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I can only show the surface. Whatever goes beyond that is more or less chance.-Â Thomas ruff

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Michelangelo Pistoletto, Mirror Paintings.
West Architecture transforms a former Methodist church
Michael Heizer at Gagosian Gallery.
"Hot" and "cool" media[edit]
In the first part of Understanding Media, McLuhan also stated that different media invite different degrees of participation on the part of a person who chooses to consume a medium. Some media, like the movies, were "hot"âthat is, they enhance one single sense, in this case vision, in such a manner that a person does not need to exert much effort in filling in the details of a movie image. McLuhan contrasted this with "cool" TV, which he claimed requires more effort on the part of the viewer to determine meaning, and comics, which due to their minimal presentation of visual detail require a high degree of effort to fill in details that the cartoonist may have intended to portray. A movie is thus said by McLuhan to be "hot", intensifying one single sense "high definition", demanding a viewer's attention, and a comic book to be "cool" and "low definition", requiring much more conscious participation by the reader to extract value.[56]
"Any hot medium allows of less participation than a cool one, as a lecture makes for less participation than a seminar, and a book for less than a dialogue."[57]
Hot media usually, but not always, provide complete involvement without considerable stimulus. For example, print occupies visual space, uses visual senses, but can immerse its reader. Hot media favour analytical precision, quantitative analysis and sequential ordering, as they are usually sequential, linear and logical. They emphasize one sense (for example, of sight or sound) over the others. For this reason, hot media also include radio, as well as film, the lecture and photography.
Cool media, on the other hand, are usually, but not always, those that provide little involvement with substantial stimulus. They require more active participation on the part of the user, including the perception of abstract patterning and simultaneous comprehension of all parts. Therefore, according to McLuhan cool media include television, as well as the seminar and cartoons. McLuhan describes the term "cool media" as emerging from jazz and popular music and, in this context, is used to mean "detached."[58]
This concept appears to force media into binary categories. However, McLuhan's hot and cool exist on a continuum: they are more correctly measured on a scale than as dichotomous terms.[18]
Sarah Charlesworth at Campoli Presti

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Rob Pruitt, The Obama Paintings, at Gavin Brownâs enterprise.
Like the way works being presented
Seth Price and Laura Owens in conversation
January 2016
356 S Mission Rd.
LO: So this is all new work for the show. We were looking at this PVC pipe you printed on. You called it a diversion and said that something you liked about the sewer pipe was that it was both sexy and repulsive.
SP: Yeah, itâs this kind of hard industrial plastic they might use for medical purposes, for prosthetics and machines in hospitals. There is something about that thatâs sexy and fucked up. And gross, I mean these pipes carry sewage.
LO: Right, and we were talking about these pencil shafts too.
SP: Yeah, theyâre hollow too.
LO: What material are those?
SP: Theyâre printed, itâs an image of a pencil that is hollow, it becomes a hole that can suck or blow air. LO: But itâs not a straw, right? Itâs a former pencil.
SP: Yeah. You couldnât suck through it, itâs got the eraser on the other end.
LO: But itâs missing the lead?
SP: Itâs like an abyss inside.
LO: So itâs like a potential to draw. The exterior refers to a pencil, but the interior is the void.
SP: Yeah, itâs creative, but in the stupidest way. The yellow pencil and pink eraser is so grade school. It canât do anything. With the other pipes, I started thinking about this idea that a tube combines the shaft of the penis and the hole of an orificeâit could be an anus, or a vagina, or both at the same timeâand this is a pencil but it canât write so itâs not a pencil. I guess it can erase.
LO: And this idea shows up again in the drawings that get silk screened onto some of the PVC pipe. These figures are pencils, but have a penis that is also an orifice. It looks even more figurative because it has this anthropomorphic bend, almost like an elbow or a limb. It also is the type of pencil that is going to put down a few ideas. There is an impetus to jot some things down, but itâs actually just a black hole. No jotting is going to happen.
SP: Right, no jotting.
LO: The other thing that I was drawing a parallel to is the photography for the light boxes which you made with this start-up companyâs camera that almost goes for an archeological perspective on an object, taking thousands of photographs over a very small space. There is a way to go deep into something, but at the same time itâs a paradox because youâre photographing skin, which is a surface layer. Itâs not like youâre going through. And then thereâs a kind of parallel to these candid pictures that you took of New York City, these found archaeological sites.
