Where do I go from here?
April 1st, 2010 “Where do I go from here?” Work by Mark Wagner, Clayton Thiel, and Salane C Schultz, at FLOAT. March 20th - April 24th.In 1992 I visited Virtual World, a gaming immersion center in nearby Walnut Creek. Hot on the release of William Gibson and Bruce Sterling’s novel “The Difference Engine,” steampunk was just starting to catch on as a subculture. The lounge at the entrance to Virtual World was designed to resemble an expat bar in colonial India (or was it Mars?), the decor replete with potted ferns and ceiling fans. Following a debriefing, we were led into the gaming area, where each pilot stepped into their own mechanized warrior. I’m a bit claustrophobic, but once the door closed, rather than feeling trapped, you felt immersed in a new, virtual reality, while on your HUD new found allies and enemies lumbered across this fresh vista. You were cut off from the outside world but completely in touch with this other dimension.
Walking into FLOAT, which bills itself as an “urban art spa,” I flashed back to Virtual World. It is not only an art gallery, but a flotation center as well. They offer “Restricted Environmental Stimulation Therapy” (R.E.S.T., which provides a much better acronym than “Flotation And Relaxation Therapy”) in what is commonly referred to as a sensory-deprivation tank. And after a briefing on what to expect from their experience, clients are similarly led from the gallery’s lounge to where the flotation tank awaits behind a curtain.
“Where do I go from here?,” work by Mark Wagner, Clayton Thiel, and Salane C Schultz, is guest curated by art publicist Nancy Vicknair. The gallery’s website broadly describes the exhibit: “Three artists explore the next dimension though magic, mythology, symbolism and story telling.”
This is the first show in six years for Alameda-based artist Wagner, who made news in 2008 when his nonprofit “Re-Enchanting the World through Art” organized the world record-setting chalk drawing in Alameda’s former naval air station. “Where do I go from here?” includes some of Wagner’s older work, including “Creation of Language” (1992) with the strong Native American imagery for which he is well known, as well as ”The Nature of Technology” (2003) which humorously shows African animals depicted as bipeds posing for a camera, as indicated by the focussing circle at the center of the print.
"Horned Goddess" (detail), "Green Man Medicine" (detail), and "The Art of War" by Mark Wagner
"Tree House I Never Got to Build," "Raven Head," and "Totem Figure w/Toys" by Clayton Thiel
Salane C Shultz with her "Sideways Girl"
"The Concertina Player" and "Man in Museum" by Salane C Schultz
Michael Singman-Aste
Postdiluvian Photo
Original blog:
http://networkedblogs.com/2290Y
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