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July 28, 2008

Operation Salt

Surveillance: Operation Salt in the Gallery at Library Square
by Geoff Wichert



In 1986, when I flew to Ireland to begin a summer walking the extensive hiking trails of the British Isles, there weren’t too many choices for taking photographs along the way. I ended up at security in each airport I took off from—Portland, Oregon, and Atlanta, Georgia, supervising a crew of uniformed agents as they opened each of three dozen film canisters to be certain none of them contained something I could use to hijack the jumbo jets we flew on. We were told this would be easier if we just let them X-ray all the film, a process we were assured would be perfectly safe.

Twenty-two years later, most travelers will carry an X-ray-proof digital camera that offers greater versatility, but indifferent pictures. For those who still believe in silver emulsion film, or who wonder, as I do, if we did the right thing to insist on hand inspection of film all those years, the answer will be available at the Main Library on August 2. Operation Salt is a collaboration by ten artists, not ten forensic scientists, and their report -- characterized by indirection, humor (some of the gallows sort), sharp visual detail, emotionally evocative associations, and sensual complexity -- is likely to find virtue in the visible impact of X-rays on film. Art is like that, and frightening beauty is still beauty, after all. Operation Salt includes teachers, graphic designers, filmmakers, and radio producers among other approaches to their interests, which include experimenting with sight–, sound–, and time–based media. In other words, there will be performance, film, and installation pieces along with less ephemeral photographs, sculpture, and paintings. Anyone who thinks a lock on the door equals privacy, or that only an overactive imagination could lead one to worry about who, petty criminals aside, might have access to our secret lives, is likely to find this whole show unsettling. For the rest of us, it’s oddly empowering to know that just because we’re paranoid doesn’t mean they are not out to get us.

And who are they? As Marlon Brando unforgettably asked in The Wild Ones, “Whataya got?” Life in public, deviant behavior, voyeurism, sexual and religious orientation, economic circumstance, and political activism are just a few of the many ways to call down unwelcome scrutiny these days. Beyond what we do, however, is the whole question of who we permit to scrutinize us. What if our keepers are the true paranoids? What happens when innocence is not enough to keep suspicion at bay? I have students who think that surveillance cannot be too invasive; after all, they ask, if you’re not guilty why would you care? Poverty of imagination alone is not enough to explain such stupidity; ignorance of the arbitrary, reckless behavior of totalitarian systems plays a part as well. The good news is that art can do something for both shortcomings, providing examples and activating the imagination at the same time. 

The artists in Operation Salt include Grace Ashby, David Baddley, Erin Esplin, Shasta Fletcher, Winston Inoway, Kristina Lenzi, Amanda Moore, Paul Stout, Eugene Tachinni, and Laina Thomas. To get the full effect, be there between 4 and 5:30 on the afternoon of Saturday, August 2, for the opening and reception. The exhibition continues through September 13.

July 18, 2008

Survival, art making, and beyond . . .

Survival, art making, and beyond . . .
by Geoff Wichert
painting by Ruby Chacon 
When Ruby Chacon loaded four kids into her Ford Explorer, hitched up the trailer, and hit the road out of Sacramento earlier this week, she probably thought the toughest challenge ahead was finishing her painting and hanging the MICA y MALCS show that would open Friday in the gallery at Mestizo. That was before a tire blew and the Ford did what Explorers are notorious for doing: rolled over four times, destroying the vehicle, the trailer, and its contents. Fortunately, Chacon and her passengers, who emerged with cuts, bruises, and raspberries, apparently suffered no major injuries. As Terry Hurst, Chacon’s husband and partner in the gallery and coffee shop, explained with more than a hint of awe in his voice, “An hour after she got back, before she even stopped shaking, Ruby was back in the studio, brush in hand, working on her painting.”
 
The focus of Chacon’s efforts is a collaborative project bringing together MICA, the Mestizo Institute of Culture and Arts, and MALCS: Mujeres Activas en Letras y Cambio Social, or Women Active in Letters and Social Change. MICA is a non-profit dedicated to using art to build stronger communities among physically and culturally marginalized peoples. “As a result of our own experiences in accessing public art spaces,” says their mission statement, “we are an inclusive organization and wish to provide space to all, especially those who in the past have been excluded from other public forums.”

MALCS is an interdisciplinary group of Chicana, Latina, and Native American women scholars who work together to support their common issues through education and promoting public awareness. Examples of their efforts to bridge the gap between intellectual or creative work and community activities include a conference being hosted right now at U of U and this exhibition at Mestizo. Opening Friday, July 18, during Gallery Stroll, MICA y MALCS  will feature a mix of new, emerging, and established artists who consciously work to represent their experiences in community, academic, and work environments and to raise awareness of women’s issues through art. Despite their academic credentials, those expecting to be lectured by didactic art will be disappointed. Instead, expect lively images of women brimming with self-esteem. Art may still be a lonely profession, but when these many women get together to celebrate the result, the air is full of fragrance and song.

MICA y MALCS opens tonight, Friday, July 18 at Mestizo Coffeehouse, 631 West North Temple, Suite 700.

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