CIRCLE OF COMPLICATION – In the Gallery February 5 – 28, 2010

Circle of Complication, kinetic sculpture and drawings by Dave Ghilarducci

Play is older than culture, for culture, however inadequately defined, always presupposes human society, and animals have not waited for man to teach them their playing.

- Johan Huizinga, Homo Ludens: A Study of the Play Element in Culture (1955)

Dave Ghilarducci’s artwork investigates perception on an everyday level, often using popular technology as the subject and object of artistic inquiry. Circle of Complication is an electronically mechanized sculpture designed to make drawings reminiscent of those made by a child using a Spirograph toy. In Ghilarducci’s work, however, the drawings are made at large scale using a program designed to produce a series of random operations.

An aesthetic of mechanization has informed over a century of art making, including, but not limited to the Futurist’s infatuation with machines, Jean Tinguely’s self-destructing kinetic sculptures, and Roxy Paine’s industrial painting and sculpting machines. Such art often considers industrial technology’s modes of production and distribution in relation to vital social and cultural issues. One recurring issue that seems to draw renewed interest as our economy has shifted its base from industry to service to information, is the notion of work and the necessity of citizens to redefine their relationship to the changing nature of the work they do. As technology changes, so do the paradigms we use to understand the world and our place in it.

Dave Ghilarducci is interested in the developmental aspects of play. In Circle of Complication he seems to inquire about how play offers a means of assimilation into a changing world. By simulating the Spirograph’s iconic geometries he points to an era of play – during the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s – in which toys like the Spirograph relied on the developmental aspects of play to reinforce a set of values related to culture and technology.

Now, some thirty years later, and living in the wake of a bygone era’s technological paradigms, we watch this mechanized sculpture dutifully produce an ink drawing over the course of twenty minutes. It offers a stark contrast to our mental image (or personal experience?) of a child absorbed in the spontaneous discovery of his or her Spirograph creation. We consider how, through play, children acquired both aesthetic and kinesthetic awareness of geometric forms. This awareness, no doubt, acted as a seductive precursor to the complex mathematics – technically known as hypotrochoids and epitrochoids – that many of those children would later learn govern these curves.

Drawing machines and sculptures that mechanize the process of art making are not new to art of the last sixty years. Typically such machines flaunted a disregard for traditional artistic skills while making the provocative claim that a machine is capable of making art. Ghilarducci makes no such claim in Circle of Complication. For Ghilarducci, the artwork is the machine, which is, in fact, an impeccably crafted kinetic sculpture. That the sculpture produces drawings does not immediately bestow upon the drawings the status of art. Rather the drawings function more as artifact. Through the process of making a drawing, the artwork reveals the complex math that governs the drawings’ creation. For their part, the drawings function as a synecdoche of sorts that stand in for the often transparent relationship between play and learning.

-Brian Goeltzenleuchter, Curator

Biography

Dave Ghilarducci was born and raised in Chicago, Illinois. He currently lives and works in Escondido, California. He studied engineering and physics at University of Illinois at Chicago. After graduating, Ghilarducci worked as an engineer, developing a range of culturally substantive objects – from rockets to Palm Pilots. He left the engineering world in 2006 to work fulltime as an artist. Ghilarducci’s work is often interactive and engages viewers while reminding them of the various and often transparent ways technology is used to manage interactions. Although still quite early in his career, Dave Ghilarducci’s work has garnered critical validation. His work has been exhibited at Track 16 Gallery and Oceanside Museum of Art, and later this year at Art Produce Gallery.

Check out the video taken briefly during the installation on Wednesday, February 3: Circle installation

SNOWBIRDS – In the Gallery January 4 – 30, 2010

When photographer Dorothea Lange and author John Steinbeck created their works on transient populations during the Great Depression, the Recreation Vehicle (RV) industry was already in its infancy. After World War II, American industrial might was redirected from tending to the war effort to meeting pent-up consumer demand. Increased employment to meet these demands provided a dramatic boost in the American standard of living. One result was the expansion of a mobile lifestyle in the American middle class. Trailers and self-contained RVs became the means and the mode of transportation to live elsewhere and to experience the country without sacrificing the comforts of home.

RV parks sprouted throughout the Sunbelt and became “winter homes” for the retired. Today, during the fall and winter, the populations of many small towns in the Southwest increase significantly as retired individuals escape the inhospitable cold and rain in search of a warm, dry climate. Some communities experience a several hundred percent increase in their population during this period. Nationwide, 9 to 13 percent of individuals over the age of 60 spend at least four months away from their self-described “permanent home,” for a total of 6 million individuals nationwide.

