mag

Heeb Issue #19 : Chosen/Art

Colby Bird

Image by Colby Bird Text by Emily Weiner

Colby Bird’s photographs and sculptures (featuring crack pipes, airplane alcohol bottles, and cocaine-smooth surfaces) lay bare a fascination with drug overindulgence and a kind of middleclass ostentation that is often baffling in its sincerity. Bird, who was raised in Texas and received his MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design in 2004, explains that he has always tried to find a common ground between a cerebral, high-art practice and a taste for the uninhibited or decadent. He achieves this in his studio, where social spheres that Bird finds alluring (yet impenetrable because of social norms) become accessible. There, the media and experiences he witnesses as an outsider distill into something he can own.

 

One figure from the “Crackheads Gone Wild” video makes a cameo appearance in “Royal Crown,” a sculptural installation Bird debuted at his 2007 show at CRG Gallery in Chelsea. In this work, a gold air freshener shaped like a crown (the kind commonly found at dollar stores and in customized cars) balances precariously on an upright 2×4. An adjacent monitor loops a VHS testimonial by the down-and-out addict who—with red hair like Bird’s—might be the artist’s doppelganger after some slippery twist of fate. “I saw so many parallels between him and myself,” he admits. “I was jealous of this guy’s complete debasement; It was like looking at my id embodied.” What became apparent to me is that Bird sees this other self (who, in the film, admits “what I’m wearing is all I own”) as heroic in his unabashed candor, and crowns him, however incongruously, as noble.

 

Bird’s large-scale photographs also use objects to obliquely describe a certain drug-addled, modern condition. One C-print titled “Theater,” for instance, depicts several small vodka bottles sitting on a dirty windowsill; The window behind is partially covered with a red velvet curtain—a seemingly futile attempt to block out the pinkness of dawn. Taking a cue from early photographers who combined negatives to illuminate both interior and exterior spaces simultaneously, Bird uses a lighting trick to elucidate what he calls “two planes of reality”: The world inside after a night of binging versus the alien world outside, full of people starting their day sans hangover. In another photo (pictured above), Bird puts a modern spin on a Dutch still life: A cheap wineglass stands in for a chalice, while a bouquet is replaced with a glass tube containing a tiny rose (a thinly disguised crack pipe sold at bodegas). Both photos can be read as sad, foreboding images, equally loaded in poignancy and color.

 

“What I struggle with most in my work is that I put my own tastes out there for examination, and they are too often taken as insincere or ironic,” Bird laments. He suggests that now—as the art market wanes with Wall Street’s—art audiences might receive his earnestness more readily. “If the economy bottoms out, it will be harder to see a crack pipe as something abstract and more as a fact of society.”

 

 

More than One Hustle 1/35, 2008
archival pigment print and screenprint on paper
22 X 45 3/4 inches

 

 

Theatre 1/3, 2007
C-print
49 X 36 inches

 

 

Trap House, 2007
Banker’s Boxes, fluorescent lights, wood, wiring, and spraypaint
60 X 60 X 65 inches

 

 

Tom Wolf, 2008

Speakers, Umbrellas, plastic wine glass, beer, American DJ
PL-1001ETL Spotlight
10 X 16 X 78 inches

 

 

All images courtesy of the artist and CRG Gallery, NY 

 

 

comments

submit a comment
Nunovya says,

09.20.09 at 5:09 am

This is art?

Puck says,

09.21.09 at 7:09 pm

That’s a post?

logo_icons2_129 Facebook MySpace YouTube Twitter RSS Feed

this issue

the whole megillah

The Wasted Issue

In turning The Simpsons’ Krusty the Clown (née Herschel Krustofski) into a golem, dripping obscenely in

(read more)

Waste Management

Newspaper and cardboard can be recycled, but toilet paper cannot. In an average lifetime, a single human

(read more)

Kyketail, Anyone?

Tried everything to get the attention of that cute guy or girl all alone on the other side of the bar? Try

(read more)

Don’t Get Fresh With Me

Stale challah is a versatile ingredient—without which the following recipes would fall as flat as

(read more)

honorary heeb

The Chosen Ones

Proust, Kafka, Orwell. . .if hyper-intellectual 21st century geeks have their say, the name Joss Whedon

(read more)

feature interview

Riot Incorporated

Britney Spears, Michael Jackson and Lindsay Lohan have given being bonkers a bad name. And this, friends, is why you need to appreciate Courtney Love. She may be a partied-out, namedropping big mouth, but thanks to her, it’s still cool to be a screw up. (read more)

features

Trail of Ashes

Aulcie Perry did more than just play basketball. And it would take more than a drug conviction for his country to forget it. (read more)

feature interview

Spoonful of Sugar

If you’re looking for something to do with your money now that the stock market has crashed, put it all on Natasha Lyonne’s comeback. (read more)

photo feature

Excessive Wear

Face it, dude, you’re a fucking mess. Your breath stinks, your hair is dishevelved and your clothes wreak of cigarette stench. Winter fashion even though the party’s so over. (read more)

storytelling

My Chemical Romance

Stephanie Green experienced Ecstasy, acid, shrooms, mescaline, cocaine, crystal, pot and almost every kind of downer—then she got to experience breast cancer. (read more)

chosen/books

Music: I-LXXXIV

This winter, Pressed Wafer Press will publish the second, long-awaited prose collection by poet-delinquent

(read more)

chosen/film

Actress Melissa Leo

Between the red hair and heartbreaking stare, you know you’ve seen Melissa Leo before, but you’re not

(read more)

chosen/art

Colby Bird

Colby Bird’s photographs and sculptures (featuring crack pipes, airplane alcohol bottles, and

(read more)

hijinx

Let’s Hear it for Grandpa!

Legendary cartoonist Bob Fingerman gives us a strip for the Wasted Issue. Click here to see the full

(read more)

features

The Adventures of a Jewish Hippie Festival Medic

Summary (read more)

purchase a copy

go to the shop

Quantcast