Screen grab of the front page of Civilian Art Projects website
Features a piece I created called “Without You I am Lost”
On July 21st, 2008 I received an invitation e-mail from the owner of Civilian Art Projects, a Washington, DC-based fine art gallery. The e-mail outlined the concept behind their upcoming group show called “Quart Bag,” which invited local artists to submit a Ziploc® that has been decorated, converted, or redesigned. The uniqueness behind the concept, one that I’ve always enjoyed since I was a kid, is everyone is essentially given a prop and its up to the artist to get creative with it and transform it into something new & unique.
After reading the e-mail a few times over I immediately thought of using some of the maps that I had saved from my Artomatic exhibit. The map scraps were originally a bunch of cut up maps that I used for my Base Map Installation (see below). These maps were originally purchased using DC government grant money that was given to me in conjunction with the DC Commission on the Arts & Humanities 2008 Young Emerging Artist Award and I realized that I wasn’t about to throw all those maps away when Artomatic finished. So when I was dismantling the exhibit I saved as many of the maps as I could so that I could recycle them (like last night’s leftovers!) in a to-be-identified project.
With the recycling theme running through my head, I went downstairs to my kitchen, found an unused Ziploc® bag in my pantry (gallon-sized not quart!), and proceeded to my basement to create this unique piece of art. The original idea was to fill the bag up with scraps of maps but after filling it up, I realized that there was something missing. Essentially, there was no message being conveyed and frankly I wouldn’t say a bag filled with scraps of maps means much to anyone, or worth $50/$100 unless of course, you were a collector of discarded maps and/or the maps were really old.
Upon further contemplation, I decided to empty out the bag and add a bit of text to the inside of the bag to give it some depth of meaning through an abstract message. I chose a phrase that combines the unique nature of maps with a subtle, but concise, message of longing: Without You I am Lost. This simple message speaks volumes (about a gallon) about who I am, where I am going, and how I’ve been feeling as of late. There were a few other phrases that I bounced around in my head like show me the way, you are not here, and get lost, but I felt that Without You I am Lost really captured the essence of how I was feeling at the time of it’s creation.
I went back upstairs to my room and printed out the text using the same font that I used in the bloody self-portrait taken after my recent mugging and had the text printed archival matte photographic paper. I then cut the paper down to size and found some clear packing tape to affix the printed text to. To give the clear tape some subtle flair, I used my lighter to burn the edges of the tape and then affixed it to the inside of the bag and filled it back up again with the maps.
This time around I was more precise in how I arranged the maps and placed on one side of the text a detail of the National Mall explicitly featuring the United States Capitol. I chose this location to add a secondary depth of meaning because as a resident of Washington, DC I’m denied representation in Congress. Thus the You could be implied to mean congressional representation and the I implied to mean the residents of Washington, DC and so it could then indirectly be read as “Without congressional representation the people of Washington, DC are Lost.”
Adding to this inferential geographic juxtaposition motif, the other side of the text features an upside-down portion of the Middle East and Africa to imply concept of being lost in the global context. Or more specifically, I am implying that American democracy has lost its way and the world has become lost. After all, the opposite of progress is congress, right? By placing the two locations on opposing sides of the central text, my message expands from a sincere message of longing to a subtle critique on American foreign policy and the disenfranchisement of Americans living in the capital city of the world’s most powerful nation.
