{"data":{"id":"12225","type":"artwork","attributes":{"id":12225,"topgoose_id":6501,"portfolio_id":null,"tms_id":12225,"title":"The Pure Products Go Crazy","display_artist_text":"Paul Pfeiffer","display_date":"1998","accession_number":"2000.151","dimensions":"Overall: 20 × 5 × 20 in. (50.8 × 12.7 × 50.8 cm)","medium":"Video installation, color, silent, 0:15 min. looped, with projector and mounting arm","department":"collection","classification":"Sculpture","credit_line":"Purchase, with funds from the Painting and Sculpture Committee and the Film and Video Committee","is_virtual":false,"is_portfolio":false,"portfolio_tms_id":null,"portfolio":null,"edition":null,"publication_info":"","description":"\u003cp\u003ePaul Pfeiffer, \u003cem\u003eThe Pure Products Go Crazy\u003c/em\u003e, 1998. Video installation, color, silent, 0:15 min. looped, with projector and mounting arm, overall: 20 × 5 × 20 in. (50.8 × 12.7 × 50.8 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase, with funds from the Painting and Sculpture Committee and the Film and Video Committee 2000.151\u003c/p\u003e","object_label":"\u003cp\u003ePaul Pfeiffer’s \u003ci\u003eThe Pure Products Go Crazy\u003c/i\u003e, a looped digital projection, replays less than a second of a scene from the 1983 movie \u003ci\u003eRisky Business. \u003c/i\u003eIn the clip, Tom Cruise’s character collapses onto a couch after playing air guitar and thrashes about in his underwear. The tiny size of the projection—it is only a few inches wide—contrasts with the scale of Cruise’s fame, and although the actor is the “pure product” to which the title (taken from a William Carlos Williams poem) refers, his celebrity is nowhere in evidence and his face is obscured. Pfeiffer employs footage from cinema, popular culture, and sports broadcasts in his digital work, and this recontextualization—often accompanied by resizing and alteration—forces viewers to slow down in evaluating it. Watching Cruise on a loop is mesmerizing, prompting us to pay attention to the very process of paying attention. “It’s about preventing the viewer from being sucked into the illusion, becoming a passive spectator in the way people watch the news or a game show on TV,” Pfeiffer explains. “I’m asking the viewer to regard the video image with the kind of contemplative attention normally reserved for painting.”\u003c/p\u003e","ai_alt_text":"A Sony camcorder is mounted on a white wall bracket projecting a small color image.","alt_text":null,"visual_description":null,"on_view":false,"created_at":"2017-08-30T16:04:39.000-04:00","updated_at":"2026-02-06T12:00:00.840-05:00","images":[{"id":102964,"url":"https://whitneymedia.org/assets/artwork/12225/2000_151_vw1_cropped.jpg"}]},"relationships":{"artists":{"data":[{"id":"5517","type":"artist"}]}}}}