The exhibition explores the mythology of the American automobile through the carcasses of an industry turned art and features the newly commissioned four-channel video work, North of South West of East, by emerging artist Meredith Danluck. Works by Liz Cohen, Matthew Day Jackson, and Jonathan Schipper accompany Danluck's film installation.
Curated by Neville Wakefield
AutoBody, curated by Neville Wakefield, explores the mythology of the American automobile through the carcasses of an industry turned art. From Robert Frank to Richard Prince, the automobile has been the driving force of American freedom: its promise of escape provided in an image of mobility. However, as JG Ballard pronounced over 40 years ago, “the car as we know it is on the way out… for as a basically old fashioned machine, it enshrines a basically old-fashion idea: freedom.” The American dream that it once represented, and freedom—the idea it once enshrined—may, like the car itself, be turning obsolete.
With a nod to those windshields that cinematized landscape, AutoBody features the newly commissioned four-channel video work, North of South West of East, by emerging artist Meredith Danluck and produced by Matthew Shattuck. Shot on location in Detroit, Michigan and Marfa, Texas, North of South West of East uses the car as an entry point, a subtle connective tissue, between the equally loaded but seemingly disparate archetypes of the Cowboy, the Rebel, the Immigrant, and the Actress. Eschewing the simplification of abstraction, the film employs the mainstays of narrative with a strong focus on temporality. Each of the four character’s retention of the past, attention to present actions and future anticipation play out on separate screens simultaneously manifesting both mobility and stasis—the chronic existential crisis that is American identity.
Marfa local punk band Solid Waste and New York musician John Carpenter are featured on the film’s soundtrack.
Works by Liz Cohen, Matthew Day Jackson, and Jonathan Schipper accompany Danluck’s film installation. Ranging from the slow motion erotics of collision to high speed ethanol ambitions, masculine relics of bodies past to feminized hybrids of bikinied futures, AutoBody figures the car as an extension of the body, laying bare the contemporary relationship between sculpture and performance.
Ballroom Marfa was at one time a body shop. Drawing on this this history, AutoBody will be presented as a car showroom—a place where fantasy, speculation, and promises of freedom, speed, and escape are embodied in objects of destruction and desire.
To inaugurate AutoBody, Ballroom Marfa will host a weekend of festivities, including an opening reception on Friday, 30 September, from 6-8 pm. During the reception at 7pm, composer and experimental metal guitarist Mick Barr will perform in Ballroom Marfa’s courtyard. Barr is noted for the discordant qualities of his compositions: non-repeating riffs and repetition, pre-meditated structure and randomness, harmony and counterpoint. Above all, he is celebrated for the speed and rigor of his shredding.
After the opening reception is a community dinner at the Capri at 8:30pm followed by a performance by the all-female mariachi band Mariachi Las Alteñas. Hailing from San Antonio and dedicated to promoting the majesty of mariachi music, this 10-part band has made its mark in a predominantly male industry.
Image: Meredith Danluck, Fairlane, 2009. Digital C-print, 30 x 40". Courtesy of the artist
Opening reception: Friday, 30 September 2011, 6-8pm
7pm: Performance by Mick Barr at Ballroom Marfa
8:30pm: Community dinner at the Capri
9:30pm: Performance by Mariachi Las Alteñas at the Capri
Saturday, 1 October 2011: 2pm exhibition walkthrough with the artists
Ballroom Marfa
108 E. San Antonio St. - Marfa, TX 79843
Opening hours: Thu-Sun 12-6pm
All events are free and open to the public