VSF is pleased to inaugurate its outdoor gallery and sound corridor with the new site-specific installation Inverted Capitol Spire, Programmatic Architecture Displacement 5 and the five-channel sound-piece “Inversion V” by Los Angeles-based artist Scott Benzel. This is his first show with the gallery.
Benzel’s work often examines the boundaries between curatorial and artistic practices, as well as popular and high culture, through the selection, re-contextualization, and re-examination of subjects categorized within the twin spheres of ‘high’ and ‘low.’ For this exhibition, the artist approaches two of Los Angeles’ most definitive cultural icons–the Capitol Records building and The Beach Boys–using the musical and architectonic concept of inversion.
Conceived of by the 24-year-old graduate student Lou Naidorf for the architectural firm Welton Beckett, the original design for the Capitol Records building suggests an inverted (skyward) stylus atop a stack of records, capped with a light that regularly pulses out Morse code for ‘Hollywood.’ After its completion in 1956, it became both the world’s first circular office building and a novelty construction that visually established the growing record company as a formidable West Coast presence. In In verted Capitol Spire, Programmatic Architecture Displacement 5, Benzel turns a 1/4-scale steel replica of this blinking SoCal landmark earthward, reassuming its original symbolism as a phonographic needle. Meanwhile, “Inversion V” reworks Benzel’s string-quintet composition based on The Beach Boys’ 1969 Capitol Records’ release “Never Learn Not to Love” with both the rhythmic drumming of Morse code for Hollywood and abstracted compositions inspired by field recordings from Los Angeles’ streets.
Both Benzel’s bold anti-monument and tempermental sound-piece confront an alternate history of Los Angeles’ flippant culture industry.
