Max Frisinger
Noah's Ark (CocoRosie)
2010
Steel, glass, wood, mixed media
246 x 272.5 x 105 cm
Max Frisingerâs raised glass cases â assemblages crammed with found material â are witty visual paradoxes, governed by a dual sense of cacophony and order. They demand careful observation, with each side like an entry point, revealing a different topography made up of found scraps â metal, wood, tubing, table legs, plastic tubs, offcuts and other broken designs â all random-looking but somehow perfectly framed around each other and their spatial limitations.
Frisingerâs works juxtapose apparent chaos with a careful sense of arrangement, and flirt with an art historical understanding of perspective, representation and abstraction. Depending on the viewerâs point of view, the objects within these three-dimensional boxes may appear to be independent from each other, or unified and flattened, like abstract paintings.
Max Frisinger
Rising (Yoko Ono)
2010
Steel, glass, wood, mixed media
246 x 272.5 x 105 cm
Noahâs Ark (CocoRosie) (2010), a vitrine chock full of mismatched shapes, is striking for the complex imagery that rises out of its superimposed objects and the gaps left between them. Rising (Yoko Ono) (2010) shows a somewhat axial arrangement suggesting kineticism despite its crammed, impossibly static nature.
When asked about his works and the development of his practice, Frisinger simply states: âinveni, vidi, viciâ (âI found, I saw, I conqueredâ). His assemblages can be seen to be making reference to the tradition of refuse-based art, recycling detritus to comment on the society of excess. Looming over Frisingerâs new time-capsules of the everyday are the ghosts of found-object sculptures by Marcel Duchamp and Jean Tinguely, Armanâs âaccumulationsâ and Daniel Spoerriâs âsnare picturesâ, as well as a poetic playfulness, somewhere between Joseph Cornell and the musical, performative improvisation of Fluxus.
But Frisingerâs boxes, like portable, flat-pack dumpsters, contain not just a nod to the past, but an up-to-date comment on our current culture of waste and excess in society in general but perhaps also within the art world.