Matt Mullican: Tracy Williams, Ltd.Most artists would argue that their work is on some level about consciousness, but few could make the claim as literally as Matt Mullican. Over the past thirty years, Mullican has intermittently created "trance" performances in which he undergoes hypnosis, either self-induced or prompted by a hypnotist. For the next hour or so he experiences (or, depending on your faith in the process, acts out) a range of tasks, emotions, and impulses: pacing, talking to Noun 1. talking to - a lengthy rebuke; "a good lecture was my father's idea of discipline"; "the teacher gave him a talking to" lecture, speech rebuke, reprehension, reprimand, reproof, reproval - an act or expression of criticism and censure; "he had to himself, painting, singing, regressing to childish behavior, and occasionally becoming enraged en·rage tr.v. en·raged, en·rag·ing, en·rag·es To put into a rage; infuriate. [Middle English *enragen, from Old French enrager : en-, causative pref. . One particularly notorious incident occurred during a 2002 performance at Anton Kern Gallery in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of , when Mullican's resistance to the hypnotist escalated into a serious conflict. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] This exhibition of videos and objects took place at a gallery located in an old Greenwich Old Greenwich is a neighborhood or section in the southeast corner of Greenwich in Fairfield County, Connecticut, United States. The Old Greenwich Railroad Station serves commuters in the neighborhood. Village house--perfect for Mullican, who envisioned the space as duplicating levels of consciousness. The downstairs, or "unconscious," level of the show included video documentation of a trance performance, Untitled (Matt Mullican Under Hypnosis: Geneva Geneva, canton and city, Switzerland Geneva (jənē`və), Fr. Genève, canton (1990 pop. 373,019), 109 sq mi (282 sq km), SW Switzerland, surrounding the southwest tip of the Lake of Geneva. ), that was staged in 2003 at the Centre pour l'Image Contemporaine, Geneva, where Mullican was hypnotized by a Jungian practitioner. In the video he paces a taped-off area of the space, chants to himself ("it's hot, it's hot" or "this is crazy"), and swears at the newspaper. Also downstairs was "Default Atmospheres," 2004, a series of eight light-boxes showing vibrant computer-generated images of the sky, and "Collected Objects," 1970-2004, consisting of two vitrines containing human and coyote coyote (kī`ōt, kīō`tē) or prairie wolf, small, swift wolf, Canis latrans, native to W North America. It is found in deserts, prairies, open woodlands, and brush country; it is also called brush wolf. skeletons, chips of the crystal used in radios, assorted insects, and a nautilus nautilus, in zoology nautilus, cephalopod mollusk belonging to the sole surviving genus (Nautilus) of a subclass that flourished 200 million years ago, known as the nautiloids. fossil. Upstairs, on the exhibition's "conscious" level, were works from the '70s, including a sequence of panels clipped from comic books featuring images of dead people, and more recent projects, like a 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. Mullican shot in his studio while under the influence (Five Performances Under Hypnosis [Matt Mullican Shooting-Close], 2003) and a wall of digital prints (Untitled [Learning from That Person's Work], 2004). Noticeably absent from the show were the works from the '80s for which Mullican is best known. These use graphic sign imagery to depict a complex cosmology alluding to--or paralleling--semiotics and Christian iconography Christian iconography: see under iconography. . Recent computer animations shown on wall-mounted monitors upstairs echoed those, however, portraying Death (a stick figure), Sky, Clock, and a series of circular gray-scale abstractions titled Cosmology (all 2004). A series of pewter reliefs of melted objects (Reconstructing the Fifth World, 2004), also called to mind art used to define cosmologies--specifically, bronze Renaissance church doors, which were typically loaded with symbolic freight. To enter Mullican's world is to understand that objects and images have almost talismanic tal·is·man·ic also tal·is·man·i·cal adj. 1. Of or relating to talismans: talismanic formulas. 2. powers, and that they are referential--that is, they retain rather than deflect symbolic meaning tied to his own personal belief system. Add to this his engagement with the computer (he was one of the first artists to use a supercomputer, in 1985, to make graphic compositions that complimented his signs), and you have a version of consciousness that expands into the digital realm, or what Mullican now calls the "hypnotic world" of cyberspace, an extension of or parallel to the "trance state" induced by advertising and the media. This is a different way of looking at the world than that proposed by, for instance, Pop art and its more orthodox progeny. Mullican seeks depth over surface and actual belief over mere representations or repudiations of it. He is better trained than most of us to view the world this way: His father, Lee Mullican, was a well-known spiritualist spir·i·tu·al·ism n. 1. a. The belief that the dead communicate with the living, as through a medium. b. The practices or doctrines of those holding such a belief. 2. painter in the 1950s. But in Mullican's own work, consciousness becomes the canvas, or stage, and the artist and his practice become conduits through which we may experience the different realms that his cosmology implies; with the belief, of course, that they exist in the first place. |
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