Carlos Amorales: Casa De America."?Por que tener miedo al futuro?" (Why Fear the Future?) is the titular tit·u·lar adj. 1. Relating to, having the nature of, or constituting a title. 2. a. Existing in name only; nominal: the titular head of the family. b. question that animated this exhibition. By way of an answer, Carlos Amorales Carlos Amorales (born in 1970) is a Mexican artist who works and lives in Mexico City. Biography Amorales studied at Gerrit Rietveld Academie in Amsterdam between 1992 and 1995 and at the Rijksakademie in 1996. transformed a collection of 428 images into simple black-and-white vectorial representations--computer-generated images made with vectors, not pixels. Printed on photographic paper and hung in neat rows, these images in Liquid Archive (Photographic Version), 1999-2004, range from the deathly death·ly adj. 1. Of, resembling, or characteristic of death: a deathly silence. 2. Causing death; fatal. adv. 1. In the manner of death. 2. to the lively (skulls, a nude); from nature to technology (flying birds, ascending airplanes); and from myth to history (Mexican wrestlers' masks, Osama bin Laden's face crossed with Che Guevara's). The inclusion of letters of the alphabet among the images on the wall may give the impression of a cataloguing system, but instead, the artist uses his images as letters are used to create words. The nude woman appears in different guises--wearing a mask, with a bird on her head--and may be repeated identically, like a doubled letter in a word, or mirrored, like a palindrome palindrome: see anagram. . Such endless combinations seem to constitute a secret code in which icons from the "axis of evil" meet other omens both ancient and modern. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Far from keeping secrets, Amorales used his archive as the basis for three collaborations, which crystallized crys·tal·lize also crys·tal·ize v. crys·tal·lized also crys·tal·ized, crys·tal·liz·ing also crys·tal·iz·ing, crys·tal·liz·es also crys·tal·iz·es v.tr. 1. into DVD DVD: see digital versatile disc. DVD in full digital video disc or digital versatile disc Type of optical disc. The DVD represents the second generation of compact-disc (CD) technology. projections. In Why Fear the Future, 2005, three tarot-card readers from Madrid interpret the fate behind fifty-four images from the archive printed on playing cards playing cards, parts of a set or deck, used in playing various games of chance or skill. The origin of playing cards is unknown, and almost as many theories exist as there are historians of the subject. . Only the readers' hands appear, repeatedly caressing or tapping the surface of the cards like charms, as if touch could extract more meaning from them. Graphic designer Andre Pahl added seeping red to Amorales's stark black-and-white palette to create an animation that pits a wrestling figure from the artist's past performances against a storm of airplanes, monkeys, and shattered glass. Finally, composer Jose Maria Serralde made a dramatic sound track, played by a lone piano player whose reflection is captured in the shiny black lacquer lacquer, solution of film-forming materials, natural or synthetic, usually applied as an ornamental or protective coating. Quick-drying synthetic lacquers are used to coat automobiles, furniture, textiles, paper, and metalware. of an adjacent baby grand piano fabricated fab·ri·cate tr.v. fab·ri·cat·ed, fab·ri·cat·ing, fab·ri·cates 1. To make; create. 2. To construct by combining or assembling diverse, typically standardized parts: by Bosendorfer (which sounds like "evil villages" in German). The projection of the pianist--shown on the back of the screen featuring Pahl's animation--gives the screen the reversibility of a coin and proves that the animation is, in fact, a silent film. Reflection--both a semblance produced by a mirrored surface and a vision delivered by a clairvoyant--is indeed at the heart of this show. A room designed for a fortune-telling session and a DVD projection displaying Rorschach blots each underscore how the interpretation of images has been linked to personal fate. While perhaps poking fun at the art critic--yet another profane PROFANE. That which has not been consecrated. By a profane place is understood one which is neither sacred, nor sanctified, nor religious. Dig. 11, 7, 2, 4. Vide Things. interpreter of iconography--Amorales suggests that images must become abstract before everyone can employ them for individual ends. His decision to use silhouettes of flying birds--those black decals that are stuck on big picture windows to prevent birds from crashing into them--as a wallpaper print is telling: Surfaces can serve blindness and vision; images, decoration and destiny. While linking clairvoyants, psychologists, and art critics as interpreters, Amorales also levels the hierarchy between artists, whose creations are generally treated as singular, and actors or even musicians, who often interpret works that have already been produced or performed by others. In the era of postproduction--where images tend to be ready-made--the artist is simply a point of distribution, not the origin of images. Since Amorales's playing cards double as an artist's book, visitors are encouraged to become another point of distribution; the cards' intimate size facilitates carrying, handling, and sharing. Pick a card, any card: You will find a rich history along with an invitation to imagine your own future. |
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