Entries Tagged 'Exhibitions/Events' ↓

Twin Towers Go Down

Double Dutch, finally the ball rolls on getting the implosion pictures going, made the first trip to Jonesboro, Arkansas to catch the Arkansas State University TWIN TOWERS dorm buildings be imploded. Gnarly late night solo flight/drive with some good parking lot sleep PLUS the shattering of my ground glass in the 4×5 thanks to American Airlines lovely new baggage policy where they charge you for all checked bags, PLUS guarantee to break some of your stuff too. Sleep deprivation breeds etheral experience, and I was floatin on a hot, juicy, Southern Cloud for 36 hours of mayhem.

Psymulation Closing Events!

Psymulation Composite - Chris Fitzpatrick
Photo Epicenter
26 Lilac Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
Monday – Saturday, 10am – 8pm
http://www.hamburgereyes.com
psymulation@chrisfitzpatrick.net
415-550-0701

Psymulation: Reenactments of the Present
Featuring artwork by Gerald Edwards III, Brennan Hill, Kent Lambert, Squirrel, and Brendan Threadgill. Curated by Chris Fitzpatrick.

CLOSING RECEPTION & EVENT
Saturday, April 12th 2008. 6pm – 9pm.

FEATURING:

  • Exhibition catalog release
  • Last viewing of the exhibition
  • A talk by Frank Chu on the 12 Galaxies
  • A new sound installation by Gerald Edwards III
  • A reading of titles from an extensive science-fiction archive by Matthew Post
  • A slideshow with 35mm photos sent anonymously to the gallery

Psymulation: Reenactments of the Present will close Saturday, April 12th with an evening of events, including a lecture, catalog release, slide show, sci-fi reading, and sound installation. The exhibition features contemporary artifacts by US artists that, Ed Halter writes, “posit a society haunted by the wartime logic of both PsyOps and BlackOps, in which fact and fiction have become increasingly indistinguishable, and power exerts itself through a thick fog of unknowing.”(1) Composite photographs, videos, drawing, taped interviews, and exploded car bomb fragments loudly collide the real and the un / non / hyper / possibly / probably / imponderably / unconscionably (real) in a time when our present is the Administration’s past, when they exist in our future, now (2)

Jeanne Storck notes that, “a nagging doubt runs through every piece in the show so that even when you exit into the alley, a cloud of unease follows. But better unease than complacency.”3 Approaching the gallery through this alley, the Patriot Act will be heard reflecting through Lilac Street via Morse code in a sound installation by Gerald Edwards III. Inside the Epicenter, the exhibition will be on display, the exhibition catalog will be available, plus a reading of titles from an extensive science-fiction archive by Matthew Post and a viewing of slides sent anonymously to the gallery, supposedly “taken at a party celebrating the end of WWIII, from the archives of a defunct newspaper.” Then at 8pm, Frank Chu will give an illuminating talk about the 12 Galaxies, taking us beyond earth, to a where that has yet to be seen. There will be wine. Will there be more?

________
1. Rhizome.org
2. Without a Doubt
3. Shotgun Review

The Ones We Love

Hexagonal Cub Portrait - Gerald Edwards III

I was asked to submit some images to an elegant web based project called The Ones We Love. Please go have a visit, and see the maximum depths of everyone’s mad love!

“The Ones We Love is a project highlighting young and talented photographers from around the world. Each artist contributed six photographs of the person(s) who is most important to them, taken outdoors in a natural setting. The goal of the website is to portray the people who are loved, cherished, and inspirational to these artists, and also showcase the differences and similarities in the photographs each of them took within the same guidelines.”

Psymulation: Reenactments of the Present

Psymulation Invitation Cover

Photo Epicenter
26 Lilac Street, San Francisco, CA 94110
Monday – Saturday, 10am – 8pm
www.hamburgereyes.com
psymulation@chrisfitzpatrick.net
415-550-0701

Psymulation: Reenactments of the Present
March 14th–April 11th, 2008
Opening reception on Friday, March 14th from 6–9pm
Gallery hours are Monday – Saturday, 10am – 8pm

ARTISTS:
Gerald Edwards (New York)
Brennan Hill (Los Angeles)
Kent Lambert (Chicago)
Matthew Post (Oakland)
Squirrel (Indiana)
Brendan Threadgill (Los Angeles)

SAN FRANCISCO, CA (March, 2008)—Photo Epicenter presents Psymulation: Reenactments of the Present, an exhibition of contemporary artifacts closing April 11, 2008. This text is the combination of the press release and wall text for this exhibition, and will soon be transformed again into one of several extended essays in a catalog currently being produced. We will release this book at the end of the exhibition, coinciding with additional yet-undisclosed programming. If you are currently in the gallery, please press play on the tape player provided, if not, please go there now.

