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Image: Jane Benson
Guest organized by Rico Gatson
and Ellie Murphy
With the work of Jane Benson, Judy Blanco, Sanford Biggers, Nicole Cherubini,
Rico Gatson, Deborah Grant, Elana Herzog, Ellie Murphy, Aron Namenwirth,
Ivan Navarro, Kelly Parr, Ara Peterson, Traci Tullius, Aaron Williams,
and James Yamada.
Momenta Art is pleased to present a group show organized by artists Rico
Gatson and Ellie Murphy. Using system theory as a starting point to enter
into emotional realms and states of mind, the artists in Intelligent
Design use the abstraction inherent in "system" to approach
a diversity of subjects–mathematical, scientific or technological
systems; social systems that define gender and race; visual systems of
pattern and craft; the cultural systems that create art and music, religion
and history.
Artists use system in their work to get at something vast and unsystematic,
using sense to get to a place that does not make sense. Rosalind Krauss
asserts in her essay "Grids" that the use of system makes it
possible for artists to combine the sacred and secular without having
to choose between them. But the work we have selected takes this combination
to a new place. System here is freed by an increased technological and
scientific sense of interconnectedness from the need to be either sacred,
profane or both. It assumes the systematic task of existing (a task both
physical and spiritual), as it purports to discover the collective hum
it believes—it knows –is out there.
The show has a taxonomy of emotion underlying it. The artists don't decide
between intelligent design and the theory of evolution. They fix their
belief in one system and all systems simultaneously. By definition, system
describes both the individual elements and their interaction and functioning
together as a whole. Gatson and Murphy are fascinated by artists taking
the scientific, mathematical and technological to personal, emotional
or spiritual regions. System in this sense brings together the abstract
and the concrete. It is where the personal becomes the universal.
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