"Untitled" (Portrait of Ross in L.A.) by Felix Gonzalez-Torres
Update: 2011-04-27
Description
Discussion by David C. Ward, co-curator of "Hide/Seek" and Historian at the National Portrait Gallery.
Even as a minimalist, Felix Gonzalez-Torres also had a whimsical, humanistic side that showed the influences of pop art on his installations. In this "portrait" of his deceased partner, Ross Laycock, Gonzalez-Torres created a spill of candies that approximated Ross's weight (175 lbs.) when he was healthy. Viewers are invited to take away a candy until the mound gradually disappears; it is then replenished, and the cycle of life and death continues. While Gonzalez-Torres wanted the viewer/participant to partake of the sweetness of his own relationship with Ross, the candy spill also works as an act of communion. More darkly, the steadily diminishing pile of cheerfully wrapped candies shows the dissolution of the gay community as society ignored the AIDS epidemic. In the moment that the candy dissolves in the viewer's mouth, the participant also receives a shock of recognition at his or her complicity in Ross's demise.
"Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture" was on view at the National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, from October 30 through February 13, 2011
For more on the exhibit, visit the exhibit website at: http://npg.si.edu/exhibit/hideseek .
Felix Gonzalez-Torres (1957-1996) Candies individually wrapped in multicolored cellophane, endless supply, 1991 The Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois; on extended loan from the Donna and Howard Stone
Even as a minimalist, Felix Gonzalez-Torres also had a whimsical, humanistic side that showed the influences of pop art on his installations. In this "portrait" of his deceased partner, Ross Laycock, Gonzalez-Torres created a spill of candies that approximated Ross's weight (175 lbs.) when he was healthy. Viewers are invited to take away a candy until the mound gradually disappears; it is then replenished, and the cycle of life and death continues. While Gonzalez-Torres wanted the viewer/participant to partake of the sweetness of his own relationship with Ross, the candy spill also works as an act of communion. More darkly, the steadily diminishing pile of cheerfully wrapped candies shows the dissolution of the gay community as society ignored the AIDS epidemic. In the moment that the candy dissolves in the viewer's mouth, the participant also receives a shock of recognition at his or her complicity in Ross's demise.
"Hide/Seek: Difference and Desire in American Portraiture" was on view at the National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, from October 30 through February 13, 2011
For more on the exhibit, visit the exhibit website at: http://npg.si.edu/exhibit/hideseek .
Felix Gonzalez-Torres (1957-1996) Candies individually wrapped in multicolored cellophane, endless supply, 1991 The Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois; on extended loan from the Donna and Howard Stone
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