Switch reflects a struggle with the effects of power consumption and questions about personal power to make change. As part of Switch, I went on “pilgrimages” upstream from my electric meter to photograph five power plants that represent five types of electric generation I hope will be substantially replaced by renewables: nuclear, coal, gas, oil, and trash incineration. Switch is a ritual object, representing appreciation of the gifts of electricity from these plants, sadness at their/my impacts, and a decision upon opening of the exhibit to switch to wind power. Visitors may carefully operate the switches to experience the work. Switch is part of a series called Power Contemplations.
Monday, April 11, 2016
Installed Switch
Sunday afternoon, I headed over to Form + Content Gallery to install Switch with Camille (curator of the Fierce Lament exhibit)
and Rosie (exhibit designer/installer). The gallery is intimate and has
the feeling of a precious container - like a side chapel in a church
complex. The gallery was alive with almost all the artists installing work at once.
Installation of Switch went smoothly, with only a few extra holes in
the wall behind it. I am always amazed at how placement in a gallery or
an intended space completes a piece - like its final outer frame. And
how the lighting creates new shadow layers to the work.
Switch reflects a struggle with the effects of power consumption and questions about personal power to make change. As part of Switch, I went on “pilgrimages” upstream from my electric meter to photograph five power plants that represent five types of electric generation I hope will be substantially replaced by renewables: nuclear, coal, gas, oil, and trash incineration. Switch is a ritual object, representing appreciation of the gifts of electricity from these plants, sadness at their/my impacts, and a decision upon opening of the exhibit to switch to wind power. Visitors may carefully operate the switches to experience the work. Switch is part of a series called Power Contemplations.
Switch reflects a struggle with the effects of power consumption and questions about personal power to make change. As part of Switch, I went on “pilgrimages” upstream from my electric meter to photograph five power plants that represent five types of electric generation I hope will be substantially replaced by renewables: nuclear, coal, gas, oil, and trash incineration. Switch is a ritual object, representing appreciation of the gifts of electricity from these plants, sadness at their/my impacts, and a decision upon opening of the exhibit to switch to wind power. Visitors may carefully operate the switches to experience the work. Switch is part of a series called Power Contemplations.
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