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Spoonful,
2005, Single-channel video installation, silent, One 45-inch
LCD monitor, one DVD player and one DVD, 25 ½ h.
x 43 w. inches [65 x 109 cm.], Edition of five and one artist’s
proof,
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With
the inauguration of our new space James Harris Gallery is also pleased
to host four works by intramedia artist Gary Hill. For the last
35 years Hill has pushed the limits of our experience with his work
making him one of the most important contemporary artists investigating
an array of issues ranging from the physicality of language, synesthesia
and perceptual conundrums to ontological space and viewer interactivity.
The four videos – which are making their Seattle debut with
this exhibition – exemplify just how and why Hill is such
a key figure in art today. Relating to Hill’s earlier series
entitled Liminal Objects, in which black-and-white, computer-generated
images are coupled in continuous, interactive motion, the works
in this series are rendered in color and created specifically for
a wide-screen format, flat-panel LCD screen. These seductively rhythmic
animations depict objects that seem to violate one another’s
borders. In "Spoonful," a spinning golden coin and silver
spoon gracefully float and dance on top of a darken screen. On occasion
the two meet, bouncing off one another. At other times, the coin
passes through the spoon without disturbing it. There’s an
air of mystery and magic in the work – the silver spoon appears
to be moving on its own. While the spinning coin, on the other hand,
sends a strong message about chance and luck (how many times have
you flipped a coin?).
With these enigmatic and unpredictable layers, the animations have
an unsettling and irresolvable quality. Hill denies us tidy ending
through small interactions and with movements that possess a circular
logic. As such, what are relatively simple and meditative loops
become complex multifaceted narratives in which we become involved
with the visually animated image and balance its original meaning
with open interpretation.
In “Big Legs Don't Cry, a man stands on top of an open book.
The pages flutter back and forth through his brown-slacks. Only
the pages and the fabric of his slacks move in the wind, while the
Man remains completely static. In "Attention" and "Church
and State" Hill uses imagery connected to the landscape and
the outside world. A balsawood airplane flies above a tent. As the
plane circles in a gentle wind, it passes over the tent and then
miraculously sails through it.
With
"Church and State" Hill imbues the animation with humor.
A sheep and a goat trot around the screen bleating. One follows,
one leads or vice a versa. At one point they merge with one another
and then separate. Like the other pieces, one can construct multiple
readings. Whether the goat is church and the sheep state doesn’t
much matter. But the two characters are definitely taking on an
air of power; albeit a preposterous one.
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Poor Man's Guilt, 2007
Five silver coins, speaker, electronics, and painted MDF board
Dimensions of box: approx. 11 ½ h. x 13 x 13 inches
Edition of fifteen and three artist's proofs
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Poor
Man's Guilt, 2007
Five silver coins, speaker, electronics, and painted MDF board
Dimensions of box: approx. 11 ½ h. x 13 x 13 inches
Edition of fifteen and three artist's proof |