This particular piece is a mixed media installation that was made for the Copenhagen Kunsthal. It is a vitrine with glass, mirrors, and stenciled text on a pedestal. The vitrine measures 200 x 117 x 83 cm. The installation has the words “Everything Will Be Taken Away” wrapped around it. It resembles a reverse (non see-through) Jeff Koons One Ball Total Equilibrium Tank (1985) with it's cubed three dimensional fish tank like shape. The vitrine played tricks on my mind because I thought that objects were placed inside it. I slowly began to realize that the mirrored objects BECOME the art on all sides. This piece is more objective rather than subjective. You can be the subject, but there is a tendency for objects to inhabit these particular areas of cities.The mirrored objects are objects which in a very literal and real sense will be taken away which includes anything and everything at any time or any place. It is not just about one's self. It is about all our beloved objects, which are things we tend to hold too dear to our hearts.
Over the course of time, many people have critiqued her work from all angles; some reviews find her shocking, while others find her work more thought provoking. However the wording may be with these critiques, their message is similar. Her work is still race, gender, and class biased. Another example of this similar-minded criticism is by oneartworld.com: "Since the late 1960s, Adrian Piper has forged a unique artistic practice that infused classical Minimal sculptural form with explicit political content and introduced issues of race, gender and identity politics into the vocabulary of Conceptual art. She has deployed permutation and seriation-which at the time that Piper began using them were considered non-traditional artistic media- as strategies for investigating the infinite variability of perceptual form and content. In recent years, her artwork has begun to intersect more explicitly with her philosophical work, resulting in a reconsideration of space, time, and infinity in defining the limits and potential permutability of the self as situated on a pre-established grid defined by social and political variables of race, sex, class conflict, and social relations."
Almost everything about her work can be pared down to the last four words. But perhaps if not for these shocking ways of telling our history of the present, past, and future, we'd get swept up in another prehistoric racial wave. Adrian Piper is not only there to remind us of the personal. She is also here to remind us of the now. Her black and white photos of the aftermath of Katrina are not there to remind us of the tragedy and loss, but also to remind us that these are the problems of today, and circle of major issues to come.
Rosenberg, Karen. One Art World. www.oneartworld.com. Jonas Almgren. 2005-2009. 17 November, 2009. <http://oneartworld.com/Elizabeth+Dee/Everything.html>
Piper, Adrian. Adrian Piper Research Archive. www.adrianpiper.com. Dr. Constanze Von Marlin.
3 October, 2003. 17 November, 2009. <http://oneartworld.com/Elizabeth+Dee/Everything.html>
Rosenberg, Karen. One Art World. www.oneartworld.com. Jonas Almgren. 2005-2009. 17 November, 2009. <http://oneartworld.com/Elizabeth+Dee/Everything.html>
Piper, Adrian. Adrian Piper Research Archive. www.adrianpiper.com. Dr. Constanze Von Marlin.
3 October, 2003. 17 November, 2009. <http://oneartworld.com/Elizabeth+Dee/Everything.html>