This text should be read while listening to an interview between researcher, conspiracist, and orchid smuggler, Dr. Armen Victorian (a.k.a. Henry Azadehdel, Habib Azadehdel, Henry X, and Cassava N’tumba) and retired U.S. Army Major Ed Dames, who performed psychic espionage for the U.S. Military. In addition to discussing Major Dames’ intriguing work in “Remote Viewing,” their recorded telephone conversation covers other bizarre territories—from UFOs and Mars to the reproductive mutilation of animals and the MJ12 Group. Their conversation sets the tone and provides a framework and point of departure for engaging with the work in this exhibition, but do you believe them?

When instances of science-non-fiction are disclosed to the public, such as those in the interview, the conspiratorial imagination and sci-fi feedback and become an automatic alibi; even the most nefarious revelation is reducible to the imaginative drivel of fringe paranoids. Others are relegated to conjecture through shredding and redaction, suffocated beneath incessant media distractions, or ignored in the general paralysis of cynicism. Yet as time slowly catches up, such revelations are key to approaching and understanding what might be happening today in the future, beyond reality and time.

“We’re an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you’re studying that reality - judiciously, as you will - we’ll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that’s how things will sort out. We’re history’s actors … and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.”

In the statement above, a Bush aide sends us all back in time as members of “the reality-based community,” as they forge a future we can only react to and try to make sense of from a key temporal remove. Their past is our present, yet our “reality” is hologramatic, hyperreal, and moreover, cultural study is time travel. To avoid fossilization, futurology becomes necessity, yet speculation is hardly “judicious.” In this non-time when now was, contemporary artworks—whether material or immaterial—are artifacts of a present, future, and past simultaneously, the exhibitions they comprise and sites they inhabit are interlaced interstices.

Psymulation: Reenactments of the Present includes a range of work by artists based across the U.S. who address a variety of ongoing criticalities heightened in the war on terror through artistic processes of appropriation and reconstitution, disruption and degradation, reclamation and re-contextualization. In addition to the conspiratorial abyss referenced earlier, the artists explore other forces of obfuscation and distraction, as well as recent changes in policy since the onset of the war on terror. PsyOps and the media, BlackOps and conspiracy, casualties and collateral damage, civil liberties and security, distraction and indoctrination, torture and liberation, the psychological and the physical, apophenia and paranoia, science-fiction, science-non-fiction, as well as notions of past, present, future, time and non-time surface throughout. Although these works were not necessarily created to illustrate the destabilization of time, they are, like everything, products of the divorce; they are reenactments of the present.

Following last year’s Swan Songs exhibition, Psymulation is the second installment in a series of projects Chris Fitzpatrick is curating for Photo Epicenter. Gerald Edwards III, Brennan Hill, Kent Lambert, Squirrel, and Brendan Threadgill have contributed work that will be on display from March 14 – April 11, 2008. Additionally, the opening reception will feature a psychological tuba performance by Matthew Post, and a catalog is being produced as an extension of the exhibition.

In Psych Securities LLC, an ongoing series of photographic composites by Gerald Edwards III, faceless PsyOps agents and technicolored HazMat workers inhabit strange environments from electromagnetic pulse tests to extraordinary rendition flight waiting rooms. He combines research into the black world of clandestine operations and experimentation with historical narratives and a heavy dose of psychedelic conjecture, envisaging realities shrouded in a stigma of conspiracy.

Appropriating various media distractions, Kent Lambert explores a number of pertinent issues from national security to international torture in three videos with sound. The trilogy—which consists of Security Anthem, Hymn of Reckoning, and Sunset Coda—features guest appearances by Tom Cruise, former U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft, the cast of Lost, G.I. Joe, and Lambert as a young boy, whose prescience has a particular resonance today.

