Los Angeles Times

Walking down a street in costume

- Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects, 6006 Washington Blvd., Culver City, (310) 837-2117, through March 30. Closed Sunday and Monday. www.vielmetter.com

Stanya Kahn is the sort of performer who has only to walk down the street to be riveting — as proved repeatedly in the numerous video works of recent years that feature her mostly doing just that: wandering the streets of L.A. in a Viking hat and a bloody nose, carrying a wedge of fake cheese in “Can’t Swallow It, Can’t Spit It Out” of 2006; hobbling down urban streets and desert dirt roads on crutches, her head wrapped in bandages, in “It’s Cool, I’m Good” of 2010.

In “Lookin’ Good, Feelin’ Good,” one of four videos in her second solo show at Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects, we find her strutting through town in a giant foam penis costume: talking on her cellphone, high-fiving strangers, ordering a hot dog at Wienerschn­itzel. The effect is as bizarrely amusing as ever.

More intriguing, however — and no less entertaini­ng — is the departure she makes in the other three videos, removing herself entirely and focusing on what is clearly a highly developed instinct for the visual language of video (one often overshadow­ed by her charismati­c presence) on the activation of inanimate objects. “Happy Song for You,” a vividly peculiar impression­istic short made last year in collaborat­ion with artist Lynn Foulkes, appears to have served as the launching point for a looser and more richly imaginativ­e exploratio­n of objects.

A pair of wise-cracking puppets made from crumpled paper wander through a landscape cluttered with low-budget horror movie monsters in “Arms Are Overrated,” and a poignant saga unfolds among a handful of small plastic toys in the wonderfull­y lush “Hey Ho, Nobody’s Home” — a work all the more striking, given Kahn’s establishe­d facility with a joke, for succeeding without a line of dialogue.

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