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Artists Beth B, David Baskin, Laura Carton, Maureen
Connor, Ute Juerss, Shelagh Keeley, Steve Rand, Mira Schor,
Tim Spelios, Ana Tiscornia
curated by Andrea Reynosa
September 25 to November 7, 1999
Smack Mellon Studios' new location, a 150 year old former
spice factory still redolent with the aroma and golden color
of cinnamon and cloves, is the site of our fall exhibition,
Natural Histories. Physically dramatic and historically
rich, this space provides a context that informs the artists'
explorations of what is meant by natural history. Until
recently, the term was thought to reveal, among other things,
the timeless truths of species, landscapes and civilizations
which are now extinct or destroyed. For more than two decades,
however, the cultural attitudes of dominance, superiority
and repression that were mostly invisible in more traditional
approaches to natural history have been exposed by a variety
of theoretical critiques.
While the artists in the exhibition are a diverse group
with widely varying practices they each approach the problematic
aspects of natural history as a given. Not content to simply
expand this critique, participants use it as a part of their
conceptual context. Consequently, the installations, which
range from the investigation of mechanisms of social control
to experiments with biochemical processes, from the disclosure
of intimate narratives to the search for perceptual and
linguistic anomalies, and from the transformation of apparently
mutant animal species to the disruption of architectural
space can each be understood in terms of its broader social,
cultural and political implications. At the same time, however,
these larger issues remain located in and viewed through
the relationships between the very palpable physical environment
of the spice factory and the densely specific history it
evokes.
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