Hybridity: The Evolution of Species
and Spaces in 21st-Century Art
April – September 2006
street level gallery
Hybridity is a defining characteristic of contemporary existence: the mysteries
of identity—both aesthetic and genetic—are increasingly complex and
potentially fantastical. Our global village shelters both the human and animal kingdoms,
and the boundaries between them may be dissolving, as many of these artworks suggest:
animals transform, merge, and mutate, with others, with humans, and with machines,
offering both a provocative vision of the future and an incisive examination of
human behavior and psychology—what drives, delights, and frightens us—in
the new millennium.
Cute yet creepy, fun but foreboding: Toward a new mythology.
From the beast of the Apocalypse to the Chimera of Greek mythology to the creatures
of H.G. Wells‘s Island of Doctor Moreau to memorable characters in
recent Star Wars and Lord of the Rings movies, hybrids have always
inhabited our collective, cultural imagination, and have been rendered in every
media, including sculpture, painting, writing, architecture, film, and more. Artists
have traditionally employed images of hybrids in response to times of crisis, or
to give expression to the uncontrollable dreams of imagination. In the 21st–century,
artists are no less imaginative in their expressions of hybridity, but the mythologies
suggested in the works here are grounded in fact as well as fiction, and, at times,
in as much hopeful anticipation as in admonishing fear. These brave new worlds,
where various animal and plant species share homes, habitats, bodies, and even genes
with humans and machines are already coming into being: the ever-receding wilderness
has brought once disparate populations into close contact (think of the deer feeding
on your front lawn), and scientific advances are yielding all manner of genetic
engineering and therapy (think of the almost daily news articles about laboratory
mice bred to mimic the conditions of various human diseases). Perched on the precipice
of this present moment, which seems equal parts promise and peril, these artists
express a complex, postmodern ambiguity: dismay, even anger, at our disregard for
our earthly home, its environment, and its animal populations, delight at the potential
for science to address some of these issues, and a fascination—sometimes fearful,
sometimes celebratory—with technology. And the forces of nature Hybridity
The Evolution of Species and Spaces in 21st-Century Art itself, worshipped in ancient
times, subject to humankind's efforts at control in the modern era, exert their
own power: laboratory designed creatures evolve in unpredictable ways, animals assert
their perspectives back onto ours, and animals and earth claim the domiciles of
the domesticated, meeting us halfway in the new, hybrid world.
The transformations at play here do not favor the human over the animal: video works
by Sam Easterson and Kathy High guide us through the world from the animal‘s
perspective, rather than our own, and Grant Hayunga‘s horse and bird-people
retain their elegant animal heads, while their more human bodies look raw and vulnerable.
The leading actors in video works by both Guy Ben-Ner and Mokohito Odani are either
costumed or morphed into animals, offering compelling perspectives on both human
and animal behavior. In this exhibition, the communion of species occurs on multiple
levels, in every imaginable direction.
Scientific developments and the effects of climate change, pollution, and the expanding
human population may well give rise to a plethora of new species in the 21st–century.
Patricia Piccinini, Nicolas Lampert, Thomas Grunfeld, Carlee Fernandez, Meyer Vaisman,
and others craft newly imagined creatures in their investigations into technology,
genetics, environmental change, and cultural convention. While they recall a spectrum
of sources, from ancient mythology to early twentieth-century Dada collage and the
assisted readymades of Marcel Duchamp, to the magical creatures of recent science
fiction films, these beings belong to the here and now. Transgenic animals and plants
already exist; these artworks offer a provocative reflection on the intersection
of current aesthetics and contemporary reality.
Visions of a world where evolutionary changes occur at high speed are nurtured in
spaces without defined boundaries: in Michael Oatman‘s riotous spectrum of
human and animal interactions set in suburban fantasyland, in Richard Erlich‘s
abandoned houses inhabited by desert sand, in Rob De Mar‘s mountain highway
nestled in a lamppost, and of course, in the viewer‘s mind, absorbing images
and objects presented in a contemporary art museum within a hotel.
Exhibited Works
- Thomas Grunfeld (German), Misfit, 2004. Taxidermy.
- Kohei Nawa (Japanese), PixCell Monkey, 2004. Mixed media,
including taxidermy and glass beads.
- Nicolas Lampert (American), Kangaroo,1995. Digital print
on wallpaper. Courtesy of the artist. Commission of Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary
Art (MASSMoCA), North Adams, MA.
- Nicolas Lampert (American), Locust Tank, 1995. Digital
print on wallpaper. Courtesy of the artist. Commission of
MASSMoCA, North Adams, MA.
- Nicolas Lampert (American), Praying Mantis Crane, 1999.
Digital print on wallpaper. Courtesy of the artist. Commission of MASSMoCA, North
Adams, MA.
