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Ticket to ride

Lyon and Blasser's 'Sound and Light'
By GREG COOK  |  April 21, 2009

090424_Lyon_m
'FRACTAL MOTION' Lyon's immersive funhouse installation. 

Raphael Lyon tells me a story about "Sound and Light," his collaborative installation with Baltimore's Peter Blasser at Stairwell Gallery (504 Broadway, Providence, through May 2). A man came by and asked how much it cost to enter the dark gallery. "He thought it was a ride," like something from a carnival, the Providence artist explains. "To me that was the greatest compliment. I'm interested in experiences. I'm not interested in objects."

The experience here is free. Enter past curtains that blackout the space. At the back of the dark room stands what looks like a giant hollow tree trunk, with a glowing, watching dragon eye floating inside. Surrounding the trunk, toward the ceiling, is a constellation of tiny purple lights that look like stars. The space pulses with electronic hums, something like whale calls, beeps, alarm horns, ghost howls. It could be a haunted wood from a fairy tale.

"Sound and Light" is one of a number of immersive, funhouse installations that local artists have been producing over the past decade or so. Recent examples include the striped, mirrored shack that Mike Taylor (who departed for Florida early this year) erected in "New Obstructions" at AS220 last fall, and Jo Dery's tarot-card-reading tent and Jung Hong's mutant ice cream machine at Stairwell last June. Another example is Michael Townsend's installation of caskets and flying figures in a tunnel near the Rhode Island State House. And then there's Brian Chippendale's poster-covered club house, Xander Marro's Dr. Seussy bell tower and, well, practically all the other installations in the RISD Museum's 2006 exhibit "Wunderground," a retrospective survey of artists affiliated with the city's underground poster scene and Providence live-work-art-music-party-lofts like Fort Thunder and Dirt Palace.

The Fort — its walls permanently encrusted with dolls, bicycle parts, masks, and junk as well as its fantastic, temporary Halloween mazes — may be the archetypical manifestation of this local phenomenon. But the interest in spectacle, immediate experience, sensation, and fun could somehow even connect back to the glowing, otherworldly glass installations Dale Chihuly made here in the late 1960s.

Lyon studied art and semiotics at Brown, lived at the Fort, and helped build those Halloween mazes. Like a lot of these artists, the 33-year-old also performs music (under the alias Mudboy), in his case hypnotic droning tricked-out organs plus narrative chanting for an effect somewhere between a pagan rite and a séance. "These environmental works," Lyon says, "they're sort of the visual analog to my music."

Stairwell's second room features what Lyon calls a "kinetic light painting" — projected green and red wiggly lines and, spotlit at the center, a pentagon of red dots fading in and out. It resembles jellyfish tentacles or seaweed. Take the projector apart and you would find lights, lenses, stencils, and micro-controls that Lyon says mainly operate on basic physics — everything carefully balanced so that it jiggles when shaken by visitors moving around the room. The sounds throughout the show are triggered by hidden motion-sensing antennas. Unfortunately, this interactivity isn't apparent — in person, it feels like it all could be preprogrammed.

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  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Rhode Island School of Design Museum, Mike Taylor, Michael Townsend,  More more >
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