For an essay written by Russ White, please visit mplsart.com
For an essay written by Russ White, please visit mplsart.com
February 11–August 20, 2023
Guest curated by M artist-in-residence Katya Oicherman in collaboration with Curator of Exhibitions Laura Joseph
On view in the M’s window galleries and skyway entrance.
Im/perfect Slumbers is a multi-disciplinary series of art installations occurring in the M’s window galleries and skyway entrance. Diverse voices of local artists, writers, and cultural activists capture the historical and contemporary state of sleeping and being in bed. This exhibition is the result of textile artist and researcher Katya Oicherman’s long-term residency at the M.
Sleeping habits, behaviors, and objects are diverse, yet the very necessity of sleep is shared by all. Those familiar and accessible everyday objects and practices serve as a conversation opener to reflect on sleep in all of its physiological, psychological, social, and political complexity. Explore the soft aesthetics of textiles and the associative imagery of dreams through the work of Rachel Breen, Sayge Carroll, Amoke Awele Kubat, Shanai Matteson, Katya Oicherman, Molly Parker Stuart, Anat Spiegel, Rotem Tamir, Yuko Taniguchi, Gwen Westerman, and Peng Wu.
The following text was taken from the artist talk that took place during the show Solo :: Together, Harn Museum, Gainesville, FL
THIS IS THE MOST BEAUTIFUL DRAGON I EVER SAW was driven by my continuous interest in ephemeral objects and objects that change through time. In this case, although the object itself, or maybe I should call it the instrument, can change structurally, the ephemeral is actually in the person who this object belongs to.
I shall stop for a moment and explain what we see:
In the bottom, you see the stairs that function as the case for the instrument when closed. When it’s open, you can see from one angle what the inside of the case looks like. The inside is exactly the negative space of the whistle, so it looks like a mold for the whistle but of course it helps to hold the whistle parts safely in place when closed. This is one of my continuous interests: how form is driven by function
When it is open, you see a dark hole, framed by red velvet and the alder wood with its pinkish/orangey color. For me this view helps to focus your look on the negative space. Every part of this object can be read as a shell. Every structure in this piece is hollow. And this is very important for me, creating environments that are based on a certain rule. When you create an environment, with nothing inside, nothing tangible, in a way you keep all the possibilities open, you are locking all the possibilities in one place. This is a micro environment- I am talking about the air that exists inside.
For me, this view of the cut box – it is like a chopped body part; it is not only because of the color but because the way I choose to split the box. It splits like the box in the “sawing a woman in half” magic trick. In general I can say that a lot of the visual decisions I made in this piece, are influenced by the world of magic tricks and circus.
I said in the beginning that I have a continuous interest with the ephemeral, I used to make objects that do not last forever- that change through time and then died. Here obviously it is not the case, it is because the ephemeral is in the absence of the person that the object belongs to and in the functionally of the object. The person is a nomad and the functionality of the object is to extract sound, one tune to be precise. Sound does not last forever, it is here for a moment and disappears, and sound is created as a result of the way air moves in and out of the structure.
Moving on to the whistle- it is made from red and white oak taken from Richmond Virginia forest and air dried for around three years. BTW no one cut the tree but it is from trees that fell down in hurricane Irene, the color is milk paint and probably it is one of the oldest paint components. I should say that not by accident I am telling you about the materials. As I mentioned, for me this piece belongs to the nomad, and I am not talking about homeless here, I am talking about nomadic cultures, and as such the materials I choose to use are a result of where I was in the moment I made the object and the techniques I choose to use are through accumulated knowledge. Here it becomes very personal, because I, for the last four years now, don’t have a permanent place and I am part of a culture that is foreign to me in a way. So I took knowledge that I collected along the way while I am here.