Hair as Material: “Tease” at ATHICA

11101252_10153324700423394_5033830505467673174_n

Tease, the current exhibition at ATHICA (Athens Institute for Contemporary Art) in Athens, GA features hair as “muse and material” per the exhibition’s subtitle. On view are works by nine artists, some of whom take hair as subject matter in documentary, collage, or drawing. To my mind, the works that involved hair as medium were the more provocative, evoking a bodily connection that varied from the abstracted and decorative to the abject.

IMG_4596

Zipporah Thompson used hair as one of many textured materials, like string and textiles, that were arranged to hang like so many ponytails against a mint green-painted wall (top photo). The mix of materials called for an examination of texture that was sensuous and detailed, and suggested an anthropologist’s orderly display. Hair became a stand-in for fabric in Lilly Smith’s two-tone column dress, which looped hair horizontally in a way that played up its original nature, not becoming a woven textile but falling open and in the process subverting the function of clothing as a covering of nudity (pictured above).

IMG_4598Ari Richter’s work is both more abject and more playful. His large installation featured a string a dreaded hair that spelled out “remainder” in looping cursive, while under it his Dust Buddies gathered. The dust buddies are made from animal tchochkes that Richter then covers with animal hair, making them amorphously more and yet less distinguishable as animals. Next to this installation is Wolfdong (not pictured), an oversized penis carefully implanted with thousands of tiny dog hairs that stick straight out, with all the disquieting and Surreal attention to detail of a Robert Gober sculpture. I had the chance to hear the artist speak about his work, and he sources his materials from himself, his friends, family, and their pets. The personal connection to the hair source reminds how hair is strangely a part of our body, yet one that we willingly detach from ourselves.

On view at ATHICA through May 3, 2015.

What does it take to make a “Living Memorial”?

Image via Budapest Beacon

Image via Budapest Beacon

In Budapest, Hungary, a living memorial is being erected and enacted daily by a group of citizens to counter a more traditional monument that was recently added to the city. The Budapest Beacon describes this living memorial as an act of protest, as people gather across from a new stone and bronze monument dedicated to victims of the German invasion in 1944. Expressing concerns about how the new monument fails to represent Hungary’s responsibility in the Holocaust, the living memorial is also an act of remembrance for citizens who wish to recognize the 70th anniversary of the Holocaust. By virtue of its focus on collective memory and dialogue about remembrance, the living memorial is an exciting alternate monument to what was erected by the state.

Read more here and here.

Fictional Tours: Keith Wilson’s Cave and Mountain Tour at the Lamar Dodd School of Art

IMG_4588IMG_4589

Your intrepid blogger recently went on an arduous tour, all for the sake of art (and getting to wear a goofy headlamp and hard hat). Actually, this “arduous” tour was around the Lamar Dodd School of Art, where I am a graduate student, and so, to me, a place that has become the most mundane of surroundings. That is exactly the kind of blasé attitude filmmaker and visual artist Keith Wilson wanted to counter on his Cave and Mountain tour. In 2009, Wilson began doing an ongoing interactive performance he calls the Cave and Mountain Tour, and as a Visiting Artist here, he recently led an interpretive tour around the art school.

KEITH_CaveTour_380_257auto

Artist Keith Wilson as tour guide

To be clear, the art school does not consist of caves or mountains as I normally think of them. Wilson told our group at the beginning of the tour that there is no universally agreed on definitions of a cave or a mountain, however. And so, having signed a waiver and put on a hard hat and light source, the 15 of us were off, stopping by caves (auditoriums), mountains (flights of stairs), not to mention unknown rain rooms and river gardens. Wilson gave us a tour-guide spiel throughout that toed the line of boring (when the school was founded) and unbelievable (unmarked graves).IMG_6139

The difficulty in judging fact and fiction certainly made the experience interesting, but more than that Wilson took the group through unused areas and gave new (if untrue) meaning to old sites, inspiring an interest in the quotidian. His command to walk in silence at many points forced you to really look and notice surroundings that I, at least, usually am too absorbed in my own thoughts to notice. Highlights of this tour were a “rain room” where continuous pounding of dripping water made a wonderful sound (actually a part of the cooling system) and the attic of the building with all its mechanical apparatus. Despite being half-fictional, this tour gave me a renewed interest in my surroundings–surely something we could all try to incorporate into our lives.