Although designed as a temporary travel home, the RV has also become primary residence for many people of limited means. By the early 1950s the RV and travel trailer industry began producing cosmetic shells to hide the mobile features of the trailer – the wheels, axles and tow-hitches. Instead of emphasizing mobility, these shells were designed to evoke a set of conventional values common to postwar US domestic architecture. Due to the discrepancy in construction, materials and craftsmanship between mobile homes and permanent houses, mobile homes quickly acquired the stigma of being low class. Even today, mobile home parks, or “trailer parks” evoke stereotypical images of uneducated “trailer trash.”

However, RV culture is far from a static social-economic dichotomy. In fact, the RV is currently being repurposed by both contemporary architects and D-I-Y cultures seeking to transgress conventional notions of home in favor of self-sufficient or  “off the grid” living.

This world within a vehicle is documented in Snowbirds, an exhibition of photographs by Stephen Chalmers. Stephen Chalmers spent a winter living in an RV in the desert Southwest, photographing people “at home” in and around their RVs, often against the iconic backdrop of the desert. Snowbirds represents a small sampling from Chalmers’ much larger portfolio of images. His photos reveal  “home” to be a flexible concept, an idea that is co-produced by the relationship between self, objects and place. Taken as a whole, the imagery offers glimpses of how identity is constructed in these mobile, domestic spaces while it points to ideologies of transience that have developed over the last century.

-Brian Goeltzenleuchter, Curator

Biography

Stephen Chalmers has been an emergency medical technician, taught gang-affected children photography, and worked as a counselor to severely emotionally disturbed children. His photography practice deals with the psychology of loss and raises questions about the nature of representation. Chalmers has taught workshops in alternative photographic processes and digital imaging, and has been a visiting artist at numerous colleges and universities. He has been contributing photographer to several books, and has exhibited throughout the US and as well as in Australia, Ireland, British Columbia, England, South Africa, and China. Stephen Chalmers earned his MFA in Cinema and Photography from Southern Illinois University. His work can be found in several collections including the Museum of Contemporary Photography, Light Work, Polaroid, and the Getty Research Institute. Selections from his projects and more biographical information can be seen at www.askew-view.com.

 


      

 

 

Patrick Stewart Joins Sushi as Executive Director

Patrick Stewart

Patrick Stewart

Hello again. I know, it’s been a while. But we are back and there is lots going on at Sushi these days. Today I want to introduce you to Patrick Stewart our new Executive Director. Having sat in several meetings with him, and perhaps more telling, had a cocktail or two with him, I can tell you he is going to be a wonderful addition not only to Sushi but the San Diego arts community as well.

Patrick will be rejoining the San Diego arts community in January after finishing his tenure as the executive director of the Atlas Performing Arts Center. Atlas is a multi-faceted center whose development, program, performance, and education accomplishments have served as the leading catalytic factor in the dramatic economic and social redevelopment of a major section of Washington, DC’s Northeast quadrant. With Sushi smack dab in the middle of the burgeoning East Village, his experience in DC is quite fitting.

He brings with him extensive regional management and production experience in San Diego, Seattle, and Washington, DC, including work with many of San Diego’s arts organizations, The Source Theatre and the National Summer Theatre Festival in Washington, and the San Diego Center for Jewish Culture, as well as positions in television on such shows as NBC’s Will & Grace and Good Morning Miami.

In addition to his institutional leadership roles, Patrick extends organization, management and curriculum development assistance to performing arts organizations.  He currently serves as a management consulting mentor to arts organizations via the Kennedy Center’s Office of the President, and lends expertise as a board or committee member to several organizations, most notably as an advisory committee member to the Capital Fringe Festival and service on the Board of Directors of the Takoma Park Arts and Humanities Council.

Patrick has an exciting vision for SUSHI and is committed to strengthening its role as a vital center for the urban arts. Although he will not return full time to San Diego until January, he has been meeting with the Board of Directors monthly to aid in management and planning for the fall 2009 and 2010 seasons. His focus will be primarily on fund development, programming, and community outreach.

Please join me in welcoming Patrick to San Diego. I’m pretty sure he is going to make San Diego a more interesting place to be.

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We Made It

Thanks to our friends, fans, members, and all around general pals, we survived our first season in our new home. We hope you enjoyed the art, music, and performances.

While you enjoy your summer, we’ll be over here. Busy planning some new explorations for the fall and a full 2nd season for the winter and spring.

