Published February 29, 2004 by aanews

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N.jpgew York based artist, Mary Ellen Carroll recently invited actors to attend an open audition to be her.
“…Female or feminine male (28 - 40), tall (5’10” +), lanky, brunette, hazel eyes, intelligent…dry wit, not so ugly, strong character, for role as post-conceptual artist in New York.” Assured that they would be paid and that there would be no nudity, Carroll received as wide a variety as could be humanly possible for such a precise physical brief: the publicity shots which are reproduced in this book feature women and men who black, white, big, small, bald, hirsute and uncannily nearly all widely grinning. Now I have never met Carroll but I am assuming that all these would-be doppelgangers present no clear or present danger to her in terms of anatomical exactitude; to revisit that old legend, she is safe that she will not die in the near future through meeting with them. Baudrillard’s universally well-thumbed concept of the simulacrum - the copy without an original - grimaces at us from the pages of, illustrating, in a most graphic manner, that our current notions of culture and society as a shifting flux of undifferentiated images and signs are most notably reinforced when reproduction and reproducibility are in play, especially when has been an exact outline of what the original should have been like. I wonder if one of the photographs is actually her…
Maria Fusco, London.

Mary Ellen Carroll
All the men who think they can be me
Published February 2004

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C.jpgause of Arrest: HockeyAt the finals of hockey season in Clifton, New York, eight adults were arrested for assault and battery. A fight broke out concerning a game on the ice – a tournament match among 9 year old children - that had led to parents fighting it out in the stands. Hockey fights are usually part of the game, inside the rink. They are about the performance of punching and pulling and drops of blood shed for the triumph of winning. Chris Hanson & Hendrika
Sonnenberg’s new book for onestar press is Fruit Bowls and Hockey Fights. In a match up as responsive as Ed Ruscha’s Various Small Fires and a Glass of Milk, Hanson & Sonnenberg combine the quiet subject of still lives with the rowdy mayhem of sports events. Both the fruit and the fights are caught in suspense – the fruit captured eternally ripe inside installations, and the fights, frozen forever in action without a clear winner. The photos reveal intricate choreographies – the strategic arrangement of plaster fruit pieces is as complex as chance photos of elbows and hockey sticks in action. Hockey season may be over but Hanson & Sonnenberg continue the fight – pitting art and reality, installation and performance, fruit and hockey. onestar press is now taking your bets on these matches.
Rachel K. Ward, New York.

C. Hanson & H. Sonnenberg
Fruit Bowls and hockey fights
Published February 2004