So “Untitled” (Go-Go Dancing Platform), 1991, is unique, but it is not the only one. Now that it has sold “a serious hold” and a $US16m asking price, let’s take a look at the six [!] related works Felix Gonzalez-Torres made. And then decided were not works after all. What are they, where are they, and what is to be done with them?
“Untitled” (Go-Go Dancing Platform), 1991, which we’ll call #1, was on view for just over a week (Week 3) in Felix’s March 1991 show at Andrea Rosen Gallery, Every Week There Is Something Different. [Carol Bove restaged this show as her part of the collaborative retrospective with Elena Filipovic at the Fondation Beyeler in 2011.] It’s the one we all know: 21 1/2 inches high and six feet square, with 48 lights embedded in the edge.
In his 1994 Parkett essay Simon Watney wrote how Felix “relays meanings between different works, by means of the formal development of individual elements. Thus the row of light bulbs from “Untitled” (Go-Go Dance Platform) [sic] from 1991 have now taken on a formal life of their own in numerous subsequent light pieces involving strings of light bulbs.”
The platform, or pedestal, which look like the stacks, are another such element, one which relates not only to Minimalist sculpture, but to exhibition and display.

Later in 1991 Gonzalez-Torres made “Untitled” (Go-Go Dancing Platform)” [#2]. It was listed in the catalogue raisonné as 60 x 16 x 16 inches, which means it’s either a typo or an OSHA nightmare. Reader, it is the latter. I’m still trying to find out where this platform was shown, but it can be seen in the 1993 Felix Gonzalez-Torres monograph published by A.R.T. Press [above]. Though it looks impossible to dance on, its narrow pedestal form is one Felix used frequently, so it has an interesting place in his work. But with the white briefs and crop top, this looks to me more like an “Untitled” (Stripper Platform).
The first work in 1992 that Felix kept was his first light string, “Untitled”, which is actually an edition of 2. But in Andrea Rosen Gallery’s inventory it’s listed as ARG #GF 1992-6. The first five, ARG #GF 1992-1 thru 5, all “Untitled”, are all platforms or pedestals.
[Next day update]: Turns out the Foundation has published documentation of some of these non-works under their ARG number, including Ghislaine Hussenot’s office pedestal, below:

Three are like “Untitled” (Go-Go Dancing Platform), painted, with lights on two or three sides, and with different dimensions. For the office of Galerie Ghislaine Hussenot, where Felix had a three-part show in 1992 [update: wrong show.], a platform [non-work XXVII, ARG #GF 1992-1], was seemingly made to metric specs: 18 x 210 x 185 cm. For Andrea Rosen’s own office, it was 6 x 60 x 60 in. [non-work XXXI] Both had lights on two sides. Another platform [non-work XXVIII], with lights on three sides, measured 6 x 72 x 48 in. No idea where that went.
One platform/pedestal [non-work XXX] made for a group show was 8 x 98 x 30 in. and covered in industrial carpet. I feel like I’ve looked for and found no information about this one.

The remaining one, [non-work XXIX, ARG # GF 1992-3] is not the last, and it may have been not only for dancing. The 12 x 40 x 40 in. pedestal of painted wood has/had no lights, but it did have “leather and rubber harnesses, g-strings, [and] underwear” underneath it.

Then in 1992, he made “Untitled” (Fear), a pedestal-shaped sculpture in blue mirror, which feels like a ghost of a go-go dancing platform. And “Untitled” (Go-Go Dancing Platform) began to be shown in museums, and it hasn’t really stopped. Given the parameters of the work, the feasibility of refabricating it for loans, and the involvement of live bodies, it’s easy to see how Gonzalez-Torres decided “Untitled” (Go-Go Dancing Platform) should be unique. But for understanding his process and the development of his ideas, the rest of the platforms remain important and valuable; there’s a lot of room between $16 million and “deleted from the discourse.”
Previously, related: All in a Day’s Work
Soft-Core: On Additional Material and Non-Work