- Carlee Fernandez (American), Rabbit with Calla Lillies,
2001. Taxidermy, felt, wood.
- Grant Hayunga (American), Raven Headed, 2005. Mixed media
on canvas.
- Grant Hayunga (American), Gabriel's Spell, 2004. Mixed
media on canvas.
- Reuben Lorch-Miller (American), Frogettes, 2001. Mixed
media.
- Patricia Piccinini (Australian), Surrogate (For the Northern
Hairy Nosed Wombat), 2005. Silicon, hair, acrylic resin, leather, and plywood.
- Meyer Vaisman (American), Untitled, 1986. Taxidermy turkey,
mixed media.
- Michael Oatman (American), Husbandry, 2005. Diptych collage
and spray paint on paper. Courtesy of the artist.
- Pierre Ardouvin (French), Litter,1994. Fake fur hats,
dog basket.
- Michael Oatman (American), Singles Cruise, 2005. Collage
on paper. Courtesy of the artist.
- Rob de Mar (American), Untitled, 2000. Mixed media, felt,
iron.
- Richard Erlich (American), Sand House 2, 2003. Archival
pigment print.
- Richard Erlich (American), Sand House-NH19 (graffiti girl),
2003. Archival pigment print.
- Lia Menna Barreto (Brazilian), Sapos Amassados sem Ordem (Toads
Kneaded Without Order), 2002. Rubber.
- Guy Ben-Ner (Israeli), Two Ostriches, 2003. Mixed media.
- Guy Ben-Ner (Israeli), Elia—Story of An Ostrich Chick,
2003. DVD projection.
- Motohiko Odani (Japanese), Rompers, 2003. DVD projection.
Courtesy of the artist.
- Patricia Piccinini (Australian), When My Baby, 2003. DVD
video projection.
- Adam Stennett (American), Mouse Swimming Overhead, 2004.
DVD projection.
- Adam Stennett (American), everything tastes better when you
are blind, 2005. DVD projection.
- Michael Oatman (American), Egg Bank, 2005. Collage on
paper with test tube rack frame. Courtesy of the artist.
- Sam Easterson (American), Animal, Vegetable, Video, 2001.
DVD projections. Courtesy of the artist.
- Michael Oatman (American), Familiar Songbirds II, 2003.
Collage on paper. Courtesy of the artist.
- Michael Oatman (American), Familiar Songbirds III, 2003.
Collage on paper. Courtesy of the artist.
- Kathy High (American), Embracing Animal, 2004. DVD projections,
glass test tubes. Courtesy of the artist. Commission of MASSMoCA, North Adams, MA.
Life as Art: Live Art Installation
Lauren Argo
June 4 – 24, 2006
enclosed window space at 21c Museum Hotel’s restaurant, Proof on Main
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exhibition details
Mikhail Baryshnikov
Dominican Moves
August 3 – November 2007
gallery street level
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exhibition details
Blue Apple Players:
an exhibition of tableaux vivants
May 13 - July 31, 2008
gallery 3
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exhibition details
Ballads of the Barefoot Mind
Daniel Dutton
October 2006 – January 6, 2007
atrium gallery
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exhibition details
Dia de los Muertos: Day of the Dead
Saturday, November 1 to Sunday, November 9
gallery 4, off the street level gallery
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exhibition details
Marvin Francis: Prison’s Paper Trail
August – January 2008
gallery 4 street level
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exhibition details
Anthony Goicolea
Ramp
November 2007 – January 2008
street level gallery
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exhibition details
Ilse Haider: Selected Works 1997-2002
March 13 – August 3, 2007
gallery 4 street level
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exhibition details
Hybridity
The Evolution of Species and Spaces
in 21st-Century Art
April – September 2006
street level gallery
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exhibition details
Past Highlights
from our ongoing exhibition
New Acquisitions and Highlights
atrium gallery
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exhibition details
Everybody Always Thinks They Are Right:
Stefan Sagmeister
September 3-28, 2008
Outdoor public installation on north corner of 7th and Main St
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exhibition details
Marc Swanson
Beginning to See the Light
July 2007 – January 2008
street level gallery
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exhibition details
Tangled Up In You
Connecting, Coexisting, and Conceiving Identity
street level gallery
February – September 2008
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exhibition details
Through the Rabbit Hole
Sleights of Scale and Flights of Fantasy
November 2006 – June 2007
street level gallery
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exhibition details
John Waters: Unwatchable Series
October 6 – December 11, 2006
street level gallery
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exhibition details
Mickie Winters
Learning to Bend Series
gallery 1 atrium level
Opening reception in conjunction with Ben Sollee cd release performance Nov 16th
and 17th 2008
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exhibition details