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LA Weekly

Online Media
June 24, 2010
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Baby Ain't Got Back (Yet)


Mike  Kelley  and  Baby  Ikki  wander  the  desert  of  the  real  

By Doug Harvey Thursday, Jun 24 2010

I've never been to Burning Man. The annual pyrotechno countercultural powwow held in the
desert north of Reno — a multigenerational touchstone for the post-'60s consciousness-expansion
crowd — has always seemed suspiciously contrived to me. If not as one of those Nineteen-Eighty-
Four antique-shop faux–Temporary Autonomous Zones designed by The Man to lure you in for
fingerprinting and Goodness-knows-what other indignities (you know the drill — Where's my free
motor boat? Right through that sparkly mushroom-shaped door — in Room 101), then at least as
some hollow, narcissistic reenactment of Kesey's Acid Tests way after the barn door has been
closed, the barn burned down and the ground seeded with salt.

Don't get me wrong, I have nothing against


Ecstasy-'n'-ketamine-fueled hedonistic theater
experiments in the wilderness, but I'm
personally more from the Unabomber end of the
Co-Evolutionary spectrum. I have been to the
Rainbow Gathering. I have eaten of the day-old
lukewarm lentils from the dingy Styrofoam
cooler, and I have pooped in trench. This is my
vision of the future. With its spectacular
pyrotechnic Survival Research Laboratories
spin-off industrialism, chip-driven LED
lightshows and $300 gate fee, BM just seems a
little naively optimistic.

Mike Kelley has never been to Burning Man


either. But A Voyage of Growth and Discovery
— his first new L.A. solo exhibition since 2002,
created in collaboration with East Coast video/performance artist Mike Smith (aka Baby Ikki) — is
largely an investigation (or homage or critique depending on where you stand) of the crypto-
bohemian cyber-rave. Occupying a cavernous warehouse space in Eagle Rock — normally Kelley's
art studio — Voyage is an immersive multimedia installation that includes six carefully
synchronized video screens; a densely layered sound track of field recordings, appropriated sound,
and a dizzy techno score composed and recorded by Kelley with frequent collaborator Scott Benzel;
and eight or nine (depending on whether you count the row of locked Porta Potties) sculptural
stations.

The sculptures are the most Kelleyesque element — most of them resemble (and may, in fact, be)
the kind of skeletal geometrical playground structures assembled from modular industrial materials
that proliferated across the American landscape in the 1970s, a trickle-down aesthetic from the
utopian hippie architectonics of Buckminster Fuller, et al. These minimalist spatial determinants
articulate the expansive void of Kelley's darkened workspace with elegance and economy,
simultaneously referencing the artist's own work (DIY orgone accumulators, models of schools
based on recovered memories, etc.) and the often-architectural artworks of Burning Man itself.

Further Kelleyisms are incorporated in the form of discarded clothing items, kitschy dolphin-
themed quilts, a "You want it when?!" sleeping bag, and the artist's signature appropriated medium-
used stuffed toy animals. Lining the base of a geodesic dome, strung kundalini-style up the spine of
a rocketship, or covering a tatty easy-chair in a sinister, Kienholzian mini-installation in the back of
a burned-out van, these markers of comfort and domestic stability are the first sign of a recurring
theme: the inadequacy of culture to address baby's real needs.

The gap between the actual psychological and sexual identities of children and the adult cultural
narratives onto which they are routinely displaced has been a leitmotif in Kelley's work since
forever. So the deployment of Smith's decades-old Baby Ikki alter ego — a nuanced performance-
art riff on the Adult Baby fetish subculture — into the posterotic narcissistic extravaganza of 2008's
Burning Man is an inspired bit of casting.

The paraphilial infantalism of a swarthy 57-year-old man in a diaper and frilly bonnet, sucking on a
pacifier, is — in the context of your average contemporary art space — an alternately disturbing,
hilarious, and liberating spectacle. From the two-and-a-half hours of footage deployed across the six
suspended video screens, it's clear that the presence of a film crew was more noteworthy at Burning
Man. Smith bumbles around the playa in a state of suspended maturity that renders him all but
invisible as he dangles from such monumental BM artworks as Bryan Tedrick's Spread Eagle or
Charlie Smith and Jaime Ladet's Fleeble Flobbler, receives a spanking at The Legendary Whiskey
and Whores Saloon, or trips out while repeatedly opening and closing the doors of a row of blue
Porta Potties.

As an exercise in simultaneous individual/collective figure/ground regression, the video


documentation is interesting enough on its own. But it is the reinsertion of this material into a
contemporary art-world context — first at the SculptureCenter in Long Island last fall, and now in
Kelley's temporary Kunsthalle (both under the aegis of Emi Fontana's newly nonprofit West of
Rome) — that makes it a compelling and deeply challenging experience. Not only is Baby Ikki's
contextual ickiness reignited, but the similarities and differences between the neo-psychedelic
utopianism of Burning Man and the original late-psychedelic culture that permeates Kelley's oeuvre
are brought into sharp relief, while their consonances and dissonances are amplified and
exaggerated by the profoundly incompatible emptiness of the 21st-century art world.

Those who attended the overcrowded reception might have gotten the impression that they were
participating in some kind of analogous, ravelike festivity, but on a regular viewing day — with a
handful of lookie-loos drifting in and out — the discontinuity between the activities depicted
onscreen and the sterile and ominous environment in which they are displayed provokes an almost
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schizophrenic sense of alienation. This split is reflected in the exhibit's structure. Previous Kelley
collaborative video installations — I'm thinking particularly of his immersive revisitings of art-
school bands Destroy All Monsters and The Poetics — have been remarkable for their integration of
multichannel video and sound with architectural/sculptural elements, translating the improvisational
exuberance of the source material into a three-dimensional walk-through environment.

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