Head on Horizon: Redux 2000-2009, light, (digital projection, 2009 in collaboration with L.J. Douglas), mixed media, dimensions variable
Writing about one’s own artwork is often difficult. The main task is finding palpable meaning to share with others when the work is familiar to the maker. Information can be left out, or omitted entirely, depending on the artist’s literary inclination at the time of critique or observational writing.
The following article displays stills and a video, accompanied by an essay about a sculpture I have worked on since 2000. The essay is based on thoughts about the sculpture at the time of its first iteration, along with new physical additions and explorations into digital projection.
I hope to use kinetic sculpture to reinforce the idea of the mutable nature of art that uses “Time” as a capricious, but necessary component, allied with other more tangible materials.
Both top and bottom images are linked to a YouTube HQ page
A condensed metaphor for memory operates in the mechanical action of Head on Horizon: Redux. First exhibited in 2000, the sculpture is based on an event from the past when I watched a car's headlights shine over a very long distance, through my apartment window and onto a wall adjacent to my bed.
The car’s projected light had a way of compressing low-lying forms (in shadow) over distance onto a single, flat surface. It occurred to me that every instance of activity within the shadows of those objects was unrelated, yet I began constructing a visual story from the accumulating collection of silhouetted forms.
As cars approached and rolled past, the projected shadows were rife with endless variation. And although these silhouetted forms were compressed into flat non-descript shapes, it was not difficult to imagine their origins; plants moving with the breeze, grass blades tramped down by roaming, nocturnal animals, rocks, frantic insects scurrying during the cool of the evening, endless forms of detritus, and then finally… the shadow of my own head.
"At the time of the experience with the light, the event was little more than another form of “play” with no more than the ethereal shadows and projections on the wall of my room. The projected “shadow objects” were playthings. Abstract forms reconstructed as members of a community of interacting players on a compressed landscape."
In Head on Horizon: Redux, a digital animation working in conjunction with tungsten light is projected onto the 2000 version, a constructed, highly abstracted landscape, made of wood, aluminum and glass. The sculpture takes its idea from the original occurrence of the projected silhouettes and attempts to expand the visual experience, thus channeling other areas of human memory and our tendency to construct stories.


There is a very gratifying feeling that comes from visual memory; from the sensations produced by objects in the landscape, and those object’s material willingness to function as visual markers in a shared experience.

(video by Doug Johnson, courtesy of McLean County Art Center, Bloomington, IL)
I would like to thank L.J. Douglas, for her intelligence, skill and creative excellence in collaborating on the production of the animated component of this work. Also Doug Johnson, Director of the McLean County Art Center for his faith in my work, and his help and expertise in producing this wonderful video. I thank Alison Hatcher, for her original idea to do an installation, and for her guidance and skill in forming this show and many exhibitions at the center. I thank Rob Fifield for his help in the preparation and installation of the work in this show. Thanks to Jane Osborn for designing an excellent color announcement for the exhibition, and finally, I thank Jobie and Irving Tick, along with Jack, Linda and Ashley Ritter for their generous sponsorship of this exhibition..Dates for the exhibition are August 21-October 24, 2009



