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Also this issue: The Right Hand Giveth... Fly South for Winterthur Domestic Bliss Nikki Giovanni A Plantsman in Asia: 1979-1999 Seussical: The Musical Artsbeat |
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January 9-15, 2003
artpicks
It's an East Coast/West Coast rivalry of a different kind at Vox Populi this month. "Flipping the Bird" brings together artists who flout the conventions of the relationship between subject and materials -- in a coastal divide. Justyna Badach says she and co-curator Laura Heyman noticed that these artists were all working with this "duality of aesthetic and how it's reinterpreted depending on where you live." The E.C. team members (Reed Anderson, Katrin Asbury, Chris Giglio, Gabrielle Kanter and Michael Laforte) take everyday objects and dress them up in sophisticated materials, using high-tech methods. Giglio, for example, makes "photograms" by placing film on a television monitor, and turning the set on and off for trippy lighting effects in the developing process. The W.C. team (Samantha Fields, Chris Johanson, Robert Martin, Shaun Odell and Philip Ross) reduces sophisticated ideas to their most rudimentary elements using childlike techniques like painting by numbers and bright colors. Fields airbrushes clonelike bunnies, while Ross has learned to grow fungus in unnatural ways, creating what Badach calls "mutant mushrooms." The gallery compares these artists to "inspired stoners in a middle-school shop class," and it's safe to say they're on to something: Didn't those kids always make the coolest stuff anyway?
"Flipping the Bird," opening reception, Fri., Jan. 10, 6-9 p.m.; gallery talk, Fri., Jan. 10, 6 p.m.; exhibition runs through Jan. 31, Vox Populi, 1315 Cherry St., fourth floor, 215-568-5513.
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