Trinity
Three bodies have fallen from the sky. They know nothing
about who they are, or where they've landed. Their bodies
cast sharp shadows on the ground. Is this planet Earth? One
crawls, one sits, one stands. It's as though the three men
(do they know they're men, do they know each other?) have
suddenly been pulled into he evolutionary process. They fumble
forward and begin to develop.
A person is first and foremost a body. If we remove all social
influences and cultural patterns we find this one thing: a
body that can be measured, weighed and studied. There's something
abstract and surreal about these American men. There's nothing
unusual about their features, and yet they appear strange.
Are they Americans who have been placed in another dimension,
or are they aliens, doing their best to imitate typical Americans?
Art during the last few decades has continued to return
to questions concerning the social construction of human identity.
This is especially true of the feminist art that developed
in the United States during the late 1970s. With artists such
as Sherrie Levine and Cindy Sherman the female subject is
treated like an artifact – the result of media and social
stereotypes and codes. It's about time the same discussion,
with the same intensity, is applied to male identity. How
are men constructed?
These three men could use some help. At first glance they
appear completely "normal." But it's as though they
are in a room where all assumed meanings and obvious truths
have lost their power. A room without culture, knowledge or
prejudices. They seem to be moving in a sea of ignorance with
no connection with one another. How did we get here?
Daniel Birnbaum
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