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Artists Avantika Bawa, Ofri Cnaani, Graciela
Fuentes, Richard Garrison, Grady Gerbracht, Monika Goetz, Lynne
Harlow, Vibeke Jensen, Tom Kotik, Fawn Krieger, Amanda C. Mathis,
Megan Michalak, Steven Millar, Jung Sun Oh, Roy Stanfield, Jen
Urso, Robert Walden
Curated by Elizabeth M. Grady
Exhibition Dates June
3 - July 16, 2006
Using unusual approaches to navigating spaces and occupying places,
the seventeen emerging artists in I can’t quite place
it… radically alter their environments, transforming
them in an effort to subvert structures both architectural and
social. Their widely varied approaches to the subjective perception
of a place and its impact on the individual will include video,
sculpture, drawing, and ten new site-specific installations.
Practicing an intuitive rearrangement of the visual information
encountered in the course of an average day, the artists toy
with the structures of power and human interaction encoded in
space, borrowing from the architecture of Smack Mellon's new
site, as well as the very energy of the gallery itself in the
form of light, sound, and time. They lead us along from image
to idea, following a trajectory of free-associations, and creating
a discontinuous mosaic of temporal perception in contrast to
the more commonplace linear narratives associated with Western
culture.
Each of the artists in this show responds to the specific architectural
structures and histories of the sites in which they install their
work. Experience comes in flashes and streaks, seams and ruptures
rather than an unbroken line. They believe that it makes more
sense to record experience abstractly than to make of it something
explicit and delimited. Open-ended meanings are preferable to
fixed and closed ones, allowing the opportunity for varied responses
and spontaneous reactions. In this way these artists encourage
the viewer to share in their intuitive approaches.
Although individually these artists may or may not view their
work as political, their creation of a liminal space, an unfamiliar
realm where some of the rules and restrictions of everyday life
are relaxed and replaced by different norms of behavior provides
a model for intellectual freedom. Perceiving the urban environment
on their own terms rather than those dictated by the structures
and practices of society is a way of undermining the constraints
and oppression associated with institutions, and established
systems of power .
In the delicate and cerebral architectural interventions of Avantika
Bawa cardboard and Styrofoam are used in the service
of breaking down the barriers between sculpture and drawing,
and treading the line between wholeness and fragmentation,
containment and dispersal. Drawing on the legacy of Minimalism,
her work responds to its context, inviting viewers to experience
it as they move through it, over time.
In Patrol (2003/06), Ofri Cnaani projects
video footage of menacing footfalls overhead, creating an uncanny
sense of physical dislocation which raises our awareness of the
psychological qualities inherent in the construction of space,
and the social impact of the exercise of authority. The projection
surface divides us from direct interaction with the walkers,
creating a dynamic tension between their freedom of movement
and our compromised viewing position, which mirrors our subjection
to often invisible structures of power.
Occupying the liminal space of passage that occurs in the airspace
above cities, Graciela Fuentes’ video
installation Landing (2004/06) places us in an airplane
above Mexico City. The video loop cuts back and forth between
clips of approach and takeoff, never permitting arrival or departure.
Leaving us in limbo, she tantalizingly references the importance,
yet ultimate impossibility, of rootedness to place by projecting
the video onto soil.
Richard Garrison navigates suburban sprawl,
with its winding roads, vast parking lots, and “big box” stores
like Wal-Mart, recording the experience in drawings and installations.
By focusing on the experiential phenomena of those sites like
color and light, rather than their intended use and function,
he questions their impact on the individual psyche, and highlights
the choices available as we avoid, move through, and occupy them
in the course of our weekly routines.
Working in sound, performance, and installation, Grady
Gerbracht renders systems of social behavior temporarily
visible in his "sonic portraits". He interacts deeply
with specific spaces, contributing to and revealing their ambient
noises, and recording and amplifying the results. This exposes
often undervalued aspects of our emotional, physical, and intellectual
responses to the environment and can indicate hitherto underappreciated
strata of social meaning encoded within it.
