
View From the Sixty Third Floor
Artspace Sydney 1998
Sculpture by the Sea Port Arthur, Tasmania 2001
Sculpture by the Sea Sydney 2002
Sculpture in the City Martin Place 2004
Vienna! Sydney!
Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna
1998
Helen Lempriere Award
Werribee Park, Victoria
2003

[left]
View From the Sixty Third Floor
Helen Lempriere exhibition of finalists
washed grass roots, instant turf, carpet squares, plaster, excavated
grave, astro turf
2005
[right]
View From the Sixty Third Floor
Vienna! Sydney!
washed grass roots, instant turf, carpet squares, plaster, excavated grave, astro
turf
2005
Lost in Space: Elizabeth Day’s
View from the 63rd Floor
Patrick Crogan
Elizabeth Day’s hydroponic installation triggers for me a mental
association with the American 1960s television series, Lost in Space.The
Robinson family, marooned on an unknown planet, use a hydroponic system
to grow vegetables to live on. I have an image of Maureen Robinson, the
archetypal suburban housewife/mother figure, tending the hydroponic garden
along with the female children of the ‘pioneering’ American
family unit. The combination of the futuristic projection of 1990s high-tech
with the (already then) outmoded 1950s family values is typical of the
show’s camp take on the future. The show was lost in time between
America’s populuxe past and its off-world future as much as the
cornball Robinsons were lost in space.
As the title, View From the 63rd Floor, suggests, Day’s installation
of hydroponics and grass is also lost in space (and time), but not in the same
camp mode as the 60s television series. Adopting the restrained mood of 90s
post-conceptual art, Day’s View is productively, intriguingly disorienting
from many perspectives. I wish to sketch out but a few of these here, particularly
as they relate to the aesthetic horizons of Day’s installation practice.
The title evokes the disconcerting appearance of gardens or small patches of
vegetation within the space of a large metropolis seen from the height of a
skyscraper. From this perspective, the city seems to swallow nature, inverting
the normal sense of scale that pertains to the city-country relationship. Similarly,
View brings the outside inside, miniaturising nature in the interior of the
city’s Artspace, drawing it into this ‘white cube’ where
the art object is revered (still) in cultural rites.

View From the Sixty Third Floor
Sculpture by the Sea Bondi
washed grass roots, instant turf, carpet squares, plaster, excavated grave, astro
turf
2002
As a meditation on the ambivalent status of this ‘neutral zone’ for
contemporary artistic practice, Day’s work furthers installation art’s
questioning of the significance of the site for the experience of the artwork.
This is a questioning which has not ceased to address the Minimalist phenomenological
exploration of art and its extension and revision in the movements of Earth
Art and Conceptual Art. View reverses Earth Art’s ‘liberation’ of
the work, a liberation achieved (it was hoped) by removing art from the aesthetic
and conceptual dead-end of the gallery space and reinventing it in the new
context of the outside world. At the same time View insists on the conceptual
agenda of this re-framing of biological life through the geometrical principles
governing the work’s installation. The rectangular hydroponic unit is
articulated within the gallery space through the frame of the grass root mat
on which it stands, the ensemble alluding to the bland object deployments of
Minimalism. Despite its evident engagement with these post-formalist art practices
of the 60s, View evokes the ‘decay’ of the utopian aesthetic trajectory
away from the gallery object, evidenced by the wholescale recuperation of post-formalist ‘non-art
objects’ by the gallery system – itself a kind of life-support
technology figured by Day’s hydroponic hothouse.

View From the Sixty Third Floor
Sculpture by the Sea, Port Arthur Tasmania
washed grass roots, instant turf, carpet squares, plaster, excavated grave, astro
turf
2005
Nature is artificed in the hydroponic process, produced and regulated
by an apparatus that could be thought of as an exemplification of
the (post)modern technological project of the ‘closed system’ (Biosphere, C3I, Cybernetic‚s
feedback loop). The arrangement of the different coloured hybrid vegetables
in the hydroponic tray evokes ironically the quasi-organicity of form in abstract
expressionist painting. The classic Modernist declarations of the purity and
autonomy of art come into focus in an ambivalent light through Day’s
setting-to-order of nature. View seems to literalise the Modernist metaphor
of art with a life of its own. On the other hand, it is difficult to reconcile
the autonomy of artistic creation, theorised since Kant as a free play that
exhibits ‘purposiveness without purpose’, with the closure brought
to bear on the natural by the instrumental regime of hydroponics.
A final attempt at situating this enigmatic project, or tracing the
enigmatic loss of position that it maintains between artistic discourses,
movements and periods: View comes as something of a departure from
Day’s previous work
inasmuch as that work concerns itself with various modes of the fragmentary.
This is evident in the materials utilised in the creation of her installations:
found objects/trash (Shadow, 1993), disparate objects/materials (The Destiny
of Objects, 1996), parts of unpicked garments/textile materials (The Unravelling
of Form, 1995, Disintoxication, 1996). This concern has located Day’s
project in the anti-purist, counter-tradition of Modernity (Dada, Surrealism,
Pop, but also Fluxus, Neo-dada, and ‘post-modern’ appropriationist
and post-conceptual work). This counter-tradition would oppose the romantic,
organic conception of the artwork as an integral unity. In its treatment
of natural organisms enclosed in an integrated system with its own modulated
light source, water supply and nutrients, View appears to depart from this
focus on the impure fragment, the discarded element. Instead, this is a work
about closure, totality, the organism.

View From the Sixty Third Floor
Sculpture in the City Martin Place 2004
washed grass roots, instant turf, carpet squares, plaster, excavated grave, astro
turf
From another perspective, however, View can be seen to crystallise
the latent impulse to restitution that underlies the celebration
of the excluded fragment in this counter-tradition, thereby confirming
its structural affinity to the High Modernism of the pure. The salvation
of the discarded, the reclamation of the remains, the reintegration
of the extraneous, this is the movement of dialectical negation that
saves the fragment by transforming it into fullness (of meaning)
and purity (of aesthetic form) – a movement that is, inevitably
therefore, integral to romanticism. View’s ‘natural organisation’ parodies
this secret affinity of High Modernism with its contrary other, even as this
paradoxical parody entails View losing a clear sight of itself as part of
the critical-aesthetic trajectory out of which it has grown.

View From the Sixty Third Floor
Artspace Sydney
washed grass roots, instant turf, carpet squares, plaster, excavated grave, astro
turf
1998

View From the Sixty Third Floor
Artspace Sydney
hydroponic system with coloured hybrid vegetable 'painting' with 1000 watt track
lighting
1998
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