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FotoFest 2016 Biennial: MPA: THE INTERVIEW: Red, Red Future

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FotoFest 2016 Biennial: MPA: THE INTERVIEW: Red, Red Future

When
February 26, 2016
Where
Contemporary Arts Museum Houston (CAMH)
5216 Montrose
Houston,TX 77006
Cost
FREE
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Human colonization of Mars is expected to begin in the coming decades as NASA and independent space ventures partner with corporate investors to explore the future of life on the planet. The recent discovery of flowing water on Mars’s surface fuels speculation that the red planet may already support life.

Within this extraordinary context, the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston is pleased to present THE INTERVIEW: Red, Red Future, a solo exhibition by the artist MPA presented in CAMH’s Zilkha Gallery. In conjunction with the FotoFest 2016 Biennial.

Working closely with the artist, CAMH has commissioned an entirely new body of work: a dynamic installation that combines sculpture, light, and photography; a participatory work in which visitors can converse with the artist via phone; and an artist’s publication.

Combining advanced technology and Minimalist aesthetics, MPA’s work sheds light on invisible forces and power.

MPA is an artist based in 29 Palms, California. This exhibition is the culmination of more than three years of her ongoing investigation of human colonization of Mars. This exhibition offers evidence of MPA’s thoughts about Mars’s future and her speculations about life the planet may already support. More broadly, MPA’s exhibition considers the colonial implications of settling the planet, how scientific and mythical beliefs can co-exist, and imagination as a source of power.

The centerpiece of this exhibition is the sculpture CODEX (2015). Viewers circulating around this floor-bound work encounter a large aerial photograph of a Peruvian geoglyph.

Dug into the ground, geoglyphs are massive earthworks–some as wide as 660 feet across–that depict a variety of animals, humanoid forms, and geometric motifs.

This particular black and white photograph of a series of intersecting triangles is divided into 36 individual units, each 1 foot square. The glass plates positioned atop this photographic overview are treated with photochromic dyes. When exposed to ultraviolet (UV) light waves, these dyes–most popularly encountered as the transitional lenses of some eyeglasses–shift in color; CODEX’s glass plates reversibly transition from clear to opaque black or ruby red. These color shifts are initiated by the work ISS Clock, in which a programmed sequence of UV light reproduces the cycle of 16 sunrises and sunsets astronauts aboard the International Space Station experience every 24 hours–roughly, one sunrise or sunset every 45 minutes.

A second work, Long Line (2015), is an assemblage of lacquered wooden stakes that stretch across the gallery floor, augmented with selected objects–bits of weathered plastic, metal, Styrofoam, rubber, and ceramic shards–MPA has gathered on walks through the desert near her home. Long Line offers another way in which a view of a landscape takes an unexpected arc upwards; this arrangement of litter found atop the dusty soil suggests a bird’s eye view of the artist’s trajectory through her local landscape. Here again, the terrestrial and intelligible couple with the imaginary and unfamiliar.

In the participatory work The Interview (2016), visitors are invited to pick up the handset of a hotline telephone, which initiates a call to the artist; during their intimate conversations, MPA and visitors will speak about life on Mars. For the artist, this exchange functions as an analogue for both astronaut debriefings and the interviews required of civilian applicants to space exploration programs such as Mars One or SpaceX.

MPA states: “Interviews have the weight of fact, but don’t have to rely on fact. A testament has its own agency. The Interview is a testament.”

The Interview’s one-on-one exchange is an opportunity for mutual imagining that creates the possibility of a subjective counter-narrative. Who is interviewing whom? The artist? The visitor? In this open exchange, two beings come together to imagine with one another.

THE INTERVIEW: Red, Red Future is organized by Dean Daderko, Curator at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, and is on view February 27 – June 5, 2016 in CAMH’s Zilkha Gallery.

ABOUT THE ARTIST

MPA (b.1980) has explored a range of meditative, durational, theatrical, and actionist modes of performance to engage “the energetic” as a potential material in live work. Enriched with ritual, her performances and installations critically examine behaviors of power in personal and social spaces. In previous works, she has proposed questions on the global arms race, patriarchy as governance, and the dysfunctional union of art and capitalist commodity.

MPA’s work has been exhibited at the Swiss Institute and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York; Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (LACE); the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, The Netherlands; and Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Oaxaca, Mexico.

Her dynamic body of work Directing Light onto Fist of Father (2011), co-curated by Dean Daderko and Alhena Katsof for Leo Koenig Projekte in New York, combined a looping 16mm film and a plaster cast of MPA’s father’s fist in an installation that incited three durational performances.

In Trilogy (o) (2012), presented at Human Resources in Los Angeles, NASA sound recordings of dying stars accompanied 31 photographs of Nike war missiles arranged as a moon calendar.

A frequent collaborator, MPA is a visible muse for many contemporary photographers, painters, and performers. After receiving a Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grant in 2013, MPA relocated from New York City to 29 Palms, CA to continue her research of somatic practices.

PUBLICATION

THE INTERVIEW: Red, Red Future is accompanied by a full-color artist’s book that includes an essay by Curator Dean Daderko and three interviews by MPA with: cultural theorists Stefano Harney and Fred Moten; investigative journalist Linda Moulton Howe; and architect Vicente de Szyszlo. Produced in a limited edition of 450 signed and numbered copies, the catalogue is designed by CAMH Graphic Designer Amanda Thomas, and edited by Rose d’Amora and CAMH Curatorial Associate and Business Manager Patricia Restrepo. Essays and interviews will be available online at www.camh.org/redfuture.

This catalogue is made possible by a grant from The Brown Foundation, Inc.

Pictured: MPA, (detail) “Blue-Eyed Devil,” 2015. Archival pigment print, 7 x 7 inches. Courtesy the artist.

The Montrose Management District
board workshop meeting scheduled for April 3
has been postponed indefinitely.