From our living room to yours

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Bring me home, please

Back in Berlin's art galleries.

Walking down Brunnenstrasse, i stumbled upon From our living room to yours, an exhibition that focuses on six American artists whose work gives a glimpse into the garbage and glory of American pop culture. There are several very nice pieces that both denounce and celebrate the notion of Americana and the useless gifts (or souvenirs) we give to the rest of the world, from our living room to yours.

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The best discoveries of the show for me are:

- Bill Lohre’s beige and white wall-mounted paper sculptures of historically charged places. In The White House (aka Loaded), he meticulously reproduced the symbol of American power using paper, cardboard, toothpicks and lollipop sticks. The official home of the US President is turned into a disposable, fragile and playful sculpture.

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Similarly, he sculpted a Gun Rack with the same cheap and delicate materials.

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- Borrowing the red and yellow of the Vietnamese flag, Trong Nguyen’s cake is decorated with a shiny frosting made of oil paint that reads “Happy Birthday War�, commemorating the recent 30th anniversary of the Vietnam War. Playing off the idea of Magritte’s Ceci n'est pas une pipe, Nguyen is poking fun at the American tradition of celebrating the wrong thing, demonstrating our own distinct brand of schadenfreude. A second cake, displayed in what looks like the gallery kitchen reads "Help Me", it's white on white so you have to get very close to it to be able to decipher the call.

At Goff + Rosenthal until March 17.

My images on flickr as usual.

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3 Comments:

Amazing images, and I especially liked the cakes. Certainly get the points across.

Liz

I thought that the pictures that you incorporated into your post were very intersting. In fact, I took a picture of the cake saying "Happy Birthday War" with my phone and sent it to my boyfriend who is in the military... He found it rather entertaing. The images aided you in effectively getting your point across. Good job!

Wow. That's really creative. Expose American culture as being disposable and violent. How come no one's thought of that one before?

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