Endless Bummer / Surf Elsewhere
Organized by Drew Heitzler
July 3 ā August 28, 2010
Los Angeles
Opening reception: Saturday, July 3, 6-8pm
Billy Al Bengston, Justin Beal, Scott Benzel, Gil Blank, Jennifer Bornstein, Carol Bove, Cameron, Anne Collier, R. Crumb, Lucy Dodd, Sam Durant, Roe Ethridge, Amy Granat, Ed Kienholz, Margaret Kilgallen, Nate Lowman, John McCracken, Adam McEwen, Dave Muller, Aleksandra Mir, Catherine Opie, Raymond Pettibon, Richard Phillips, Amanda Ross-Ho, Sterling Ruby, Ed Ruscha, Reena Spaulings, Vincent Szarek, Guyton \ Walker and Christopher Williams
With a video program by Drew Heitzler and a āzine with text by Jan Tumlir
Inherent Vice feels more like a Classic Comics version of a Pynchon novel than like the thing itself. It reduces the byzantine complexities of āGravityās Rainbowā and āV.ā ā and their juxtapositions of nihilism and conspiracy-mongering, Dionysian chaos and Apollonian reason, anarchic freedom and the machinery of power ā to a cartoonish face-off between an amiable pothead, whose āgeneral policy was to try to be groovy about most everything,ā and a bent law-enforcement system. Not surprisingly, the reader is encouraged, as one character observes, referring to George Herrimanās "Krazy Katā comic strip, to āroot for Ignatz."
-- Michiko Kakutani, New York Times Book Review
Los Angeles isnāt what I thought it would be. I guess I donāt really remember now what I expected when I moved here six years ago. But I knew better than to believe the movies. Still, you canāt help but glean at least an idea of a place from what you see on the screen. That was my mistake. Iām an artist and Iām a surfer, so I should have remembered that, with only a handful of exceptions, Hollywood never gets artists or surfers right. Same thing with Los Angeles, they play it all wrong. Maybe thatās because Hollywood is now, and always has been, over-run with so many East Coasters. The hills are full of the Ivy League, come to Los Angeles to conquer it, or worse, to fix it. Problem is they donāt get it. They use a double standard. I was no better, I didnāt get it either. I thought Los Angeles would be swell. It wasnāt exactly that.
So how does Thomas Pynchon get it so right? Heās from Long Island and he went to Cornell. He did live here for six years. Maybe that was enough. Maybe he still lives here. Maybe heāll come to my show. There is a lot of chatter about āInherent Viceā being the first Pynchon novel to be turned into a Hollywood film, so perhaps heās in the neighborhood. Probably not. Iām sure itās all been handed over to a couple of screenwriters who are busy making it camera ready. Theyāll get it wrong. Hollywood doesnāt do nostalgia very well either, and āInherent Viceā, the story of a stoner gumshoe set in that 1970 moment just after the Spahn Ranch arrests, is nostalgia of the weirdest kind. A paranoid trek across our whacked-out city and a psychedelic lens through which we may view our current state of affairs, or maybe just a dark mirror reflecting the freeway haze, the offshore Santa Ana flow, and the summer sun. Either way, itās a story that feels like the Los Angeles that I learned to love, the Los Angeles that Angelenos love, sprawling and unexpected, soft-focus and prone to disaster, an awesome endless bummer. ⦠Surf elsewhere.