SP: Oh, theyâre of construction sites.
LO: Right, but itâs almost like a ruin. Do you see any connection between those images?
SP: I hadnât thought about it. I donât feel like I can make any connections between any of the work. I just wanted to throw like ten ideas into the air with this show. I just hope itâs fun to look at.
LO: Whatâs interesting is that the two places your mind would go would be microscopic, but then blown- up, details of skin or the body, but then also an urban, found, debris-field.
SP: It looks like ruins when they put up these new buildings.Â
LO: Like Smithson. They are ruins in reverse.
SP: Exactly. But all the tubes, pipes, classic formless blobs, ripped-up paper, nastiness, discarded material, itâs not just the Smithson ruins-in-reverse idea, it is also an apocalyptic negation of everything that they are hoping to put into these new condominiums.
LO: I donât know why it makes so much formal sense to see these non-decision-decisions that are made about stacking these different materials. It is like when people talk about painting and they talk about those types of spaces where decisions arenât so controlled but there is an accumulation of decisions that are heterogeneous. They donât seem like they should go together, but they do go together.
SP: Do you think about that?
LO: I think about that when Iâm looking at someoneâs art.Â
SP: But not when youâre making?
LO: After I make something, or when Iâm at a pause, I think about the types of space or the types of marks and the differences between them. When I look at this construction site. it just seems so formally right. I donât know if itâs because so many sculptors have looked at these types of piles and been informed by them in the 20th century.
SP:Also this printer is fucked up, so it looks so awesome. You just canât get away from how amazing mistakes look.
LO: You talked about wanting to approach this show in a different way, where you have a volume of space. And maybe these pictures of construction site zones are a non-controlled, non-hierarchical space- making.
SP: Itâs true. I havenât gotten any closer to the idea of making some volumetric object to be contemplated in the round. I still canât get myself to make that unique, stand-alone sculpture.
LO: Well I guess thatâs why I was trying to describe this camera that you were trying to describe to me. When I look at those spaces, I think about how you donât see it in the round, but you are viewing itâŚ
SP: ⌠Totally fragmented. The machine does this in the most practical and efficient manner possible, it breaks the subject area into an X and Y grid and then it proceeds through each point on the grid and shoots pictures downward toward the subject in a âZ-stack,â a stack of shots with a different focal length for each photo. Then it goes to the next spot on its grid and does the same thing. Then a software package turns each stack into a single focused shot, and then a panorama program algorithmically stitches all of those pieces into larger units, and then we assemble those⌠Itâs pure data gathering. This project was about diving into massive data. When you look at one of the pictures printed out at small size, like in a book or something, it looks like nothing special. What makes it bizarre is the level of detail, and you can only see that when itâs printed super large.
LO: And Iâm surprised by how unfamiliar something like skin becomes. It has a multiplicity of meaning and an extreme translucency that I have thought about with Ghirlandaioâs Virgin and Child. It looks like thereâs a light bulb inside the virginâs skull. Thatâs his genius, he illuminates how translucent the skin is.
SP: But thereâs also something so boring about it, which I respond to on the level of someone who likes to make things. You get to a place where youâre making something and you feel like itâs horrible but you also have a kind of internal meter that can tell you where your discomfort with its being horrible is actually a good sign. I feel like you can spend your whole career trying to hone that instrument so you can know exactly when itâs so bad itâs great. These pictures make me think, âWhat the fuck am I doing? Iâm taking some picture of some random personâs forearm that takes two weeks to process?
LO: There is also an absurdity to taking something that is always stretched around a form and making it flat.
SP: That was sort of the starting point. Shooting pictures around someoneâs knee gives you a bunch of flat images, of course, and when you put them together you unwrap that knee, and unwrapping makes it very strange topographically, like that kneecap over there. When I showed a photo of that one at the drawing show, people asked what it was, whether it was a wound, or if it was pornographic. Honestly, I donât know where any of this stuff comes from⌠But Three 5-6 Mafia seems like a cool place to play around. Has anyone called it Three 5-6 Mafia before?
