The installation SLOW MOTION MIDNIGHT SPREAD blurs the boundaries between screen and object. The body of work was presented in the curated section of Zona Maco Sur in 2016 and pivots around two poles. The first is the collapse of the biological human into geologic time. The second, is the notion of the ghost in the machine. Not in the sense of the anthropomorphism of the machine, but more closely related to Tom McCarthy’s argument that new technologies provide the dangerous illusion of frozen time, denying the inevitable passage toward illness, death, and decay. This freezing of time within virtual space is completely incongruous with the passing of time on the other side of the screen. The works navigate the sliver of space between the retinae and the screen – the portal between fantasy and reality. What will happen when the sliver between the imagined and the real expands as the displays become more integrated and transparent in our experience of the physical world?
The fabric sculpture, No Seams to Match, is a reconstruction of a life-size military bunker sewn from silk printed with two patterns created from photographs I took while standing seaside looking back at the bunkers. The interior walls are printed with the composited images, the exterior walls are printed with a normal map of the same image. I was interested in the bunker as an uncompromisingly horizontal architectural manifestation of surveillance and desperation; perhaps the only building truly designed for cyborgs.
The translation into fabric relaxes the brutalist paranoia; rendering the bunker soft and transparent. The wallpaper, A Fixed Resistance, creates a Mise-en-scène for the installation; composited photographs of wandering sand dunes I took on the decommissioned Salton Sea Military Test Base in California and found images of the desert landscape in the Middle East and the Sahara Desert.