A couple days ago I e-mailed the gallery director back indicating that I was interested in participating in the exhibition and attached the photograph of the bag. I wasn’t sure if I’d be able to participate because I was using a gallon-sized bag instead of a quart bag. Her response was that she thought it was perfect :-) Earlier this afternoon, about 30 minutes before I was going to leave my house and drop off the bag at the gallery, I received an e-mail notifying me that the photograph I had sent was currently on the front page of the gallery’s website. Grinning, I checked it out and took the screen grab above. I’m really looking forward to seeing the variety of submissions that will be on display. If you are in the Washington, DC area, you should come & check out the exhibition:
The Quart Bag Exhibition opens on Friday, August 6th from 7pm to 9pm @ the Civilian Art Projects, which is located on the 3rd floor of 406 7th Street NW, Washington, DC
In case you are interested in seeing what the maps were used for before they ended up in the bag in the photo above, in April of this year I produced the YouTube video below for promotion of my Artomatic 2008 exhibit:
Related Art Gallery Entries:
- Feature in today's Weekend Pass Section of the Washington Post's Express Newspaper: "Geo-Beautiful"
- My Artist Talk At The Old Print Gallery
- Listing of Maps on Display at The Old Print Gallery
- [Upcoming Exhibition] Geospatial Art at The Old Print Gallery
- Four artists at Gershman Y – Philadelphia Inquirer
- Charted Territory: Robin Rice on “Mapping: Outside/Inside” at Gershman Y – Philadelphia City Paper
- Photos from the Opening of “Mapping:Outside/Inside” at the Gershman Y
- [UPCOMING EXHIBITION] Mapping: Outside/Inside in the Borowsky Gallery at the Gershman Y
- Two Photographs of Park La Brea Quilt #3 on display at FRIEND REQUEST
- FRIEND REQUEST: MCA Invitational
- [POSTPONED] Westminster Playground Art Exhibition
- This Weekend: Westminster Playground Art Exhibition
- Three Photographs of Cara Ober's exhibit "Love Letters" at Civilian Art Projects
- Photos from the Metropolis Now! closing party at the Meridian International Center
- Photographs from The Phillips Collection After 5 exhibition: "Sensory Remix: A Video-Art Collage"
- "You Are Probably Not Here" featured today on the front page of We Make Money Not Art
- [Closing Today] Photocartographies: Tattered Fragments of the Map
- YouTube Video: "A Fly on the Wall at Artomatic"
- I am mentioned in today's Washington Post article "Artomatic '09: Survival Tips From an Expert"
- My Artomatic 2009 Opening Night Exhibit Dissected on Flickr
- My maps on display at Artomatic 2009
- || Upcoming Exhibition || Photocartographies: Tattered Fragments of the Map
- Photos from the DC Manifest Hope Gallery Party
- Geospatial Art in a box - The Anticipation
- Hallway view of the first edition of the New & Arabesque Map of the Hirshhorn Museum & Sculpture Garden
- Video from the Art Whino Block Party @ the Adidas Store
- My map of the Pentagon to be featured in the "We Are Here" Map Archive in the touring exhibition "Experimental Geography" [2008-2010]
- A Ziploc Bag of Leftovers Overlooked
- Photos from last night's "Quart Bag" exhibition @ the Civilian Art Projects
- Tonight: Quart Bag & a selection of screen grabs featuring my bag
- Quart Bag: A Community Art Show at the Civilian Art Projects
- FLIK International Movie Festival & Interactive Exhibit
- My Artomatic 2008 Top 100 by Floor
- 24 on 14th - One Long Day on 14th by Graeme King
- Artomatic 2008 Opening Night
- The Base Map Installation @ Artomatic
- Thats the Kurti...
- Featured on-line with the Maps exhibition at the Walters Museum
- Photos from the PEACE NOW! exhibit at the Warehouse
- TONIGHT: L (A) T T I T U D E S
- Upcoming exhibit: PEACE NOW!
- L (A) T T I T U D E S - February 21st, 2008
- Submitted today: Lost in America's Last Colony
- To be hung at a local gallery:
- Imagekind Curator's Pick
- Geography & the Humanities Symposium Program Cover
- my on-line store is now operational
- Submitted Today: Cathedral Quilt - Signed [Web Biennial 07]
- Photos from North, South, East, Westminster
- Thank You!
- North, South, East, Westminster
- 8 Wards on the Wall
- Hospital for Horses & Dogs
- My first gallery submission