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Daniel Borins & Jennifer Marman: Another New American Century

Art Gallery of York University, Toronto Jan 28 to Mar 29 2009
Daniel Borins & Jennifer Marman  <I>Passports</I>  2007 Daniel Borins & Jennifer Marman Passports 2007

Daniel Borins & Jennifer Marman <I>Passports</I> 2007

Forged passports. A sci-fi Pietà. And paintings that fall off their canvases. It’s clear, reviewing selected works by Daniel Borins and Jennifer Marman, that to them art is never quite what it seems. The Toronto duo has made a career out of binding familiar with unfamiliar—Led Zeppelin band members into a dry, diagrammatic print, for instance, or a balcony from the terror-laced Munich Olympics into Smurf-scale.

At the same time, some Marman and Borins artworks reflect a core interest in the related interplay between viewer and artwork. As their 2003 work Presence Meter, currently exhibiting at the National Gallery’s “Caught in the Act,” indicates, the closer someone gets to a work, the more the work itself can change. (It’s a handy principle for engaging with some of their more enigmatic pop-culture-inspired works.)

Now, with a solo show, “Project for a New American Century,” just opened at the Art Gallery of York University, Borins and Marman have an opportunity to create an entire art/non-art environment—quite possibly a “monolithic prison-like enclosure” inspired by anti-Franco anarchists and brutalist university architectures alike. With that environment taking up one gallery space, another space plays out comparable “what if?” scenarios in painting and sculpture, yielding minimal landscapes and abstractions that could well be an aerial view of a suburban Canadian campus.

Smaller selections of Borins and Marman’s practice are also on exhibit as part of "True Lies," a group show at Georgia Scherman Projects to February 14. There, sculptures imitate paintings that imitate sculptures, still stones gather Astroturf-branded moss and handmade passport replicas for Canada, the United States and Israel rest in a Plexiglas case. What country is Marman and Borins’s art giving us access to? It’s hard to tell, exactly. But it sure can be a fun, and sometimes even thought-provoking, place to visit. (4800 Keele St, Toronto ON)

This article was first published online on January 29, 2009.

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