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Artists Kari Gatzke, HALFLIFERS, Jennifer and
Kevin McCoy, Dawn McDaniel, MTAA (T. Whid and M. River), Mike
O'Malley, Cary Peppermint, Michelle Yarnick
Curatorial Team Torsten Z. Burns, Jennifer and Kevin McCoy
October 18 to November 30
In the craze of modern technology, how often to we need to stop
and consult the manual? It might be nice to have a manual for
life, that we might stop in the midst of decision-making and look
up alternative strategies and life-saving information. "The Omega
Manual" portends to be literally the last manual you will need.
The artworks in this exhibition project alternative futures for
the objects that comprise the show and seek to answer questions
such as: Which future are we participating in? Which life are
we living? Which belief system will we engage today? Will that
belief system withstand the future?. The works in this show, although
based on low-tech, everyday materials and objects, are transformed
through their delivery as art.
Crystalline tables, exploding cakes, shopping-spree assemblage
and miniature projectiles,... where is the line drawn between
art and the everyday object? The artists in this group show place
this line in different places for different reasons. Some explore
the edge between the perceived and actual utility of the object,
pointing to practicality that doesn't exist or changing the learned
response to a common thing. Fictional scenarios can be suggested
just by the presence of an artifact, tool, or label. Other artists
reinvigorate an object's meaning by changing the materials with
which it is constructed. Often, a mass-produced object is slowed
down through a meticulous construction process. The show also
explores the process of popular craft and construction, the investigation
of the "kit", or the idea of self-made technology. These artists'
mechanical or pseudo-mechanical objects have the unique potential
to be generative, to create themselves over the run of the show.
In "The Omega Manual", each artist investigates the practical
object as a tool of enlightenment, thoughtful manifestations towards
a useful history.
"The Omega Manual" also has implications for the use of technology
by and for art. Rather than rejecting militaristic or corporate
strategies, these artists work in parallel to these institutions
by reverse engineering complex and forbidding structures such
as the space program and the rock industry. By attempting the
impossible, these projects re-invest metaphor into hidden production
processes from command-centers back-stage dressing rooms. They
pull the forms out of their native context and at once divest
them of their ostensible use and give them new aesthetic utility.
This show will include both emerging and more established artists.
It will encompass painting, sculpture, kinetic sculpture, video,
and digital media. Opening and closing performance events will
also take place. These events would frame the notion that objects
live through but also beyond their placement in the art gallery.
Original artworks and documentation can exist side by side, creating
an interplay between the past of the original and the present
time of the document.
The curatorial team, artists who have collaborated in the past,
are pulling together their own work with other work that was suggested
by six years of conversation about technology, utilitarianism,
and science fiction.
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