Since the mid-1960s, Franz West (born 1947) has been finding new ways to
balance his art on the line between beauty and ugliness. At the age of
14, West--living in bombed-out, post-Nazi Vienna--attended an event
organized by the Viennese Actionists, at which Hermann Nitsch smashed a
lamb cadaver against the wall of a basement room in a tenement building:
"it was incredibly shocking and really depressing," West said. His own
art over the past four decades has eschewed such nihilism: his
Adaptives, which he has described as "neuroses made material" (with a
nod to Darwin as well), are sculptural objects for viewers to engage
physically, using them as ungainly temporary prostheses, appliances,
accessories, and instructional tools. White Elephant documents these,
as well as West's important works of furniture and collage, and his
marvelously awkward sculptures, which seem lumpily homely and
unbalanced, or gangly and hopeful as a blemished teen.