Oh and if you joined us for the Red Ball, thanks! It really was a ball. And if you didn’t, be sure to watch our blog this fall when we announce the date for the next one. You wouldn’t want to miss this party twice.

Now go have a great and artful summer.

Food Preview

Gazpacho (Spanish liquid tomato salad).

Finally found out today about some of the food we’re going to enjoy at Saturday night’s ball. JRDN, that gorgeous restaurant at Tower 23 is serving Tomato-Melon Gazpacho with Dungeness Crab and Basil Crème Fraiche. Doesn’t that sound lovely?

Our friends at Avenue 5 will be preparing individual horseradish & goatcheese crostini, with anise braised short rib. Sounds scrumptious. I shouldn’t write about food when I’m hungry….

Other donors include Sushi’s neighbor The Corner with cheeseburger sliders, Siren at Sè with asian bites, and we will be getting a preview of the new Proper Pub menu (Wine Steals new concept by the ballpark, opening this summer).

Really hungry now…

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Red Ball’s Live Art Auction

One of the most anticipated features of Red Ball’s past has been its live art auctions. As the owner of two pieces from a previous Red Ball, I know the quality and value to be found. This year is no different. Our committee has been hard at work securing confirmations from some of the region’s top artists. So far, we have commitments from:
Einar and Jamex De La Torre

Brian Goeltzenleuchter

Acamonchi

James Watts

Acamonchi Green Traffic LightsJoshua Krause

Teddy Cruz

JW Caldwell

Acamonchi Green Traffic Lights

The live auction should be most entertaining, as Vernon the Entertainer will be our auctioneer on stilts. He will walk through the Sushi space, tracked by spotlights, while guests indicate their desire to purchase a piece with numbered fly swatters. It should be unlike any auction you’ve seen before.

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Steampunk Cirque with Zirk Ubu

Zirk Ubu

So what is Steampunk? It seems to be this interesting mash up of Victorian-era English aesthetic with science fiction and modern technology.

And what is Zirk Ubu? According to their web site – part circus and part mystery cult..a visionary amalgam of performance genres…fantasy, buffoonery, aerial acrobatics, surreal tableaux and burlesque vignettes.

Now imagine about a dozen of these folks wandering through the Red Ball crowd, spontaneously entertaining and engaging people. Perhaps you are starting to get a feeling for what the night will be like?

Strange & Beautiful Balkan Music

OrkestraOne of this year’s Red Ball musical performances will be Wolfgang von Cope and Orkestra Moustachio. The photo kinda tips the reason for the name, eh?

I wasn’t sure what to expect with this one, so when a friend sent over this video (click on the link below) I was delighted. It shows the band playing at a wrap party with their friends from Zirk Ubu dancing it up. Better get your dancing shoes on.

Orkestra and Zirk Ubu

Mark Murphy Brings Top Regional Artists to Silent Auction

If you follow the fine arts world as it relates to illustration and lifestyle movements then you have probably encountered some of the incredible artists presented by art book publisher Mark Murphy. Mark has asked about a dozen of his friends in the art world to create original 12 x 12 pieces exclusively for the Red Ball silent auction.

We are very excited to have Mark and this talented group of regional artists be a part of the Red Ball. Here are a few examples of the fantastic work you will see in the Visual Arts Gallery on June 13th.

Red_Ball_Selection

Jason Limon : Jen Lobo : Raudiel Sanudo : Cathie Bleck : Mike Maxwell : Scott Saw

Resurrecting the Sushi Red Ball

It hasn’t happened since 2006, and we all really need a good party, don’t we? So it’s time to resurrect the fantastic, mythical, unlike any other party in San Diego Red Ball.

We’ll hold the party at the Sushi space. Expect unusual entertainment from the likes of the Balkan gypsy band Wolfgang von Cope and his Orkestra Moustachio, along with members of Burners without Borders and a couple of fantastic DJs. We’re still working on the list (some cool stuff planned) so check back regularly.

We will be holding the legendary art auction, with a fun twist. There will be food, booze, photos, and a generally Steampunk Cabaret/Vaudeville Cirque feeling to the whole affair. Yes, you will need to dress in costume (I know some of you are smiling right now and some are probably thinking – uh oh) or in very festive RED attire.

Tickets are $75 per person or $125 per couple. We will have a limited number of tickets for students at $35 (ID required).

So save the date – Saturday, June 13th from 7 – midnight. Tickets will go on sale through the Sushi website on Monday, April 27th.