Introduction
Kaz Oshiro transforms paint and canvas into domestic and utilitarian objects that blur the boundaries between painting and sculpture, illusion and function. They appear to be exact replicas of appliances, cabinetry, or electronics, but are painstakingly made with a painter鈥檚 traditional tools of oil and canvas, supplemented with bondo, a material car refinishers commonly use. Playing with artifice and illusion, Oshiro presents a meticulous three-dimensional reality on a two-dimensional surface, making clear the underlying structure of the illusion by revealing the stretcher-bar and canvas of the painting.
Oshiro鈥檚 hybrid objects deconstruct the traditions and heritage of modern art鈥攊n particular, painting and pop art鈥攁nd confront the illusions and myths of popular culture here, in Southern California. With a vivid pop sensibility, Oshiro鈥檚 seemingly mundane objects reference the history of late twentieth-century art鈥擬inimalist sculpture, Pop Art, Conceptual Art, and California Finish Fetish鈥攖hrough the stuff of popular culture鈥攎usic, furniture design and fabrication, and car culture.
In earlier work鈥攔eplications of Marshall and Peavey amplifiers, dorm refrigerators, microwave ovens, and trash cans ornamented with stickers and stains鈥擮shiro focused on music and popular culture, where his everyday objects told stories of specific sub-cultures in the music and art worlds, through combinations of appliance and adornment, His newer work鈥攔eplications of wall cabinets, a full-scale kitchen, and, here, washers and dryers鈥攅ngages issues of domesticity, design, architecture, and their relationships to the commodities of popular culture and private life.
Kaz Oshiro鈥檚 exhibition is the twenty-seventh in the 色中色 Museum of Art鈥檚 Project Series, an ongoing program of focused exhibitions that brings to the 色中色 campus art that is experimental and that introduces new forms, techniques, or concepts.
Rebecca McGrew
Curator
Catalogue Essay
Kaz Oshiro鈥檚 Magic Deceit
By Michael Duncan
鈥淭he connoisseurs of the future may be more sensitive than we are to the imaginative dimensions and overtones of the literal.鈥 鈥 Clement Greenberg, 鈥淎bstract and Representational,鈥 Art Digest, November 1, 1954
Kaz Oshiro鈥檚 surprising re-creations of commonplace objects are trompe l鈥檕eil mind-teasers that slyly extend and invert the esthetic end-game initiated by the ideas of Marcel Duchamp and Andy Warhol. Flawless illusions, they appear to be what they depict--amplifiers, kitchen cabinets, trash cans, washers and dryers--complete with evidence of wear: scuff marks, stains, scrapes, stickers. As bland objects from the bottom of the consumer chain, they seem unlikely inhabitants of a museum or gallery.
All are non-collectables; they are slightly worn containers for things, receptacles of rock music, garbage, dirty laundry, plates, and mugs. Without aura or singularity, they seem too ordinary to consider as pathetic or abject; they have none of the appeal of Mike Kelley鈥檚 stuffed animals or Jim Shaw鈥檚 thrift store paintings. As presumably found objects, they don鈥檛 have the romantic patinas of rust or age. A glance at a wall label or checklist, however, changes everything 鈥 along with a look at their backsides. Oshiro鈥檚 works are composed of acrylic paint on canvas, with accessory details molded in bondo, the substance used to repair car bodies. Beautifully crafted props, they are usually installed so that viewers can discover the backstage artifice of canvas and stretcher bars.
Oshiro鈥檚 painstaking replications endow seemingly empty emblems of consumer culture with meaning. Growing up in Okinawa, Oshiro was bred on a hearty mix of American and Japanese pop cultures. His teenage enthusiasm for punk and new wave music and involvement as a young adult with pop collectibles eventually led to disillusion with the commodity-controlled world of fashions and trends. While in art school at California State University, Los Angeles, Oshiro became intrigued by the Photorealist paintings of Daniel Douke, particularly his masterfully convincing painted replications of paper bags and various forms of metal. Oshiro became interested in making free-standing objects using Douke鈥檚 illusionist techniques.
Like a good magic act, Oshiro鈥檚 works inspire a curiosity that leads to insecurity. We don鈥檛 really like knowing that our senses are fallible. Although we admire a good magician, we want to understand how we were tricked. To examine Oshiro鈥檚 works is to understand that things are not always what they seem. But his objects offer more than just slight-of-hand. The works take on new significance after a viewer sees their canvas and stretcher bar supports and examines their surfaces closely for indications of the artist鈥檚 touch. There are real signs of life within the masquerade.
Oshiro鈥檚 painstakingly accurate models of unremarkable objects neatly extend a long established art history of illusionism. Since ancient times, artists have created trompe l鈥檕eil paintings of faux windows, desktops, cabinets, and vistas that have bemused viewers with their convincing 3-D effects. Renaissance artists painted full-scale frescos that used perspectival rendering seemingly to extend corridors or architecture and to emulate exterior views. Ostensibly real insects or plants carved from wood or cast from metal were often included in collections of curios or cabinets of wonder.
