
The Classic Manner of Inclusion
Todd Pavlisko
June 3 - July 2, 2005
Working in a variety of media, Todd Pavlisko subversively mines the inner
workings of the "institution"-- be it cultural, social, or corporate.
One of the featured works in this exhibition is the ongoing installation
Trophy Member, 2003-present, which asks the pertinent questions
that evolve from the process of developing institutional support and membership.
The answers are as varied as the individuals who consider and contribute
to the financial stability of every type of cultural organization. "I
am particularly interested in the courtship between the institution and
the patron -- the symbiotic phenomenon that gives rise to cultural hierarchy
and provides a setting for civic responsibility." The membership
campaign launched in 2003 with the solicitation of members offered varied
degrees of accessibility -- i.e. ascending in cost as they increase in
privilege. The artist states "the classic manner of inclusion allowed
people to separate themselves out by category." With their names
and membership levels now engraved on a plaque and attached to a trophy,
the member/patron has a specific affiliation to this expanding, concrete
installation, in effect redirecting financial support from the "establishment."
In 2004, Pavlisko's sculpture Fountain (an industrial drinking
fountain dispensing red wine) was included in the exhibition "Nothing
Compared to This (ambient, incidental and new minimal tendencies in recent
art)" at the Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, Ohio. This sculpture
along with other new work will be featured in our booth at LISTE:
The young art fair in Basel June 14-19. Performance is in integral
part of his practice and Pavlisko has performed at the Museum of Contemporary
Art Chicago, MOCA Cleveland, and the Pittsburgh Center for the Arts, as
well as Het West-Indisch Huis, Amsterdam, Holland. Pavlisko received his
MFA from Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh (2002).
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The Classic
Manner of Inclusion
( installation shot)

Untitled ($ red), 2005
plastic retail tag fasteners on raw canvas
24 x 24 in.
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