalists, crossing Darwin and Linnaeus with Disney and Hitchcock

His still lifes resemble walk-through Wunderkammers or cabinets of curiosity – an artist’s take on science and discovery

I reread this book as I’d identified Dion as one of the closer linked artists to my own practice through my rubbish research. I studied Dion’s work at college and attended a talk by him at the Manchester Museum circa 2005. Coming to it again, with a specific rubbish research focus, it seems like my memory of what I’d previously studied was a dust-covered museum archive itself. I’d catalogued it into long-term memory with key concepts such as the museum and museum-critique, animals and taxidermy, taxonomy and classification systems. A lot of the detail was hazy with dust. I’d recently seen Xylotheque Kasselat dOCUMENTA(13) in 2012 and read Archaeology (1999), Black Dog Publishing, which focusses largely on Thames Dig (1999), so revisiting his wider body of work was bound to be useful.

In the interview with Miwon Kwon (p.11), Dion sets his stall out be saying irony, allegory and humour are the meat and potatoes of art and literature, which I would have to agree with.

He goes on to talk about his interest in the politics of representation and categorises the categorisers, so to speak (p.16): “ As I see it, artists doing institutional critiques of museums tend to fall into two different camps. There are those who see the museum as an irredeemable reservoir of class ideology – the very notion of the museum is corrupt to them. Then there are those who are critical of the museum not because they want to blow it up but because they want to make a more interesting and effective cultural institution.” It’s clear to me Dion identifies with the latter. Specifically, he is interested in the tension between the museum’s position as an educational forum and an entertainment forum (p.17, interviewing Michel von Praet who co-reorganised the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle in Paris, 1990).

He says the museum has become more educational as part of the popularization effects (owing the reduced public funds) along with the commercial reliance of the gift shop, outreach programmes and cafes, etc). This comment chimes with the kind of things Neil Cummings & Marysia Lewandowska were saying around the same time in The Value of Things, August/Birkhauser, 2000 (see November 2012 posts).

continued..


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Today I sent my rubbish newspaper to print and am really looking forward to it being delivered at the end of the week.

It was quite a big moment; the finalising of my rubbish research project by setting it in black and white print. Whilst the blog has been under construction, and may continue to be for a little while longer yet, the newspaper is concrete and now unchangeable. Any mistakes will have to be lived with and the content is finite.

I now have to switch modes completely from gathering phase to analysis phase. There’s been some natural crossover already but the full analysis of the newly-finished newspaper begins in just over a week’s time in Stockholm when I take the newspaper to Supermarket Art Fair with Paper Gallery. I’ll present the newspaper at the fair in Paper Gallery’s booth and hopefully get some feedback directly from the fair-goers.

My budget only stretched to 90 copies so it’s quite a limited edition, and they’re free. I also need to retain some copies so I can’t distribute all 90 at what I expect to be a very busy fair. I think I’ll take 60 copies and distribute 15 each day including the Thursday night preview. Ideally each newspaper will be exchanged for a snippet (or more) of feedback, either at the fair itself or perhaps through follow up email if people are so inclined and don’t just throw it away as soon as they get home – although that’s just as valid. I will have to refrain from being too precious about them.

The pdf version will be online via the blog also, but it’s the newspaper as an object particularly I’m keen to get feedback on – before the throwaway object, almost obsolete in our digital era, becomes the rubbish it features. Perhaps a few copies will end up in archives or libraries but most will likely end up recycled either through other uses or via the recycling bin.


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