Allan McCollum:
The Small World Drawings
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Allan McCollum. The Small World Drawings, 2000. Graphite on rag paper; 4 x 6 inches each. Installation: The Barbara Krakow Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts. March 18 - April 26, 2000.
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The principle of intrinsic interest is often brought up when artists are taught the principle of weight in creating a balanced composition.
The example I remember from my high school art teacher was how a painting that depicts Niagara Falls on the right side of the canvas can be balanced with a tiny human figure on the left side of the canvas. This is because the human figure carries more intrinsic interest to the human eye (humans, it seems, are more interested in humans than in waterfalls). Therefore, since only humans look at paintings, a tiny human figure and a huge waterfall can carry the same weight in a paintings composition.
This idea has remained with me since that time, and, for my exhibit at Barbara Krakow Gallery, I would like to explore this precept.
I recognize that all commercial art galleries appreciate artists who create artwork that is interesting to their regular clients. Artists, in turn, like to please their galleries. In this way, art can often be shaped by a particular gallerys community of clients, through a kind of natural evolutionary process. This could be one of the reasons that, over time, artists in one particular gallery will tend to make similar work.
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Allan McCollum. Small World Drawing (Lee + Boris) 2000. Graphite on rag paper; 4 x 6 inches
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Allan McCollum. Small World Drawing (Carol + Carol) 2000. Graphite on rag paper; 4 x 6 inches
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As I create my first solo exhibition in Boston, I am hoping people here will be pleased by my work. In his famous book How to Win Friends and Influence People, Dale Carnegie teaches us the importance of remembering peoples names by reminding us that ...the average man is more interested in his own name than in all the other names on earth put together.
Ive asked Barbara Krakow to provide me with her Boston area mailing list, and Ive used the first names of these people to depict this particular community of individuals. I have assumed that, as with any true community, many of these clients maintain relationships with many of the other clients. For instance, one of the gallerys clients may be another clients stockbroker, psychoanalyst, lover, parent, friend, or enemy. In some cases, one client may have multiple relationships with another client: one client might at the same time be another clients dentist and ex-boyfriend, for example.
To honor Barbara Krakow Gallerys Boston clients, I am creating drawings to represent each individual and the complexity of their community. There are over 30,000 possible pairings; I am depicting 1000 of these pairings with 1000 drawings.
Allan McCollum
March 2000
Visit the Barbara Krakow Gallery
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