The act of dying upon one’s self and other remnants of a rebirth Armory Center for the Arts:
photo, Ian Byers-Gamber “If the doors of perception were cleansed every thing would appear to man as it is, Infinite. For man has closed himself up, till he sees all things thro’ narrow chinks of his cavern." -William Blake We circumvent a tiny sphere within the infinite universe. Our lives feel big and our obstacles insurmountable at times. We perceive only
a fraction, invisible to the naked eye, of the realities surrounding us. Perhaps this unwitting censorship guards us from truths we cannot process with our still primitive minds. Science opens new doors all the time and yet many choose to force them shut again. Denial of objective reality threatens to lock mankind in a permanent dark age, unable to surmount the barriers of fear that block the path toward enlightenment. We dull our senses rather than expose them to the ever-increasing stimuli of
our vast existence.
Christian Bok is an experimental poet based in
Darwin, Australia where he is hard at work founding a creative writing program and Darwin University. His background in avant garde literary practice informs the program he is creating but at the same time he remains fully open to students’ diverse literary backgrounds and needs. Bok is simultaneously creating artwork for a group show in September with a theme based upon materials found in office supply and hardware stores. His work, series of paintings, is informed by “a really strange
painting” by Kazimir Malevich. Using paint chips from the hardware store, Bok creates collages incorporating the colors and their given names to produce large scale poems translated into colors. Recently Bok finished editing a book of essays and poetry by Canadian avant garde writers over the last 50 years titled Avant Canada. Since 2002, Bok has been working on a project titled The Xenotext for which he writes a very short poem which is then translated into a genetic sequence. The sequenced
poem is then built in a lab and implanted into the genome of a bacterium, replacing part of the genetic code of the bacterium with the encoded text. Bok’s sequenced and implanted poetry causes the host to build a protein, writing a unique poem in response to the encoded and implanted one. The chosen organism is indestructible, able to withstand gamma radiation or the vacuum of space which means that these encoded poems could effectively exist forever. While Bok has yet to succeed in the
implantation into the desired indestructible host, he has achieved proof of concept by implanting sequenced poems into e coli bacteria.
“When critics say that poetry is dead my response of course is to build an unkillable poem,” Bok says. It is possible to extract and read back the lines written by the host organism and the action of creation causes the
organism to fluoresce red. The work touches a concept that scientists have considered which is the possibility of communicating across universal distances by embedding messages into viruses and allowing them to replicate themselves. Bok designs the genetic structure and proteomic sequences himself and then receives some assistance from laboratories with the actual gene splicing. Of his work Bok says he is “trying to be a poet in the 21st century responding to the technological circumstances of
[his] moment in time.” Bok writes other poems besides those sequenced into DNA. One of his works is so intricately constructed under a series of strict constraints that it took five months to complete. To hear more about this and Bok’s mind bending work with experimental poetry and DNA sequencing as well as his other pursuits, including readings of some of his companion poems to The Xenotext, listen to the complete interview. Laub Laub is on a road trip visiting family driving from Florida through Georgia, the Carolinas, and Virginia. He currently has an exhibit in Pasadena, California at the Armory Center. The work includes sculptural elements and series of
drawings. Visitors are greeted by a big door between cement blocks behind which they find a fumigation bag filled with meat. Laub has discovered that the bags are not enough to contain the smell of rotting meat which adds an unexpected element to the show. The exhibit represents a map of grief. The artifacts and artworks are elements of suicide and dying. The main theme of the show is suicide. Laub’s mother is suicidal and he has had many friends die from prescription pill overdose. Through the
work he implicates the pharmaceutical industry in the epidemic of death and overdose gripping the nation. There are also elements of rebirth as well as fanciful, storybook-like elements that tell stories. Everything together in a sense represents a collision of time as well as a timelessness.
There is both the political and the personal in the work just
like overdose and suicide often has elements of both. Following concern from young viewers, Laub was asked to remove the real drugs from the show. He at first felt offense, wishing that there could be a conversation with the high school students who spoke up about the inclusion rather than a request for removal. He decided to temporarily remove the drugs before replacing them again. Part of the installation in Pasadena is a collaborative work with artist Jennifer Moon. A series of tapestries
illustrates the life and death of Moon’s dog Mr. Snuggles. To hear more about Laub’s work and his collaboration with Jennifer Moon, listen to the complete interview. |
Weekly Grants & Resources for Artists Every week you will find updated resources here to apply for grants, find
residencies and more.
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Let’s talk about opportunities. As you may or may not know, Praxis Center maintains a curated page of artist opportunities. While we try to highlight those that are free of charge, sometimes small fees may apply.You can use this resources page to locate grants, residencies.... | I have a friend who needs to know what’s going to happen. She spends hours making plans, every detail is accounted for, her mother says that when she was small she spent all her time setting up for play and no time actually playing.... |
Life doesn’t always go the way we want it to. Sometimes when we plan for one outcome, we encounter another entirely. Often, it takes an open mind and a dose of courage to roll with the many possible outcomes of even our best laid plans.... | Are there moments when a career in art feels like an insurmountable achievement? Do you find yourself reeling from the sheer process of putting all the pieces in place, as though you have been asked to spin a dozen plates at one time?.... |
Routine makes the world go round. Whether you are a declared type A who follows a strict routine to the letter day in and day out, or a soft around the edges type B unafraid of a looser structure, you probably stick to some routine regardless.... | The business of art is all about finding ways to empower yourself in order to move your career to the next level. A huge part of the equation is believing that you can be your own manager and publicist. It can be difficult to believe on your hard days that there are successes waiting for you.... |
These are positive and / or negative reviews of galleries, art fairs, consultants, writers, online pay to play offers, residencies and more – all written by artists so that other artists can beware of situations where institutions treat artists badly, or that end up
costing the artist money or are outright scams.
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