| Last
Supper Dining Set
1999/2004, wood and canvas
Table 29 x 144 x 36 inches
13 Chairs, each 18-1/4 x 16-1/4 x 16 inches
Nearing the end of the millenium, it is time once more for conjectural
talk of Armageddon. There will be god-fearing men with beards walking
our streets carrying placards announcing the impending end of the world
and the need for immediate repentance. Psychics will make their lists
of celebrity predictions for 2000 regardless, REM's "It's the End
of the World as We Know It" will see heavy airplay on radio, and,
if that weren't enough, there is also the scurry to find a technical patch
that will deter the comparatively prosaic prospect of a Y2K computer meltdown.
In accordance with these last rites, the HNH product for this year revisits
the history and depiction of the Last Supper as both a social activity
and art reference. What would our visual impression of it be had Leonardo
not painted the iconic image we know so well?
The table top is a strip of raw canvas stretched over a sturdy, flat support
of wood. Like the resined dinners of Daniel Spoerri, the Last Supper dining
table becomes a site for art production. Here the bare canvas receives
all the subtle and not-so-subtle drippings, stains, and markings from
foods and drinks that inevitably make their mark during the course of
a meal. It accumulates with each sitting, building up the surface of the
"painting" it simultaneously becomes. This painting can be taken
off its legs and hung on a wall at any time and a new canvas subsequently
stretched. Less like Spoerri and perhaps more akin to Rachel Whiteread,
the canvas becomes a document suggestive of the intimacies that occur
in the act of dining. A red wine stain here or a droplet of marinara there
may lead one to recall an eventful meal with chance but memorable company
where one might have met a great love or enemy, as the madelaine similarly
opened a world to Proust.
What better way to ring in the new millenium then a last supper with music
accompaniment by Prince, who so prophetically urged us to party like it's
1999? The sacred and the profane, dare we hope for more?
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