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Week 9: Nathan Huff | Sadness Sleep and Santicity

Nathan Huff

Sadness Sleep and Santicity

2017

Handmade basketry, altered furniture, sewn pillows, found water glasses

dimensions variable (image: New Media Gallery, Ventura College)

The dreamscape has long been a source of inspiration for artists. As any insomniac or dreamer may tell you, the act of interpreting these intertwined situations teeter between observing the domestic mundane and a fantastical adventure of untangling threads of nostalgia and memory. In installations like this, I explore these impractical even harebrained scenarios interrupting our normal reality. While they celebrate the intuitive and subconscious they also offer new awareness to the present moment.

--
www.nathanhuff.com

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Week 9: Jennie E. Park | Vision Test / Viewfinder

Jennie E. Park

Vision Test / Viewfinder

2020

Digital video (6 minutes, 47 seconds)

Kinetic sculpture: Wood, acrylic, gearbox motors, Arduino, breadboards, jumper wires, switch, power cables, metal hardware (brackets, screws, washers), magnets, paint, iPad.

(Note: Because the camera lens does not see like human eyes do through the lenses of the actual sculpture, I created animated lenses replicating the rotation of the lenses. The sounds are the actual motor sounds recorded.)

During a routine eye exam, an optician asks, “Lens 1 or 2,” to ascertain visual acuity while flipping through lenses, and viewfinders at scenic stops enable visitors to zoom into or scrutinize vast vistas. This kinetic sculpture references these practices or technologies of ascertaining, manipulating and interrogating vision by presenting alternate interpretations of the same images, via four phrases: "WE ARE THE VIRUS," "THEY ARE THE VIRUS," "WE RESIST THE VIRUS," "THEY RESIST THE VIRUS." The images appear alone, as split screen composites (referencing the Kuleshov effect), and as layered images (where each layered image comprises all preceding single images). COVID-19 exists in a world already structured by metaphorical “viruses:” the unhoused, imprisoned, migrants or refugees, and other “others” are deemed societal “diseases;” because we have already socially distanced ourselves from them by sequestering them away where they will not disrupt “normal” ways of life, they are largely unable to practice social distancing to protect themselves from COVID-19. At the same time, capitalism, pollution, social media, and protests or social movements are also deemed viral. In a given context, what is a "virus," and who are "we" and "they?" As "resist" has political and immunization-related meanings, what does it mean to "resist the virus?" The sculpture aims not to deem certain positions (in)correct, but--through also referencing incantation, subconscious programming and auto-pilot operation--to challenge viewers to examine the assumptions and contradictions operative in their own default or habitual interpretations of, or positions with respect to, world events or figures, and to consider whether those defaults effect a "normal" we'd like to return to, or to overhaul.

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Week 9: David Eddington | Silver Century

David Eddington

Silver Century

May 2020

total size 12' x 4' (each panel about 4 sq.)

Sumi ink and acrylic on watercolour paper

The human race: how we misuse our searching and inventive minds. The triptych is about this and questions the deployment of machines. 

Strength adapted for aggression, cluster bombs, tanks destroying olive groves, warships; better utilized to harness the wind, irrigate crops and construct bridges. 

It is hoped that this work will begin a reappraisal of some of society’s values. A grand hope, but why not.  

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Week 9: Gretchen Batcheller | Among and Between Agencies

Gretchen Batcheller

Among and Between Agencies

2017

100cm x 80cm

Acrylic and oil on linen

I grew up the daughter of a Navy fighter pilot, who himself was from a long line of Naval officers. In the late 70’s, when my family was stationed in Yokohama, Japan, I was an infant/child transplanted into a new culture with a language I did not understand and surrounded by impressionable visuals. As I explore these distant childhood memories, it is paramount to address my family’s multigenerational participation in the militarization of the Pacific.  My place of privilege as a white, cisgender, heterosexual daughter of a Navy Captain has (until my adult years) veiled my ability to recognize the impact the United States military has had (and continues to have) on entire societies, economies and the natural environments that sustain them.  This ongoing revelation as an adult challenges my ability to find an appropriate artistic expression for the seemingly endless layers of my experience living in Japan, and later in Hawai’i, as a military dependent. This ongoing body of work serves as a fractured, visual correlate for a remembered reality that oscillates between gradients of cultural discovery, systemic oppression, relationship, growth, and the power of memory. 

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Week 9: Debbie Korbel | Crowvid-19

Debbie KorbelCrowvid-19May 2020Cardboard and wire36" H x 18" W x 17" D

Debbie Korbel

Crowvid-19

May 2020

Cardboard and wire

36" H x 18" W x 17" D

Since we are all caged at the moment I thought creating a sculpture that suggested the ability to fly free seemed appealing. The crow has been used as both a positive and negative symbol.  Because of it's black color and penchant for carrion it has been seen as a bad omen; a harbinger of death. Conversely, it has also been used as a positive symbol of mystery, change and transformation.

Like many, I have been sequestered at home. "Crovid-19"  was created on my kitchen table using materials I don't normally use in my work--cardboard and wire, because they don't require a mold, firing, casting or many of the tools I have at my studio. I wasn't sure if I could realize my idea by creating the piece in cardboard--so it was a little experiment for me as well. 

detail

detail

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Week 9: Victoria May | Materials Flow Management

Victoria May

Materials Flow Management

2013

found and treated fabrics, blankets, repurposed clothing and accessories, tire innertube

75" x 65" x 10”

This piece was inspired by a road trip to the Jentel residency in Wyoming. Taking in the geology as well as the markers of industry seen in the landscape on the drive there, I wanted to blend the two, drawing a connection between raw resources and all the technological innovations that have ultimately derived from materials extracted from the earth. The use of soft sculpture and organic treatments subverts the authority of institutional systems and exposes a softness, even frailty, in the calculated infrastructures that our society has come to depend on. 

I chose this piece as it seems like a good reminder of just how intertwined we are with our surroundings and how vulnerable we are to the powers and processes that existed before us and that are greater than us, in spite of all our alleged sophistication.

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Week 9: Juliette Sallin | Remembering the Sea II

Juliette Sallin

Remembering the Sea II

2020

silk, silk dyes and plant dyes, brass

8,3 x 21 x 11 inches

This hanging sculpture is a tribute to the sensory memories of my childhood during the Mediterranean holidays: the enveloping sun, the gentle breeze, the taste of salt on my skin and the surrounding flora were an experience I still keep in my body. Spending my days as much in water as on land, the terrestrial fauna and flora merge with the aquatic one: the corals change into bushes, the algae into coastal weeds, foxgloves into shells. Everything is alive, sensual and serene. In order to make all these sensations as true as possible, I chose to use silk satin. The silk is dyed by hand, some parts with plants (beetroot, madder root, and avocado skin) to give a more organic and complex color impression. Silk satin is one of the most pleasant fabrics and makes the dyes even more intense. The elements, all cut by hand, are assembled into a composition that blurs the line between vegetal and animal recollections.

I selected this sculpture because it represents a moment  of my childhood when everything felt free and serene. In these very strange and stressful times, this artwork offers a moment of calm and contemplation that may help to push our mental chatter into the background and let our feelings guide our experience of the moment.

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