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Physics Room
A Contemporary Art Space
Christchurch, New Zealand
Neural Notations
Curated by Donna Leigh Schumacher
January 17 – February 10, 2001
Physics Room Annual 2001
Emma Budgen
June 2002
pp. 17
Strange things, our brains. When the brain
runs amok it often does so in a spectacular fashion; a tumor, a paranoid
episode, a manic high, a desperate low. The link between creativity and
neurology has been made, and continues to be made, the artist as madman
proposition having been explored and exploited since kingdom come and Van
Gogh chopped his ear off. Sometimes I think this premise is as limiting as
illness itself.
There must, however, be ways of talking
about such ideas which allow for empowerment, understanding and exploration,
without reducing everything to cliches of crazy geniuses and mad painters.
The best works in Neural Notations danced a beautifully fine line between
the personal and the political, being communicative rather than
introspective, close without navel gazing. Their power was in a lightness of
touch, as much what the works didn't say as what they did. A dark edgy humor
was a feature of the show, notably in Gail Wight's work The First
Evolutionary Occurrence of Pain (1999), a diagram of a snail's
primitive pain receptors wired directly into a tiny model diorama of a car
crash ‑ funny, not funny. And again, in the sad/funny Brain Dolls of
Donna Leigh Schumacher, who danced a brave, wobbly dance atop a plinth,
their composition equal parts rag doll and seratonin boosters.
Cheryl Coon's
work was both beautiful and terrifying, a sprawling constellation of flower
or star‑like objects, each created from tacks wound into a ball of thread,
and thrown as hard as possible at the wall, to protrude precariously from
the gibbed wall. Its rhizomic construction was largely random, constrained
by the limits of the wall space, and the installing gallery workers ability
to throw. Each tiny object contained dozens of piercingly sharp metal tacks
which dug into the edge of the wall, shimmering with palatable danger.
Jennifer Gwirtz and her partner John Bauman
performed live at the exhibition's opening, against a backdrop of Gwirtz's
framed graphs and notes. Their intensely personal compositions were based on
transforming ECG scanner readouts into musical scores, utilizing their
voices as instruments, bending notes into sounds and shapes rather than
'singing' in the strictest sense. Jennifer's diminutive body stretched and
moved against the sound, in one solo performance she performed quirky cute
wee hand movements like a chirpy little bird. But cuteness aside, this was
both charming and moving, and was the moment in the show which hit me
powerfully.
Emma Bugden
more reviews
. . .
Neural Notations
Curated by Donna Schumacher
Artists:
Elliot W. Anderson
Cheryl Coon
Jennifer Gwirtz
horea
Sara Roberts
Elliot Ross
Donna Leigh Schumacher
Susan Schwartzenberg
Gail Wight
It came from California
Log 13, Winter 2001, p. 32-33
Wood, Andrew Paul
Neural Notations, a group show curated by Donna Leigh Schumacher
Neural Notations
Asian Art News, vol. 11; March/April 2001, p.88
Fusco, Cassandra
Neural analysis
The Press, 2001 Jan. 31, p. 30
Wright, Nik. |