Mesmerizations

Providence art: 2007 in review
By GREG COOK  |  December 18, 2007
Apartment_Mallinside
DOWNTOWN DIGS: The living room at the Apartment At the Mall.

Rhode Island confirmed why it’s the capital of New England art-making with two major developments in 2007: (1) the outing of a group of artists who turned forgotten space in Providence’s flagship mall into a secret hideout and (2) the establishment of an underground museum of mechanical miracles in Bristol. And that was just the start.

1 The Discovery
On September 26, artist Michael Townsend was stopped by security as he left an apartment he and seven collaborators had secretly created inside neglected storage space in Providence Place’s parking garage. And so was announced to the world one of the most audacious and awesome underground art projects Rhode Island has ever seen.
 
“The Apartment at the Mall” was a delicious, trenchant, outlaw joke that colonized a bit of the mall to reconsider the place of consumerism and real-estate development in our communities. A recreation of the place is on exhibit at 70 Eddy Street through December 31. For those who have only experienced the original via photos or video, it’s an uncanny copy, a kind of proof of the mall apartment’s existence, and simultaneously like walking into a mirage.

What’s next? The artists are creating a book about the project. Townsend says they sold contents of the original apartment — still at the mall — to a Providence collector. The owners of the mall, he says, have made rumblings about suing the artists to seize the intellectual property rights to the whole project and possibly bar them from discussing it. They plan to fight any lawsuit. In the meantime, Townsend hints that he has a couple more off-the-radar spaces under development.

2 The Inventor
Word of mouth has turned the Musée Patamécanique, which opened last fall, into a cult hit. Hidden on a Bristol estate, curator Neil Salley has built a collection of apparitions and marvelously curious mechanical inventions that beg questions about art, science and the very nature of reality. A garden expansion is next.

3 The Woodsman
Providence sculptor Bruce Chao has been erecting temporary sculptures high in the canopy of a forest in Seekonk, Massachusetts, for six years, but photos and videos of his boardwalks, webs, and false tree limbs that were exhibited at Brown University’s Bell Gallery in June were his first public presentation of the work. In Chao’s art, treetops became places of visions and dreams. Other Bell Gallery highlights: Yumi Kori’s bubbilicious midnight installation, Catherine Yass’s video float through the locks of China’s Three Gorges Dam, and Ruud van Empel’s mesmerizing digitally-assembled photos of children haunting jungles and woods.

4 The Rookie
For her MFA graduate show at RISD, Rachelle Beaudoin presented photos of herself wandering Providence in Cheer!Shorts with custom slogans across the butt: “Unusually Wet Pussy,” “Totally Waxed,” “Cock Sucking Queen.” It was funny, rascally, smart, discomforting feminist art that asked essential questions about women, beauty, and sexuality in America.

5 The Foreign Translation
“China seen by . . .” at the University of Rhode Island’s Fine Art Center was a hive-mind portrait of the ancient culture and modern industrial dynamo by 14 Chinese and Western photographers that was bewildering, unnerving, and awe-inspiring.

1  |  2  |   next >
  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Visual Arts, Cultural Institutions and Parks, Museums,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY GREG COOK
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN  |  May 13, 2013
    What does it mean to be a man? That's the question at the heart of this smart, sumptuous exhibit — one of the best shows in the region this year.
  •   MERRY PRANKSTERS  |  May 07, 2013
    Parked out front of Brown University's gray modernist Granoff Center on a recent sunny morning were one of those 15-foot-tall inflatable rats that unions install in front of businesses they're protesting and a limousine sloppily painted to resemble a yellow and black school bus.
  •   ALTERED IMAGES  |  April 30, 2013
    Among the handsome Washington Street storefronts of AS220's renovated Mercantile Block building, with their neo-old-timey signs, is the residents' entrance to the building. It is against AS220's religion to leave any space empty that can be filled with art. So the lobby is the AS220 Resident Gallery, which occupants of the building take turns filling with their stuff.
  •   IN THE CITY  |  April 23, 2013
    One of the distinguishing characteristics of the Providence art scene is how the city itself has been such a rich subject. A decade ago, the city became a galvanizing topic as artists fought to protect the old mills that served as their homes and studios from demolition — with mixed success. But lately, the community's industrial architecture itself has attracted artists' attention.
  •   THE AFTERMATH OF ATROCITY  |  April 16, 2013
    From the ruins of the Iraq war emerges Wafaa Bilal's "The Ashes Series" and Daniel Heyman's "I Am Sorry It Is So Difficult To Start," on view at Brown University's Bell Gallery.

 See all articles by: GREG COOK