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Issue 245

Mike Kelley’s High School Caricatures Wreak Havoc

At The Brant Foundation in New York, the artist’s installation is like a fever dream that can’t be switched off

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BY Chris Murtha in Exhibition Reviews | 18 JUN 24

Photographs are often tasked with encapsulating an event, reducing it to a freeze-frame moment. For the series ‘Extracurricular Activity Projective Reconstruction (EAPR)’ (2000–11), Mike Kelley worked in reverse, developing fictionalized screenplays from individual images plucked from his stockpile of high school yearbook photos depicting carnivalesque teenage rituals: hazings, dress-up days, pageants. Kelley displayed each video alongside reconfigured props and set elements from its own production. In 2005, he assembled 31 of these ‘stations’ into Day Is Done, a cacophonous, gymnasium-sized installation that invoked the experience of channel surfing. A single component shown on its own – as Extracurricular Activity Projective Reconstruction #8 (Singles’ Mixer) (2005–06) is presented at The Brant Foundation – functions very differently, like a delirious fever dream that can’t be switched off.

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Mike Kelley, ‘Singles’ Mixer’, 2024, exhibition view. © 2024 Mike Kelley Foundation for the Arts. All Rights Reserved / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY. Courtesy: The Brant Foundation; photograph: Reem Yassin

In the black and white source photograph, which is displayed in a framed diptych alongside the artist’s full-colour staged re-creation, two students are inexplicably costumed. Clad in dungaree overalls, a grinning teenage girl with long blonde pigtails and painted-on freckles proudly clutches two giant stuffed bananas – the overtly phallic punctum that likely caught Kelley’s eye. Behind her is a brunette in a Kiss t-shirt and the band’s signature face paint. Kelley was endlessly fascinated by the ways in which humans performatively explore hidden facets of their identity through role play, so it is no surprise this pair are the protagonists of his imagined scenario.

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Mike Kelley, ‘Singles’ Mixer’, 2024, exhibition view. © 2024 Mike Kelley Foundation for the Arts. All Rights Reserved / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY. Courtesy: The Brant Foundation; photograph: Reem Yassin

The main three-channel video is projected onto screens that extend from a portable wall draped with a plastic-covered stage curtain. Mounted atop a pair of folding tables, and behind three stacks of plastic red cups, are glossy photographs of the video’s junk-food spread. The inclusion of actual and represented elements from the video puzzles our sense of the real and the staged, much like the ‘reality’ television shows the work appears modelled on. A canned soundtrack of hoots and groans, however, locates Singles’ Mixer closer to sketch comedy or a tabloid chat show. Immediately dispensing with niceties, the attendees – dressed as witches and goths or, as with four Black women, not in costume – launch into a bitter argument, structured around blatant race- and class-based tropes, over ‘the ideal man’. The candidates, as depicted in student-level paintings brought to the event as if for an art crit, are Kobe Bryant, Garth Brooks, R. Kelly, Brandon Lee (as The Crow) and Gene Simmons. The only actual guy in attendance, a proto-incel computer nerd, watches in goofy pleasure as the debate boils over into a catfight between the ‘hillbilly’ and the Kiss fan. Hung salon-style on the wood-panelled back side of the curtained wall opposite a looping excerpt of the climactic battle, the faux-naïf portraits are made to witness the chaos they have wrought.

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Mike Kelley, ‘Singles’ Mixer’, 2024, exhibition view. © 2024 Mike Kelley Foundation for the Arts. All Rights Reserved / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY. Courtesy: The Brant Foundation; photograph: Reem Yassin

Kelley’s sometimes problematic caricatures simultaneously perform and undermine their own stereotypes. The metalhead is also the prudish voice of reason and high culture who doesn’t appreciate ‘deviant sexual metaphors’. (She makes an exception for Simmons’s tongue, ‘an organ of oral artistry’.) Pretentiously proclaiming the ‘beauty of the mind’, she delivers, in the first of the video’s two monologues, an incantation to the ‘high gods of wisdom and glory’. Directly addressing the audience, the hillbilly responds with a convoluted campfire tale of a ‘long gone race of folks’ residing inside a tiny bubble in a primordial cesspool. ‘Proud things’, she warns us, should be humbler.

Viewed now, as the US spirals into the maelstrom of yet another contentious election, Singles’ Mixer seems like a warning of what happens when people stubbornly refuse to engage in a productive dialogue with their perceived opponents. Perhaps it should be screened every four years.

Mike Kelley’sSingles’ Mixer’, is on view at the Brant Foundation, New York, until 29 June

Main Image: Mike Kelley, ‘Singles’ Mixer’, 2024, exhibition view. © 2024 Mike Kelley Foundation for the Arts. All Rights Reserved / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY. Courtesy: The Brant Foundation; photograph: Reem Yassin

Chris Murtha is writer and curator based in New York, USA. His writing has appeared in Art in America, Artforum, e-flux, Mousse and X-TRA, among other publications.

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