AIDS 3D
TOPY/Genesis Breyer P-Orridge
Gary Cannone
Charles Irvin
Castillo/Corrales
Chances Dances
deluxe projects
Dexter Sinister
Renee Green
Shane Huffman
Matthew Metzger
Rebecca Morris
My Barbarian
Orson Panetti
Jon Rafman
John Russell
Steve Ruiz
Zachary Cahill
Anthony Elms
Philip von Zweck
The exhibition presents artworks that navigate the intersections where bureaucratic information and fantasy define each other. Science fiction and other forms of speculative entertainment often posit a future or parallel world where nature, science and culture function according to different laws. The artists have each in their own way let it be known that statements of fact are not enough, and that fantasy never escapes the boundaries of what we can imagine.
Curated by Anthony Elms and Philip von Zweck
Artists: AIDS 3D, TOPI/TOPY/Genesis Breyer P-Orridge, Gary Cannone and Charles Irvin, Castillo/Corrales. Chances Dances, deluxe projects, Dexter Sinister, Renée Green, Shane Huffman, Matthew Metzger, Rebecca Morris, My Barbarian, Orson Panetti, Jon Rafman, John Russell, Steve Ruiz and Zachary Cahill
This exhibition presents artists and artworks that navigate the intersections where bureaucratic information and fantasy define each other. Science fiction and other forms of speculative entertainment often posit a future or parallel world where nature, science and culture function according to different laws. Of course, in order for the audience to understand the nuances, differences and allusions to their own world, common tropes, structures and objects are required to recognize what is not of this world. The borders need to be readily legible in order for accepted notions to be placed in crisis.
The clarity of information is often ridiculously humbled whenever new findings reveal the limitations of classification and the orderliness of fact is found too be more permeable than the press would have us believe. And as anyone with a passing knowledge of the science fiction, or really almost any genre, can attest often the road to otherworldly will be bogged down by the endless repletion of detail, factoids, technical minutiae and busywork. The artists or groups featured have each in their own way let it be known that statements of fact are not enough, and that fantasy never escapes the boundaries of what we can imagine.
This world is trouble. We know it. We could spell out the why and how, but that tale would hardly result in any dream worth having. In 2008, when discussing artistic strategies that claim the political legacy of 1968, British artist Liam Gillick made the following observation: "for every artist' collective that offers information in lieu of a fourth estate no longer meeting its obligations, there is a small painting of a unicorn basking in the light of three glowing suns." This statement was the genesis for the exhibition. The jarring quality of this comparison is just how similar the two supposedly diametrically opposed poles seem. A Unicorn Basking in the Light of Three Glowing Suns addresses, sometimes passively and sometimes through negation, those things that socially construct desire. For where is ideology more blatant than in a dream?
To which, we paraphrase a question posed by Chicago-based artist and activist Laurie Jo Reynolds: if a man falls down a well, do you write a poem about it or do you get him out of the well?
Our response is clear: you refuse such reductive choices. You document and dream until somehow it is simply not possible to imagine a world where wells are not considered appropriate places in which a man should fall. What if, for example, the popular yet thread-worn mantra "there is freedom on this canvas", spoken often by television painting instructor Bob Ross, had transformative implications for your body and politics? Would you fill out all the forms to be a happy tree?
Anthony Elms is a Chicago-based artist and writer. He is Editor of WhiteWalls, and Assistant Director of Gallery 400 at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He has curated numerous publications, musical compilations and art exhibitions at Gallery 400 and independently. Philip von Zweck is an artist whose practice primarily involves the organization of other artists work, including a weekly radio show, monthly apartment exhibits of other well-known and undiscovered artists, developing guest lectures and performing weddings. Von Zweck graduated from the University of Illinois at Chicago in 2004 and currently teaches at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He was the 2007 recipient of the Emerging Artist Award from the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation.
Image: John Russell, Untitled (Abstraction of Labour Time/ Enternal Recurrence/Monad), 2010. Archival Inkjet Print on metallic silver polyester
Friday, October 8: 5pm: Curator's Talk
6-8pm: Public Reception
7pm: performance piece by Zachary Cahill (Chicago, IL)
8pm: music performance by the Terminal Orchestra (Marquette, MI)
The DeVos Art Museum
Located at the corner of Tracy & 7th Street on the campus of Northern Michigan University
1401 Presque Isle Ave. Marquette, MI 49855
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Friday 10am - 5pm
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