In Jack Finney’s 1950s sci-fi classic ‘Invasion of the
body snatchers’ alien seeds invade Earth from outer-space replacing people with
perfect physical duplicates grown from plantlike pods. The novel become a
metaphor for the paranoia and fears of communist-like conformity present in US
society at the time; an examination of our fear of 'the other'. In the year
2017 I explore what can a 1950’s sci-fi novel and an exhibition featuring
human-sized, interactive and immersive sculptures have in common and what
relevance, if any, that has today.....
Sometimes fiction is more remarkable than fact.The fact
is, the day is Tuesday 28th February and I am visiting Somerton’s Ace Arts Gallery to view an exhibition by Jan Nedojadlo. What I am confronted with are a series of large fabric clad, textured pod-like or utopian structures that are interactive, designed with places within which to sit, rest and explore (the only ingredient missing probably was a mist machine). These pods, like their sci-fi counterpart are designed to inhabit the human form in which the viewer can become miniaturised into a sensorial innerworld of lights, textures and smells. Thankfully with these pods there is no threat of menace or intent on creating body-doubles to take over the world, but they do have the ability to change or alter those who choose to spend time in them offering unique spaces for rest, reflection and relax. In some ways the pods do contend with the notion of ‘fear of the other’ by creating spaces that help people confront fears of disability and/or mental health. I’d like to see some really political pods, out of context in the gallery and for example in campsites in Calais for refugees, made with refugees and other minority groups and the possible outcomes that could produce.
Their form,derived from human organs, hands and the liver,
“The human mind
searches for cause and effect, always; and we all prefer the weird and
thrilling to the dull and commonplace as an answer.”
Where did they come from? Why are they here?
The podules lie dormant, an almost engulfing presence but
one that is so strange that it beckons further investigation from sight and
touch of their contours and hairs, intestinal-like villi and skins of varying
colours and textures. I pluck up the courage to step-inside one and climb into
another -Ooer! Perhaps never to be seen again like a fly lured into a venus
flytrap... inside I’m enveloped in a soft-padded walled membrane, an outer-shell
covered in veins that seem to pulse and thrum with a subtle glow that suggests
the presence of life or an otherworldly-ness. Though there is nothing sinister about
these pods if anything they are more bodily, womb-like, relaxing. Far bigger than a man but
ergonomically proportioned to fit the cup of a hand or enclose the shape of a
seated human-figure. There is an indistinct sound generated from within the
pods that I cannot quite place and a smell, not unpleasant, but another sensory
distraction in what is already an unusual encounter.
commissioned by a pharmaceutical company, another, a spine built working with
patients in mind for the Stoke Mandiville Spinal Unit. That in itself should be
enough reason to want to investigate but I was almost disappointed to accept
the grown-up reality that these imaginative things had not landed from space and
as far as I am aware at least, made by an artist who is human of some sort
(I’ve met a few artists who I’d be less sure!). The illusion of organic form being
made from common place or recycled materials such as the bristles from brooms,
towels and wire was no less fantastical in its inventiveness and transformation,
in fact perhaps unintentionally it links well with the environmental themes in
‘Invasion of the body snatchers’ but nonetheless I was left with the
overwhelming feeling that this work is better confronted not knowing that this
red furry husk-shaped thing I’d taken fascination in exploring from every angle
for the last ten minutes is meant to be a liver or that their purpose of
creation arose from a utilitarian practicality around its funding as either a
health-care tool or science fair exhibit,
both of which for me turn it into a
holistic form of glorified interactive furniture. I want to believe the pods
are art objects in their own right, my critique more perhaps on the way in
which audiences are invited to think about these objects, the amount of information
that is presented, is what I am questioning. Sure, one can choose not to read
artist statements, but I think why have them there at all if they’re not meant
to be read. This exhibition had me thinking a lot about interpretation and the
imaginativeness of it, sometimes the overly prescriptive nature of how an art
work is rationalised can alienate (if you pardon the pun) an audience rather
than present one distinct concept as a point from which many meanings can
proliferate. I do not need to know that the piece central to this exhibition
titled ‘Hand's of God’ was created from a Christian ‘experience’ in order for me
to relate to it in a spiritual way.
“When modern men
and women lost religious faith, they lost the associated belief that human
beings are special, that we were created with purpose to undertake a life with
meaning. Science, technology, and politics have not yet filled that void and
probably never will be able to do so, especially not if they continue to be
powered by the ideologies that have thus far informed them. If we believe that
we are just animals, without immortal souls, we are already but one step
removed from pod people.” Dean Koontz writing about ‘Invasion of the Body
Snatchers’
I’ve tried to use ‘Invasion of the body snatchers’ as a
way of framing the themes and ideas I feel has been explored in this work. It
is a different approach to how I normally write and viewers visiting the actual exhibition may experience the
it very differently. I would just ask that sometimes art is at its most
creative for the questions that it raises or the interpretations it ignites rather
than knowing its answers. Answers are boring.
Forth into the unknown...
Catch
the podules before the beam of to another galaxy near you at Ace Arts, Somerton
until March 11th. http://www.acearts.co.uk/
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