As early as the seventeenth century, artists depicted in convincing detail the stretcher bars and backside of a painting, jokingly toying with the most basic convention of two-dimensional art. Such pranks were more than simply stunts of virtuosic rendering. Paintings capable of deceiving the senses tweak the hegemony of visual reality, opening the doors to the illusory worlds of fiction and the imagination. In their survey of trompe l鈥檕eil works in western culture, art historians Eckhard Hollmann and J眉rgen Tesch point out, 鈥淏ehind the entertaining surprise that a picture initially triggers often lies a deeper reflection on human shortcomings and the transience of objects. The observer is both entertained and disturbed, aware of how superficially and imprecisely he usually sees the world. To deceive the eye also means to open it.鈥
Around 1915, artist-trickster Marcel Duchamp cribbed the forms of a store-bought urinal, snow shovel, and bicycle wheel, claiming them as his own art. The greatness of the readymades stems not simply from Duchamp鈥檚 conceptual audacity in pronouncing common objects as art. He was able to see that these everyday things could serve as sleek, beautifully designed sculptures鈥攆ormally resolved in the mode of Brancusi鈥檚 sculptures or African masks. Performing a kind of conceptual trompe l鈥檕eil, Duchamp made his readymade art simply by titling the everyday objects.
In 1964 Andy Warhol extended Duchamp鈥檚 ideas by presenting replications of Brillo soap pad boxes as sculptures. In a variety of ways, Pop Art embraced the depiction of mass market goods, celebrating everyday life and the universality of consumerism. In his exact appropriation of the size and look of the boxes, Warhol challenged the distinctions usually made between art and non-art. In a sense, the full-scale copies of Brillo soap boxes cleansed art of its usual content, claiming even consumer goods as suitable subject matter.
Warhol鈥檚 Brillo boxes can also be seen to be joking commentaries on the simple geometric works just beginning to be made in the early sixties by Minimalist sculptors such as Donald Judd and Robert Morris. Like the crisply lined, regular forms of Judd鈥檚 cubes or Morris鈥檚 platforms, the Brillo boxes are simple rectangular solids, 鈥渟coured鈥 of irregularity or organic shapes. But there is a crucial difference: the Warhol boxes have been silkscreened with product logos and a price tag. The philosophical purity and Zen-inflected presence of Minimalist sculpture is gleefully corrupted in the appropriations of Warhol鈥檚 Pop Art.
Playing off Warhol鈥檚 twist of the formal tropes of Minimalism, Oshiro has chosen to appropriate objects from everyday life whose shapes consist of simple geometric solids. Oshiro鈥檚 works are all variations on rectangular box-like forms that reference the unornamented look of Minimalist sculpture. In 鈥淧eavy Stack鈥 (2003-04), the six components are arranged in a neat rectangular grid. Oshiro鈥檚 various kitchen cabinet works hang on the wall like Judd鈥檚 modular units. Oshiro鈥檚 trash bins feature bright monochrome faces that recall the fiberglass inserts in many Judd works. 鈥淪ony Bookshelf Speakers鈥 (2003-04), a vertical row of six, evenly spaced, faux, wall-mounted speakers, is a direct parody of Judd鈥檚 stacks from the mid-sixties of rectangular, galvanized metal or stainless steel.
When Warhol declared in reference to his assembly line production of soup can and celebrity portrait paintings, 鈥淚 want to be a machine,鈥 he was placing himself in opposition to the spiritual and philosophical aspirations associated with art movements such as Abstract Expressionism and Minimalism. He challenged the uniqueness of painting through repeated use of silkscreens, creating dozens of variations on his best known images.
While also made in series, Oshiro鈥檚 works are far from assembly line productions. Their time-consuming facture invests them with a perversely positive value, one generated from Oshiro鈥檚 personal philosophy that 鈥淭o survive, you better hate the thing you like and like the thing you hate.鈥 Following this twisted logic, Oshiro re-creates low subject matter in the style of a movement whose ideals he mistrusts. Questioning the efficacy of art, his plain-spoken works are kitchen-sink dramas, finding a kind of poignancy and purity in mundane vessels for garbage, rock music, trash, and dirty laundry.
In addition to Pop, Photorealism, Minimalism, Appropriation, and trompe l鈥檕eil painting, Oshiro also draws on the poetic associations of found-object assemblage in his meticulous re-creations of the objects鈥 marks of ownership. These indications of daily use humanize the works, hinting at everyday lives beyond art and the act of art-making. Oshiro provides only the scantiest details about the owners of these objects. Like evidence from an archeological site, the rock band stickers, food stains, and detergent spills might spark theories about early twenty-first century lifestyles and culture. Oshiro鈥檚 trompe l鈥檕eil objects are implicit memento mori, quietly asserting the fallibility of our senses and the mortality of all things.