FRIEZE,
November 2000~Charles
LaBelle
ROBERT OVERBY
UCLA Hammer Museum, Los Angeles
Irreverent,
often brilliant, and occasionally fatuous, the
prolific output of Robert Overby, who died in
1993 at the age of 58, is only now becoming
more widely known. Moving between drawing, painting,
printing, and sculpture, the artist specialized
in a brand of corrupted (he called it ‘Baroque’)
Minimalism. He instilled a highly personal,
poetic, and social content into what were basically
reductive, process-oriented works; marrying
pure materials such as rubber, lead, canvas,
concrete, resin, and wood to banal objects and
abject spaces. All manner of crappy, dirty,
broken things formed the subject of his work:
socks and handkerchiefs, shattered windows and
splintered floors, bondage masks, beaver shots,
coat-hangers, cans, belly-buttons, and man-hole
covers all cropped up during the high point
of his production in the 1970s. With his been-down-so-long-it-looks-like-up-to-me
sensibility Overby wasn’t afraid to crawl
in the gutter and the resultant work refused
to accommodate itself to the expectations of
market or spectator. In one instance, Across
the Street (1971), he covered a section of public
road with thick latex, creating an undeniably
ugly, unwieldy work that brought formlessness
to a new, all-time low. As a gesture, it was
fierce and passionate and crazy: one lone man
battling the monster city. When it was over
he returned home with the flayed ‘skin’
tied to the top of his VW Bug like a hunting
trophy.
This literal ‘grounding’ of his
work in the ‘real’ is what separates
Overby from his American contemporaries such
as Nauman, Morris and Oldenburg and makes him
a godfather to a diverse array of younger artists
such as Marc Quinn, Tim Hawkinson, Sarah Lucas,
and Gabriel Orozco. Indeed, it was something
of a revelation to see Overby’s show so
shortly after Orozco’s MOCA retrospective.
Their work rhymes in many places: in their poetic
transformation of common objects; in their mutual
fascination with time and the forensic quality
of their gaze; in their dismissal of continuity
and adoption of a self-reflexive circularity;
and, finally, in their acute awareness of how
memory informs perception. Looking at Overby’s
small cast of the space inside his clenched
fist, Monkey Grip (1970), one sees a sexualized,
punning version of Orozco’s Pinched Stars
(1977). Similarly, Overby’s numerous rubbings
of tile floors, which he transformed into large
grid paintings, show up in Orozco’s charcoal
rubbings pulled from the walls of the Paris
Metro.
Yet, where Orozco’s work is tightly controlled,
Overby’s is possessed by an engaging sloppiness.
Looking back, his was a risky, self-destructive
course of action filled with false starts and
quick shifts. Consuming and regurgitating ideas
like a bulimic bingeing at a cake stall, Overby
worked at an impossibly frenetic pace. His self-published
Red Book (1974) documents 336 separate pieces
made over four years. The degree of this commitment
is especially sobering when you consider his
career as an artist during 1971 and 1979, the
majority of this work was never exhibited, most
of it, until recently, languishing in storage.
Pregnant with possibilities, Overby’s
first cast door was significantly titled Madonna
Door (1970) and featured a narrow French door
with a prominent bulge at its center rendered
in clear plastic. It was a purposefully immaculate
conception, its transparency announcing that
there were no gimmicks, no hidden tricks, no
art direction. Madonna Door insisted that art’s
point of entry should be perfectly clear. But
at the same time, its clarity marked an attempt
to penetrate the inner workings of art, to unlock
its evident mystery.
A search for meaning is what becomes
most apparent when you look at Overby’s
work. His fascination with the way art functions
is infectious. His casts are not copies, nor
replicas, nor ‘samples’, but more
like the three-dimensional equivalents of musical
dubs, re-mixed versions of originals. And, in
the improvisational spirit of dub, no two of
Overby’s works are the same. Constantly
taking his ideas one step to the left, even
pieces which look similar (such as numerous
latex doors), are varied; pigment added to some,
cuts have been made in others. Investigating
the interaction between surface and meaning,
Overby frequently dubbed his dubs, making new
sculptures from casts of other works or creating
canvas ‘Tone Maps’ of his latex
pieces. Like De Niro packing on pounds to play
Jake La Motta, Overby – the consummate
‘method’ artist – understood
that the inner truth of something could be revealed
by altering its form, that meaning can be apprehended
from the outside-in.
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