LO: No, thatâs really good. Did all of the skin models work out, or were some rejected?
SP: No, no rejection here, itâs like open arms here in the studio.
LO: And you were saying that for one of the photos you looked for someone with older skin?
SP: Oh yeah, we advertised for a surfer who was in his late forties, at least. We got hooked up with that guy, it was awesome, great guy, lots of character in that skin, sun damage and scars.
LO: Have you done photographic portraiture before?
SP: Not since high school.
LO: Did you click the button, or did you tell someone to click it?
SP: The robot does it, you have to line it all up in the program beforehand, like, demarcate the operational zone, and then the robot arm starts doing its thing and five hours later you have like ten thousand photos of an area as big as a keyboard.
LO: And what about breathing and other natural movement? Does that fuck it up?
SP: No, you use extremely high shutter speeds and take thousands and thousands of picture, and thereâs tons of redundancy, there are shots to the right and left of each picture that overlap so the software can sort it out and ideally toss out blurs caused by movement. But on the other hand itâs really not made for moving subjects. Actually the software had a huge problem with this job.
LO: So, itâs another sort of absurdity that you picked this software thatâs meant to photograph a static object.
SP: It is meant to photograph a dead insect. And the stitch software is meant for putting together panoramas of the Grand Tetons. Thatâs why we had to call in a retoucher at the end to iron it all out: you need a human eye to say whatâs supposed to go where, because machine vision is kind of ruthless. But it creates all kinds of interesting fuck-ups along the way. Thatâs the other thing we love about machines, right, ruthless fuck-up-creation capability.
LO: It reminds me of another painting idea: youâre trying to get your hand out of it, but still have this idea that there is anomaly and expression. To have this spontaneity caused by other means.
SP: Everything balanced just right. Is that, like, a holy grail for painters?
LO: I think it is. Thatâs what I liked about your new book. You almost get to all these little holy grails. Youâre kind of being critical, but at the same timeâŚ
SP: Are you thinking about all these things with the paintings youâre making right now? Because, if Iâm correct, youâre working with inkjet-
LO: No, just screen printing.
SP: Whereâs the inkjet. I donât like that youâre hating on inkjet.
LO: No, I make stuff with inkjet. Itâs all on paper, though. I havenât gotten to the inkjet on canvas yet. I make a lot of books, theyâre oversized.
SP: Yeah, I love those books. Do you generate an image of lemons, for example, or is that taken from somewhere?
LO: That particular image was taken from a found illustration, then it was composited to make what I want.
SP: Right, so basically you would, like, scan it and redraw it.
LO: I wanted a continuous pattern, so I made a repeating tile out of it.
SP: Well, thatâs kind of what we do here. Once you have all the pieces, which are kind of found by the machine and put together in a Frankensteinâs-monster fucked-up way, you call in a human to clean it up. The retoucher sees himself as an artist, and is working from this tradition of fashion ads and editorial. Then we feed that through a 3D rendering program to add this glistening, plastic/gel thing. I guess thatâs the fully synthetic part of this process, neither all machine nor all human. You have a human operator willfully using a software tool to make an amalgamation of CGI vision and human retouching.
LO: Iâve hired those people to fix installation shots, and they are used to a certain kind of advertising light, which you have to always ask them, âPlease donât do that.â
SP: Itâs like when you get artwork photographed, where people are delivering you photos where youâre like, âWhat happened to the walls?â I donât know⌠Iâm just hoping to just leave everything in pieces, from now on, forever.
LO: That sounds good.
SP: I want to take it all apart and leave it in pieces, the more the better. I guess that was the principal thinking behind all this work.
LO: Well, something I really liked about the drawing show I saw is that it felt like unique frames became a way to organize the exhibition, but then anything could go in those frames. From the deep past, recent past⌠A lot of shows you see with a lot of drawings, you donât really go into each drawing, but somehow the way the exhibition was with these fragments of ideas from different periods, that you start to make connections between, or not⌠You really slow down with it, which I thought was great and unusual.
SP: Oh, great.
