Artifacts, False Memories and Projections curated by Lisa Kinoshita
Published in the Weekly Volcano, Aug. 6, 2015
“illumination” mixed-media by Lisa Kinoshita. Courtesy the artist. |
The exhibition WUNDERKAMMER: Artifacts, False Memories and
Projections is so uniquely integrated into the projects and collections at
the Foss Waterway Seaport that separating the exhibition, curated by Lisa
Kinoshita, from the maritime museum’s collections is a scavenger hunt filled
with delightful surprises.
The show is a collection of
Wunderkammers created by a group of the South Sound’s better-known artists
including: Renee Adams, David Blakesley, Justin Gibbens, Chuck Iffland, Steve
Jensen, Alexander Keyes, Lisa Kinoshita, Nicholas Nyland, Holly Senn, Jessica
Spring, Brent Watanabe, Mishele Dupree Winter, and Robert Zinkevich, plus
collaborative works by the teams of Marc Dombrosky and Shannon Eakins; Alice Di
Certo and Kyle Dillehay; and Jenny Pohlman and Sabrina Knowles .
And what, you might ask, is a
Wunderkammer? Fair question. Explorers
of the Renaissance age collected natural specimens and a variety of cultural,
scientific, and religious artifact to fill the cabinets of curiosity, or
wunderkammers, of European royalty. They were like museums in a cabinet or
collections of strange oddities —precursors, perhaps, of Joseph Cornell’s
artistic boxes.
Some of the wunderkammers in
this exhibition were built by the artists and some were found or collected by
them, many are combinations of found and built assemblages, and all are
fascinating. Most relate in one way or another to bones, feathers, skin, body
parts and archeological finds. There is a morbid and grotesque fascination to
many of them.
"Recycling" glass and mixed media by Alice Di Certo. |
Some of the works are free-standing
pieces that are not really wunderkammers at all but relate in spirit, such as Jensen’s carved
boat funerary objects —free-standing sculptures on plinths that are made of
such things as driftwood, chain, boat resin, and a skull, all eerily beautiful.
Or Senn’s nests made of shredded book pages and Spring’s accordion-fold books.
Or Pohlman and Knowles’ strange wall-hanging sculpture “Homage to the Bush
Doctor’s Market,” two rusted chains draped across a four-or-five-foot expanse
of wall from which hang a collection of
blown-glass vessels with translucent or frosted surfaces within which can be
dimly seen various collected items. Also draped from the chains are items such
as beads, feathers and boxes. The work is based on healing markets in Zimbabwe seen
on a trip to Africa. It is strangely reminiscent of glass art by William
Morris.
Another intriguing find is
Kinoshita’s “Illumination,” a watercolor, ink and pencil drawing of a man, and a calligraphic quote from Pope Francis on pages
of sheet music identified by the artist as the libretto from “La Bohéme.”
And then there’s Watanabe's
indescribable tiny video projected onto a picture of a woman. Kinoshita says it
is “intentionally infected with a virus so over the course of the show it will
pixillate, degrade and possibly disappear.”
There is so
much more that I wish I had space to describe, if I even could describe it. See
it for yourself, you will be glad you did. Plus, the collection at the museum
is something everyone should see. Give yourself plenty of time to investigate
everything in the collection.
WUNDERKAMMER: Artifacts, False Memories and Projections, , 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m.,
Wed.- through Sat. and noon to 4 p.m. Sun., through Aug. 30, admission $5-$8, free to members and children under 5, 705 Dock Street, Tacoma.
Wed.- through Sat. and noon to 4 p.m. Sun., through Aug. 30, admission $5-$8, free to members and children under 5, 705 Dock Street, Tacoma.
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