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Gallery of the Loo


An ongoing exhibit at Moose McGillycuddy's


April 05, 2007
The body of work overwhelmed me. Rows upon rows of frames of various

sizes hung in seemingly every square inch of wall space. I could do

nothing but gape, perching on my seat with one fist tucked firmly under

my chin in resolute contemplation. Enthralled as I was by the sheer

magnitude of it, I couldn't help but think of a recent article I'd read

by Peter Schjeldahl in The New Yorker, describing an exhibition of feminist art at the Brooklyn Museum.



Much like that exhibit, the one covering the walls all around me in

the women's restroom of Moose McGillycuddy's in Kihei is a kind of

"suite of galleries," with art of mixed media separated into four

stalls. At first glance, the extreme eclecticism of art in such a

heavily inundated exhibit as this results in a look and feel that is

paradoxically homogenous.

Also like the exhibit in Brooklyn, Moose's displayed art—at least in

the ladies' room—also has thematic conflicts it cannot resolve:

"politics versus taste, virtue versus pleasure, aggrieved conviction

versus disposable wealth." Although in this case, the bulk of

images—mainly photographs and Photoshopped photographs—in Moose's

bathroom seem to be separated into three distinct categories:

celebrities in ironic situations, everyday people with bizarre physical

conditions and animals deliberately posed in a kind of species-specific

karmic justice.

Schjeldahl writes, "The best artists help us forget where we are,

even as they may snugly fit a category," citing an example of a

particular female artist's commentary on the conditions of womanhood he

felt was "both cartoonishly obvious and, in its aesthetic power,

exhilarating." For me, this is best displayed in Moose's ladies' loo by

a photograph of a woman chugging a pitcher of beer while on the toilet,

and another of a woman, also relieving herself, this time while

squatting on a urinal, and last, but not least, a photo of a woman in

the midst of spray-painting the side of a new car with the words "Hope

she was…"

Schjeldahl also describes another piece at the Brooklyn feminist

exhibit as having a "funny, spooky intelligence" that "stands out in an

ambience of strained ambition." I think of this as I peer into a

Renaissance-like portrait of Jack Black, a photo of Anthony Hopkins

holding a drawing of Bambi, and still another of wild-haired Nick Nolte

as Mel Gibson in a faux Braveheart movie poster which reads, "Every man dies, not every man really lives."



There are other notable images—a girl with a live tarantula crawling

out of her white panties; a couple assuming the position in the dryer

of a laundromat; a penguin windsurfing on a turtle; a squirrel atop an

acorn 10 times his size; a mugshot of Kermit, smoking. I wonder what

Schjeldahl would say about them.

For as Schjeldahl asks of the feminists' exhibit in Brooklyn whether

its imperative will be "to advance what women corporately want or to

promote what a gifted elite of women does," so too does the art on

display in the women's lavatory at Moose McGillycuddy's. MTW

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