Salon.com
Comments
Thanks Roger! There has been some critical dialogue w my work in the past, but I'm hoping to find other venues for this latest iteration.
Thank you for this amazing and beautiful post.
After watching the video I heartily second Bob’s suggestion. You are a very gifted man Gary and, moreover, one who uses his gifts to greatly bless others.
Thank you. Rated and appreciated
thanks for everything
So much of art comes directly from the brain that it is awful to try to communicate the process to others. That is awful for viewers who desperately want to know about the process.
Congratulations, and Rated, rated, rated.
How many hours have we all spent watching the light show from late-night passing vehicles? How many of us can create art from the same? Brilliant, Gary.
Where is this going to be on display? People are going to rave over it! Congrats!!
Love the time-out-of-mind, spatial, flowing feel of this.
Shared experience, indeed. Kudos, Gary.
Scanner, your mom might like this anyway!
Zum, thanks, the original idea became so much more in the building process.
m.a.h, the endless permutations are always interesting, trying to locate the sources, then catching glimpses of new shadows and reflections, endlessly rolling by..
lalucas, you saw the gold in the wheels! The wheels are one of my favorite images in the animation. I do not know at this point if this piece will go to Chicago or another city with a venue for this type of installation. McLean County was generous to have the confidence in me for placing one work in a large space. This is rare, but they are a wonderful and rare organization.
Stacey, every project like this has its collaborative aspects. Everyone connected with this is talented and very special.
Hi Beth, I will try some different venues….and yes, sometimes I feel out –of-mind myself!! Thanks for your comment my friend!
Old new lefty, Thanks so much for that supportive sentiment coming from a self-described art snob! I have to admit, I’m one too…I agree this would travel well, to Chicago, NY and elsewhere, with nods to McLean County Art Center!
Rated
Simply, amazing...
RATED
When I read your description of this piece and what inspired it, it brought back immediate memories of my own experiences with shadowplay from headlights. Then, watching the video, I was simply stunned into immobility.
Seeing how you took that simple inspiration and worked it into metal and glass and steel, and made it MOVE, is just incredible. When I see something like this, it gives me hope for us.
Highly highly rated, G. This is exceptional, and I can only imagine how much more impact it has in person. Thanks. :-D
Hello Sally, it’s first version was shown in Chicago. The present one is more fleshed out. I’m grateful the museum allowed me to show the piece that has taken years to come to fruition.
Thanks Coyote, I think collaborations double the possibilities in the exploration of ideas.
Thanks Owl, the projection licking around the surfaces is of special interest. It ha inspired more ideas using the projected motion.
Thanks Chuck…a wonderful, poetic comment!
Greg, thanks! I hope you continue to feel better….
Hello Steve, thanks for your great comment, I was fortunate the director of the Museum made the video for us. It explores the piece in the same way I would have!
Hello Bill, the shadow play and analog movement is done with a random switch, where a low voltage electrode drags through small ball bearings. When the electrode hits a bearing, the light goes up, shifting the colored silhouettes. Thank you for your great comment Bill. I am glad it was evocative for you.
Procopius, thanks for watching and reading. The piece is perhaps an extension of a subtler experience. Similar to the way memory sometimes enhances the details of the images we retain.
I don't know if you've ever visited Sarasota, but it's a very artsy town. There was an artist here some years ago that welded bumpers and fenders, grills and the like together and made art of them. Can't recall his name, but he had some pretty cool stuff that sold for some rather high prices, but what do I know about art. Not much really, but I do know when I like something and I like your Redux. I liked this guys car part art, too!
The artist you mention is most likely John Kearney. He made a name doing things with bumpers, but more than anything, he provided workshops for artists in Chicago for many years. It was called the Contemporary Art Workshop.
I am thrilled you got a nod on your last piece, because it helps set the stage for your reception! I hope someone has a screen with WiFi at your opening!
Hi Lance, yes. It was in Chicago in 2000 at Klein Art Works…thanks so much. I hope all is well with you as we move into Fall!
Sallysum, “?” I don’t run with that kind of heard………thanks anyway
Monte
" It occurred to me that every instance of activity within the shadows of those objects was unrelated, yet I began constructing a visual story from the accumulating collection of silhouetted forms."
That's the perfect answer to give when someone inevitably asks me, after reading a horror story I wrote, "where do you come up with this stuff?"
BTW, quite a few ideas come in the half dream state…the moments before drifting off. That’s a whole other blog.
Calder’s Circus.
This brought me very vividly back to about age 8 when I made a homemade "wave machine" out of (I think) turpentine, water and food coloring. I sat for hours shaking it up and watching the little blobs become big blobs and settle back in while watching the world go by through the little soda bottle held up to my face. My camp counselor told me that wasn't how I was supposed to use it but that was just what your piece captured for me. I'm still a weird little kid.
(thumbified with apologies for lateness!)
I'm delighted your wave machine was a memorable thing for you... the one I had was memorable for me as well. No doubt yours was better than mine. I remember mine was grimy... more of a prophetic model for the Exon Valdize.
And that camp councilor of yours....if anyone deserved a hair-conflagration....