Horizon (2005), a violent gash of searing fluorescent
light that is exposed when the artist cuts through a section
of drywall, disconcerts the viewer as it partially dematerializes
its environs. In this piece, Monika Goetz plays
with our reliance on the solidity, stability, and reassuring
regularity of walls. Equal parts beautiful and disturbing, this
work has a profound emotional impact as one struggles with the
notion that the walls that comprise our shelters and workplaces
are flimsy, permeable, and ultimately unreliable.
Addressing the nature of perception and our movement through
space through their insistently human scale, installations by Lynne
Harlow have a formalist elegance that belies their sophistication.
By reducing her interventions to simple geometric forms comprised
of painted surfaces and light, permeable materials like fabric
scrims, and hardware cloth, she creates a weightless atmosphere
suffused with light.
Harsh whispers and enigmatic announcements create a feeling
of threat and bewilderment in Vibeke Jensen's If
You See, Something Say (2006). By editing and rearranging
the wording of phrases heard over the loudspeakers on the subway,
along with inviting the public to use a microphone to explore
the relationship between silence and control, Jensen challenges
the experience of being subject to disembodied forces beyond
our control.
Tom Kotik embeds references to sound in architectural
frameworks, which sometimes make noise, and are sometimes menacingly
silent. Low frequency, inaudible music makes an audio speaker
pulse, and acoustic foam threatens to drain the sonic energy
from a space, creating an "Architecture of Silence" that
suggests the repression of freedom of speech in countries ruled
by totalitarian regimes – or here at home.
Fawn Krieger unfolds an overlapping territory
between personal and collective space, collapsing expectations
of scale between body and site. Working with mundane materials
and processes like carpentry and sewing, traditionally associated
with craft and the construction of the home, she uses an intimate
vocabulary of comforting familiarity, as well as traces of memory,
loss, and the nature of social behavior.
Tilting the world on its end, Amanda C. Mathis reproduces
and reorients elements of the architecture in which her work
is sited. We are thwarted in our efforts to follow the expected
path through the gallery by the hulking presence of new walls
and windows, and dragged temporarily out of our heads and into
our bodies as we interact with the daunting physical presence
before and around us.
Upon entering a low passage in Megan Michalak's Underground
Parallax (2006), the viewer confronts a mirror reflecting
an infinite wooden catwalk leading backwards and upwards into
space, and towering over the installation. The piece acts metaphorically
to recall the "underground" as a historical site
of resistance and liberation even as the endless path before
us offers an exit from the exhausted social structures of late
capitalism.
In Chattanooga, Tennessee, the suburbs crawl up Lookout Mountain,
which rises on the edge of the city. The ominous presence of
the eponymous work by Steven Millar is created
mainly by the rough and crumbly surface of its burnt-black oak
material. It richly signifies everything from the disposable
nature of much suburban construction, to racial and social issues
of access to this dubious iteration of the American Dream.
Exploring the link between visibility, perception, and communication, Jung
Sun Oh has built a Plexiglas structure containing
a fog that slowly thins from opaque to translucent. As the
viewer enters the fog chamber, there is a struggle to make
visual connections with those outside. Our awareness of invisible
barriers to interchange like language and culture is heightened
by the minimal, wall-like form of the chamber.
The precarious relationship between ephemerality and presence
found in the disregarded but by no means vacant lots and marginal
spots found everywhere in the urban environment is explored by Roy
Stanfield in his Plexiglas sculptures. Threatening to
disappear into the gallery space, still they catch the light
and govern traffic patterns in a way that challenges the notions
that what is discarded is lost, and that an object once robbed
of functionality also loses its meaning, energy, and significance.
Jen Urso is concerned with systems: systems
of ideas, social interaction, decay, and growth. Elements of
her work break down, like the trains of thought she transcribes
in her diagram-like drawings or the slowly disintegrating concrete
and clay tiles she places in our path. But in sympathy with the
Law of the Conservation of Energy, the breakdown releases energy
to form new patterns, and to facilitate change.
The marks of shimmering graphite made on the matte-black paper
ground in Robert Walden's Ontological Road
Maps suggest aerial views of elaborate urban zones, complete
with housing developments, industrial areas, and business districts.
The artist's experience of making is parallel to that of viewing
the works, each requiring a navigation of the city's frustrating
pattern of loops and culs-de sac over time. In this way we are
reminded that the state of being is found at the intersection
of temporal position, physical location, and state of mind.
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