Subject: Exhibition: Matthew Porter | THE UNDEFEATED | Opening Reception: Fri. May 13: 6-8pm |
From: "INVISIBLE-EXPORTS" <info@invisible-exports.com> |
Date: 5/9/11, 10:35 |
To: Barriticus@gmail.com |
INVISIBLE-EXPORTS is pleased to present The Undefeated, a solo exhibition of new work by Matthew Porter. The exhibition comprises a critical photographic inquiry into the antagonistic but complementary careers and legacies of Hollywood icons Jane Fonda and John Wayne as political actors—and political actors as Hollywood icons.
* * *
The Undefeated
is a 1969 film starring John Wayne. The previous year he wrote and directed
The Green Berets, an agitprop narrative
about career soldiers fighting in Vietnam. That was also the year that Jane
Fonda starred in Barbarella. While
filming, Fonda began to realize that director and husband Roger Vadim wasn’t an
exemplar of New Leftist virtue, as she had previously thought. His misogynistic
attitude towards their sex life and his indifference to her emotional needs
imbued her with an urge for independence, and adventitiously she began to
become more politically active. But Barbarella wouldn’t be the last time Jane Fonda would be photographed wearing
tights; in 1982 she released her first exercise video to help fund the Campaign
for Economic Democracy, an organization started with her next husband Tom
Hayden. Jane Fonda’s Workout Book was
a best-seller, and Jane Fonda’s Workout Video went on to sell 17 million
copies. * Last summer I
drove to Kingston, New York, to photograph a working replica of the car from
the 1979 Australian film Mad Max. The film, the
first in a series, is critically understood as an anti-establishment film about
the effects of mechanized violence on a society struggling to maintain order in
an increasingly apocalyptic landscape. The owner of the replica car is a
retired New York State Trooper, who commissioned the modifications in Australia
and had the car shipped to him in New York. While I was photographing the car,
he explained that he saw the film as a different sort of cautionary tale—a
warning to liberals about the dangers of a lenient legal system that
undervalues and impairs its law enforcement. * In 1972 Jane
Fonda traveled to North Vietnam. Like hundreds of other Americans before her,
she was seeking to confirm rumors of the deadly effects of chemical weapons,
the bombing of civilian targets by the American Military, and to deliver mail
to American POWs. On her last day there, she was driven to the site of an
anti-aircraft gun emplacement (inactive at the time), surrounded by American,
Japanese, and Vietnamese journalists, and casually directed to sit at the helm
of the weapon. Members of the local community sang Fonda a song, and she
responded with an emphatic performance of a Vietnamese anti-war song written by
students in Saigon. It was a rapturous moment. Everyone applauded and Fonda,
exhausted by the manic pace of her tour, clasped her hands together and thanked
her hosts. A photograph from this encounter became the focal point of the 1972
short film titled Letter
to Jane, a footnote to Tout Va Bien, and a pinnacle of Goddard pedagogy. * In the
exhibition there are two photographs of hornets’
nests piled on tables and chairs. The nests have either been seasonably
abandoned, or the hornets were exterminated.
They are spherical, composed
of concentric wrappings of what looks like low-grade cardboard—a material
that’s been chewed and spit out by the hornets to synthesize into paper. The
annual apocalypse affects every colony, but often leaves the nests intact. * John Wayne’s last
collaboration with John Ford is 1963’s Donovan’s Reef.
The film, redolent of period racism, is a campy send-off to Ford’s waning
interest in war-primed masculinity. The love interest for Wayne’s character is
an uptight Boston socialite and board chair whose prissy attitude Wayne
meliorates with an over-the-knee spanking. The Hawaiian island of Kauai serves
as the backdrop for the film, standing in as French Polynesia. Kauai has a long
history as a location for Hollywood war movies because of the aesthetic
approximation of its jungle foliage to Southeast Asia and the Pacific Theater.
* * *
Matthew Porter lives and
works in Brooklyn. His work often features historical mash-ups, collapsing
disparate events and cultural references within single frames, or spreading
them out over a series of tightly edited photographs. His work was recently the
subject of solo exhibitions in Los Angles and Dallas, and he was included in
the International Center of Photography’s Perspectives 2010 in New York.
In 2010 he curated shows at Mount Tremper Arts in upstate New York and M+B in
Los Angeles. His interviews with artists will appear in Triple Canopy’s
upcoming issue on photography.
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