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Best-voting-prov-2010

Funhouse

“New Obstructions” at AS220; “Trash” at 5 Traverse
By GREG COOK  |  October 9, 2008

Angelina_inside.jpg
ASTONISHING, PERVERSE, WEIRD, AND HORRIFYING: Tom Deininger’s Angelina Jolie.

AS220’s exhibit “New Obstructions” is one of those right-on ideas that seem to come so naturally to the institution. In July, AS220 acquired the Mercantile Block on Washington Street, with plans to redevelop it much as they did with the Dreyfus next door. Over the winter they’ll begin turning it into studios, offices, and live-work spaces, with an anchor ground floor tenant like the Dreyfus’ Local 121.

But before they fix up the joint, artist and AS220 curator Neal Walsh enlisted artist Mike Taylor to help him organize a quick group art show in the former Cogens Printing Services at 135 Washington Street. It feels like a punky version of one of those old Hollywood let’s-put-on-a-show musicals, in which a plucky gang of performers band together to entertain despite a lack of money and time and everyone saying they’ll never be able to do it.

“New Obstructions,” which runs through October 17, is more funhouse spectacle than trenchant, but it’s definitely worth a visit. Taylor’s Hallucinominium is a brightly-colored shack that literally resembles a funhouse. Inside, a strobe light flashes and makes the crazy striped walls and mirrored floor seem to vibrate. Jim Frain suspended crumpled-paper clouds above a light box within a frame of black foam panels printed with white leaves. Walsh and Scott Lapham teamed up on a large black abstract canvas with a peephole in the middle. Look inside to spy an actual table set with cups, plates, and a patch of grass.

The show offers a number of contraptions. Jeremy Radtke concocted a device that, I’m told, will rip ropes through a found nautical painting, tracing its shapes. (See it in action at the October 17 closing party.) Eamon Brown’s The Ventilator is a curvy wooden bench beneath a pair of air ducts that produce electronic hums. Sit down and the sounds merge and hypnotically pulse. Frain and Jacob Berendes collaborated on Our First Million. Stick your head in a hole in a bathroom door and it appears that your head is attached to the body of a green Teletubby. Pull strings and the arms move up and down. The experience is unnerving — and I say that as a longtime Teletubbies fan.

For the most part, the artists use the place to spread out and loosen up, but Richard Goulis taps the site itself for his installation Unfrozen Time Chunk. He collected stuff from around the building to assemble what looks like a random cruddy basement living room. I wish it was more intriguingly mysterious, but it does produce a topsy-turvy confusion between what’s “art” and what’s “real life.”

The show is rounded out by work by Kristina Brown, Natalja Kent, and Nicole Reinert, and Jon Laustsen’s In a World, a model of under-construction roller coastering roads and bridges made from wood and cement sprouting lots of little rebar. It brings to mind the I-195 relocation project, redevelopment in Providence in general, and this building in particular.

The show “Trash” at 5 Traverse (5 Traverse Street, Providence, through October 17) has some of the same magpie sensibility of “New Obstructions.” The artists — Raphael Lyons, Chris Wyllie, Tom Deininger, Joel Taplin, J Dub, Johnathan Derry, and Scott Lapham — are grouped by their use of junk or recycled materials.

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ARTICLES BY GREG COOK
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  •   BON APPÉTIT!  |  February 09, 2010
    Luis Meléndez himself greets you at the outset of "Luis Meléndez: Master of the Spanish Still Life" at the Museum of Fine Arts. He seems a haughty 31-year-old in this 1746 self-portrait, standing in a fine silk coat and ruffled shirt and holding up a chalk drawing (note the chalk in his hand) of a hunky nude dude.
  •   LIVING HISTORY  |  February 03, 2010
    This year marks the 25th anniversary of Bert Gallery, which Catherine Little Bert and her father-in-law Hugo Bert (who'd run Cottage Gallery in North Providence) opened in the Biltmore Hotel in downtown Providence in 1985.
  •   LIGHTING HISTORY  |  February 03, 2010
    On January 1, 1903, Isabella Stewart Gardner invited 300 guests to a private concert by members of the Boston Symphony Orchestra to celebrate the opening of her new museum on the Fenway. After performances of Bach, Mozart, and Schumann, the mirrored doors of the first-floor concert room rolled open to reveal an extraordinary vision.
  •   REBOOT  |  January 26, 2010
    Portland artist Randy Regier's work is just beginning to be known, but he may be one of the best sculptors in the country.
  •   BEAUTIFUL GARBAGE  |  January 20, 2010
    "Trash" at AS220's Project Space (93 Mathewson Street, Providence, through January 29) focuses on our love-hate relationship with garbage

 See all articles by: GREG COOK

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