LO: But I think itâs also that there is a kind of looking at a drawing that youâre supposed to do, which would come up every once in a while, but all kinds of other ideas, like language, or note-taking, graphics, would start slipping in. Itâs not just like, âhere is a thoughtful rendering, or a pre-idea.â
SP: Did you ever do a show of sketches or drawings? Repertory stuff. LO: Yeah, I was just telling you I showed all those studies. SP: But that was within a larger show?
LO: Yeah.
SP: How did you do it, vitrines or something?
LO: No, it was all crammed together salon-style. I donât know if it really worked.Â
SP: That was a while ago, now, right?
LO: No, Iâve done this weird thing where Iâve had a sketchbook and Iâve actually remade the sketchbook, as a piece. Kind of verbatim. I took xeroxes of every page, did wintergreen transfers, and then made a handmade book thatâs a duplicate of that sketch book.
SP: Cool. I did something like that, did I ever show you that Poems book?Â
LO: No, I donât think so.
SP: I just scanned pages from notebooks, and called them poems.
LO: So they may or may not have language on them?
SP: Drawings too, but mostly language. Little notes you make sometimes, like when you hear something fucked up on the subway and you go somewhere surprising, and you randomly add something later, and itâs a poem⌠Just a slight transposition to another realm. All of a sudden it becomes art if you make a wintergreen transfer, or call it a poem. You do just enough to be able to call it something else.
LO: Going back to these photographs, I think itâs really interesting that there are so many directions they could go in, and I think thatâs what youâve avoided. I think thatâs what you meantâI donât know if you said the word âbanality,â but you were talking about an evenness of the photographs of the skin.
SP: When there is a kind of lack of interest. It took me a while to come to grips with that. I kept asking the retoucher, âCan we make it pop a little more? Are there some insane colors we can pull out of this motherfucker?â But then you realize that this is the way it is, itâs fundamentally an image that is fascinating and repulsive but also boring and banal. Thereâs almost nothing there but then of course thereâs a lot there. Itâs arbitrary, some random personâs skin, but skin is such a charged thing.
LO: But somehow you have uncharged it, as much as you can.
SP: Well, race is something to think about, it was worrisome to me to put up these huge glowing light boxes.
LO: I recently did this whole show with newspapers I found in the walls of my house. Itâs the thing you print the newspaper from, but theyâre all from April, 1942, so itâs all âNazis and the Japsâ, and itâs very loaded.
SP: âThe thing you print the newspaper from,â meaning what?
LO: So, itâs the pre-plate. Itâs a paper mold. A positive that they would make the negative plate from. And then that plate would print the newspaper.
SP: Was this in LA?
LO: Itâs in my house in LA, so itâs the LA Times. I found these things that look like something you just ink up and print. So I did that. I would then print the negative. But then I made molds of them to get the positive, which was amazing, I was able to get pretty detailed photographs out of it. I then printed and scanned all of those. Then I enlarged those scans into screens to make paintings from them. It came to me because when I took the shingles off my house, it was being used as insulation, it was a discarded, recycled material of the â40s. When I printed them, all the information is highly charged, you know, Hitler and anti-Japanese rhetoric. I am relating it to your picking a subject like skin that you allow yourself to go toward, where there is a lot of implied meaning. Itâs the closest Iâve gotten in a long time to using something that I know would be like, âWhoa, you came to Vienna and chose to talk about Hitler.â I think itâs interesting, this moment where you evade meaning, or allow meaning to be more elusive. Then maybe some meaning happens, but you donât know whatâs going to happen with it.
SP: Itâs exciting to make material that might be charged. I was on the subway this morning, just looking at ads and graphics on peopleâs T-shirts. I had a moment of being so sick of language. I let my gaze drift up to the metal bars, and beige plastic in the ceiling, and heating grates in the subway, because I needed to get away from this mediated language thatâs all around us in the culture, and I suddenly understood the appeal of those of us who are making, say, entirely abstract sculpture. Because Iâve worked mostly with images, ideas, and concepts that are in the culture, in language and media, I donât really make abstract work. It can feel abstractedâideally, evenâbut not abstract in the sense of Specific Objects or whatever. But I suddenly felt the appeal this morning on the subway. And there is something in some of these skin images that is so boring that itâs kind of like a breath of fresh air.