Brendan Threadgill’s Partially Reconstructed Fragment (SKU# 3059778), the mangled roof of a car used as a bomb, sprawls across the floor in the center of the gallery. He refinished these materials in strict accordance with automotive industry standards, but avoided altering them structurally. Also included is Painted Fragment With Overspray, a two-panel diptych, that further reveals the impossibility of erasing or concealing the traces of violence and unknowable histories embedded within.

The recent hyper-aestheticization of torture has had a considerable effect on perception.Through association and apophoria, in Threatening Chair—a large photograph by Brennan Hill—a tool intended to aid the improvement of vision can be perceived as an instrument of infliction. Similarly, Sinus Horror, a drawing based on a highly detailed medical illustration has been reduced into a pulp-comic formalism that allows for multiple readings.

In Nuclear Holocaust, a video with sound by Squirrel, appropriated footage of nuclear explosions, desert warfare, and George W. Bush are combined with epic symphonic music and what the artist calls “a psychotic church radio program” about God, Satan, the Saints, and the apocalypse. Collateral Damage, another video with sound, collides the superficial with the unconscionable, revealing the causal relationship between two seemingly dichotomous images.

During the opening reception, Matthew Post will repeatedly perform “Enter Sandman” by Metallica on a tuba equipped with a sousaphone bell. The song has been used extensively to torture and terrify in Iraq and Afghanistan and brass instruments have been used as psychological weapons in war for thousands of years. The performance is made more poetic by an interview on NPR, in which Metallica-singer James Hetfield paradoxically stated, “If the Iraqis aren’t used to freedom, then I’m glad to be part of their exposure.”

For high-resolution photos, more information, or descriptions of the included works, please email psymulation@chrisfitzpatrick.net

Better Beasts Installed & Opened

Here are some pictures of the show installed at Broadway Gallery. Get down there and see it with some time left.

Better Beasts - Broadway Gallery - Gerald Edwards III

VBPA - The Insider @ Better Beasts - Broadway Gallery - Gerald Edwards III

David McBride - Better Beasts - Broadway Gallery - Gerald Edwards III

David McBride - Better Beasts - Broadway Gallery - Gerald Edwards III

David McBride - Better Beasts - Broadway Gallery - Gerald Edwards III

David McBride - Better Beasts - Broadway Gallery - Gerald Edwards III

John Kilduff - Better Beasts - Broadway Gallery - Gerald Edwards III

Leslie Grant - Better Beasts - Broadway Gallery - Gerald Edwards III

Nate Hill - Better Beasts - Broadway Gallery - Gerald Edwards III

Nate Hill - Better Beasts - Broadway Gallery - Gerald Edwards III

Opening Reception was Full Speed Ahead, Jalapenño Poppers and all. Thank you everyone who came out and about on a rainy night.

Opening Reception - Better Beasts - Broadway Gallery - Gerald Edwards III

Opening Reception - Better Beasts - Broadway Gallery - Gerald Edwards III

Opening Reception - Better Beasts - Broadway Gallery - Gerald Edwards III

Opening Reception - Better Beasts - Broadway Gallery - Gerald Edwards III

Opening Reception - Better Beasts - Broadway Gallery - Gerald Edwards III

Better Beasts

Better Beasts Invitation Card

ARTISTS:
Chiken Coop Collective
Leslie Grant
Nate Hill
John Kilduff
David McBride
Visual Buffet Public Arts

February 1st-15th
Opening Reception: Friday February 1st 6-9pm

Broadway Gallery, 473 Broadway 7th Floor New York, NY 10013
212-274-8993
www.betterbeasts.com

“God Made Man, But He Used a Monkey to Do it.” - Devo

On the eve of recession, in the face of tradition, and in the spirit of “why the hell not?” Broadway Gallery proudly presents Better Beasts, an art offering curated by Thomas Seely and Gerald Edwards III. For two weeks only, we invite you to come marvel at the creations of the planet’s most volatile animal.

Incorporating painting, sculpture, video, installation, performance and found photographs, Better Beasts investigates the human quest for progress, power and self-improvement—the desire to consume, create, mythologize, categorize and dispose of anything or anyone standing in the way of quantifiable satisfaction.