Leon Johnson explains his trans-historical-post-colonial-dinner-wait-what?!
By IAN PAIGE | April 29, 2009
Leon Johnson, 50, teaches at the University of Southern Maine and the Transart Institute in Berlin. He and the Creative Material Group will present "Blue Hammer," an intermedia performance of relational inventories and reckonings, this weekend at Whitney Art Works. From Megan O'Connell printing propaganda pieces during the day to chef Barak Olins providing dinner to audience members after a 45-minute evening performance, the project links a multitude of collaborators in forged creative space. Johnson tried to explain; read the full interview at thePhoenix.com/Portland.YOU DESCRIBE "BLUE HAMMER" AS A FORM OF "TRANS-HISTORICAL-POST-COLONIAL-DINNER-THEATER-BURLESQUE"... I was thinking about a construction that makes an ore, an amalgam of reference points. I thought about this line that the main character has — she says, "I'll tell you this is how we learn now. Our lessons grow each time we have the courage to confront an absence, any vacant space, any of the missing, pockets of unbearable silence." This beautiful idea that if there's an absence, somebody's not at the dinner table, there's an opportunity to address the absence. It's an idea I developed in response to being a post-colonial punk — I spent the first 20 years of my life in Cape Town, South Africa. Was very intimate with what silence could get you if you're white. Complicity. You get a big enough set of blinders and it's all just other white people and lobster. The job at hand is to address the unbearable gaps. Wading through decades of post colonial theory, the job at hand is to address the unbearable gaps. All the silences that are missing. If that address wasn't a theory, what arena would it be? Not just theater, but dinner theater. There was pleasure in thinking of those together. WHAT DO YOU MEAN SPECIFICALLY WHEN YOU SAY "ADDRESS THE GAPS"? The Belgian Congo. Conrad is writing Heart of Darkness. "The Unfortunate Occupation." With a little research and digging you realize it's 8 million dead in the Congo. How do you give that a scale? If you weren't there? This idea of trans-historical might be a useful device, creating beings that don't have to account for witnessing by not being alive at the time. Is that empathetic history?
ACCOUNT FOR BEING A WITNESS? DO YOU MEAN TO TAKE RESPONSIBILITY FOR OR TO ACKNOWLEDGE THE ABSENCE? That's it right? On the scale of being a witness, where do you consider an appropriate cutoff point? This piece is part of the agony of trying to answer your question. You can say, "I was in South Africa the year Steve Biko was murdered." That's witness to a small sample of the great and agonized trajectory of apartheid.We can be witness to certain aspects of history but then history aggressively fluffs it out and articulates it in images and soundbites. When I got to America, every year witnessing the delivery of Martin Luther King on the major networks: "I have a dream..." and cut... "In other news, the Green Bay Packers..."
Related:
Easy on the eyes, Structural integrity, Summer people, More
- Easy on the eyes
"The Funnies" at Whitney Art Works is a sprawling show of upwards of 150 pieces by 25 artists, all of whom have been brought together by local artist — Jeff Badger.
- Structural integrity
The five artists featured in "Stratum," now on view at Whitney Art Works, are diverse in background, medium, and scale, but they comfortably crowd the gallery's two rooms with sculptures, paintings, and drawings that respond to the relationships exposed by stripping back layers and how meaning and interpretation shift when new layers are presented.
- Summer people
Ever wonder why there is so much professional-level art made and shown in Maine, a state with a total population less than that of many minor cities? One answer is that following the fame of people like Winslow Homer, creative types flocked to Maine, often to artists' colonies.
- Weight + measure
The centerpiece, conceptually and physically, of Aaron Stephan's show at Whitney Art Works is "Flat World/Round Map," a cast-iron sphere about six feet in diameter. While not exactly the largest ( "18 Columns" covers more ground and "The Burden Crates" is taller) it creates a center of gravity around itself.
- Found, and created
While aesthetically there is little to compare between Rebecca FitzPatrick's "Thread" show and "Multiples" by Owen F. Smith, together on view at Whitney Art Works this month, both artists appropriate found materials, are impressively prolific, and identify with a post- or anti-war movement of the previous century.
- Groups + solos
First on the list of this year's points of interest is the anticipated Portland Museum of Art Biennial, which opens in early April.
- Drugs and culture
University of Southern Maine professor Wendy Chapkis usually studies, teaches, and writes about gender issues, so her latest non-fiction outing, Dying to Get High: Marijuana as Medicine , might seem like a bit of a departure.
- Packed kitchen
Artists, film- and bookmakers, teachers, performers, and motorcyclists Leon Johnson and Megan O’Connell recently made Portland the home.
- The sad ghost of postmodernism
It sticks around, but doesn't always work.
- Altered states
Talking drugs, Zen, and painting with art critic Ken Johnson
- Letters to the Portland Editor: March 13, 2009
We are two Maine natives, who attended the True/False Film Festival in Missouri, couldn't agree more with Christopher Gray's account of the festival and the festival experience.
- Less

Topics:
Museum And Gallery
, National Football Conference, National Football League, NFC North Division, More
, National Football Conference, National Football League, NFC North Division, Martin Luther King Jr., Joy Division, Green Bay Packers, University of Southern Maine, University of Southern Maine, Bracha Ettinger, Leon Johnson, Less