WHERE'S THE JUNGLE ROOM?

Elvis Home

Long live the king

Alexander Kennedy trips over a pipe, bangs his head and temporarily goes to magic America with Alexandre Perigot

he memory of a pathetic fat man in a tight.

spangled costume walking aimlessly in his

little castle is invoked by Alexandre Perigot. but it‘s the gallery-goer‘s inner lilvis that is expressed as you rattle about the life-sized mock—up of his home at the Tramway like a 'real life‘ rat on constant view. Famous people look smaller in reality (the ego doesn't fit the body). and our idea of the White House-like home of The King towers above the mock-up that the Paris-based artist has constructed in the main gallery space. This is a monument to celebrity. the shell of a grim but rhinestone-punctured reality that hovers over Western culture where the sky should be.

Perceptions are immediately questioned as you walk through the back door of the celebrity home. It‘s lacing the wrong way for a start. We want our art and our culture straight on please. flattened out. signposted. giving us the full frontal. Why isn‘t this silver scaffolding version of the real thing behaving? It should be up the back of the space. looking down benignly at us with a wide open smiling mouth for a doorway. As you navigate your way through the rat- ma/e. looking for the cheesy truth. ‘lilvis lite~ questions rise tip in the mind: ‘Where's the Jungle Room'.". ‘Where's the toilet he died on'." But the building has been stripped nothing interferes with our piercing gaze and inane questions. You‘re a cultural tourist of the highest order.

It‘s difficult not to over—sentimentalisc a ruin. a memory. a monument. And art that exploits this is best avoided. But Perigot uses this need for cheap.

'casily accessible emotion as subject matter. rather

than simply relying on it as some kind of quasi

sublime filling for his work. For him it is quickly dissolving candy floss rather than ever expanding marshmallow. The relationship between superficialin

and genuine affect is critiqued. The political aspect of

this kind of empty expression (rhetoric) is also here: the relationship between America and Britain being at the forefront of all of our minds just now. This is a monument to The King (monarchy. imperialism). to American culture and our relationship with it. Perigot reminds us in the gallery text that lilvis only ever visited Britain once. when he touched down in Scotland (l’restwick) on his way home from (iermany as a (il. The sculpture becomes an empty symbol for the ‘hands across the water" Blairite cant that will now hopefully cease. They should put this sculpture where terminal one used to be at (ilasgow Airport.

As a structure to be interacted with and the dwelling of a performer. ‘lilvis Home’ acted as the stage set for three performances on the opening night. (ilasgow‘s very own Parsonage (fresh from supporting Rod Stuart. no less) made an appearance. with the glorious techno racket of Simon liisher Turner and punk posturing of Agaskodo Teliverik following on. As you walk backwards to get a better view of this construction (or to see the acts) try not to trip over the pipes that till the second half of the space. A tennis ball (lilvis‘ last stool?) is shot through the /.ig/.agging construction. Two traumas make a trauma so don‘t fall twice or break open the pipes. The King‘s sewage could enter the building like the return of the traumatic Real.

Alexandre Perigot, Pipedream, Tramway, Glasgow, until Sun 5 Aug 0000.

THE BEST EXHIBITIONS

VisUal Art >l<

=3: Alexandre Perigot: Pipedreams Silver scaffolding delineates the outer edges of a diminutive mansion. bringing Elvis' Graceland to Glasgow. Alexandre Perigot presents an installation that subtly comments on celebrity, collective memory and the political relationship between America and Great Britain. See review, opposite. Tramway, Glasgow, until Sun 5 Aug.

7:: Pale Carnage This exhibition of 12 international artists examines beauty. cruelty, desire, decadence. voyeurism and violence. The work focuses on aesthetic and philosophical trends from the late 19th and early 20th century, demonstrating the fascistic politics that can be found at the core of modernism and classicism. See review, page 84. Dundee Contemporary Art, Dundee, until Sun 2 Sep.

ti: Richard Long: Walking and Marking Installation, photography, maps and paintings recording Long’s walking trips around Britain and abroad. For this show the artist will also exhibit new works that relate directly to the landscape around Edinburgh, bringing together and utilising materials from the land. creating stone circles and muddy hand-print works that record the artist‘s presence. Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh, until Sun 27 Oct.

:1: Bevan Quinn Another excellent exhibition in the South Side Studio’s Fridge gallery. Quinn has created hard edged. shaped canvases that take off where Stella got stuck. The use of neon and Perspex literalise the fourth dimension that modernist masters gestured towards, creating works that are crisper than the crumbling originals. Fridge Gallery, Glasgow, until 29 Jul.

1‘.) Jul 9 Aug 900/ THE LIST 83