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<p><img SRC="millionaire'burg.GIF" height=178 width=650></center>

<blockquote>
<center><font color="#12918B"><font size=+0>Excerpt from "Medea's Weekend"</font></font>
<br><font color="#12918B"><font size=-1>Tony Millionaire, Waterfront Week,
vol.2, #19, 1992</font></font>
<br>&nbsp;
<p><font color="#12918B">________________</font>
<p><font color="#1D7C8B"><font size=+2>Out of Town: The Williamsburg Paradigm</font></font>
<br><font color="#12918B"><font size=+1>______________</font></font>
<p><font color="#12918B"><font size=+1>by Gisele Atterberry</font></font>
<br><font color="#12918B"><font size=+0>Champaign-Urbana News-Gazette,
1993</font></font>
<p><font color="#12918B"><font size=+1>With motors whirring, bells sounding,
an interactive video display, and electrical cords and mechanical equipment
sprawling throughout the galleries, "Out of Town: The Williamsburg Paradigm"
is the liveliest show in memory at the Krannert Art Museum [University
of Illinois].</font></font>
<p><font color="#12918B"><font size=+1>Twenty-six artists are represented,
each of whom is active within the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn,
a burgeoning art scene. The exhibition, brainchild of University of Illinois
art history professor Jonathan Fineberg, proposes that Williamsburg is
a new model of artistic activity.</font></font>
<p><font color="#12918B"><font size=+1>Unlike many exhibitions which are
defined by the geographic boundaries within which artists reside or keep
studios, this show makes no claims to a collective look or shared visual
bias for the group as a whole. Rather, the emphasis rests on the fact that
in Willliamsburg artists tend to take a role in the political and social
health of their neighborhood and city - acting locally, thinking globally,
as the saying goes. Also to individual degrees of interest, they are attentive
to popular culture (particularly to new music), new technologies and information
systems, and the vast range of international and national developments
which make an impact on quality of life issues.</font></font>
<p><font color="#12918B"><font size=+1>The lifestyle generated by these
artists is not a sheltered bohemian existence. Instead, there is a collective
awareness that art cannot shut itself off from the world. The artists'
attitudes are extroverted and anti-elitist.</font></font>
<p><font color="#12918B"><font size=+1>Considering the conviction with
which these artists share these concerns, it may come as something of a
surprise that there is such a tremendous amount of visual diversity here.
Yet, a push for non-conformity should not be unexpected for this group
of young artists, most in their 20s or 30s, university-trained and accustomed
to making a living in ways other than by selling their art through the
traditional gallery systems.</font></font>
<p><font color="#12918B"><font size=+1>A parallel between this show and
the installations and shows of Colab (short for Collaborative Projects),
a New York artists' group of the early 1980s, immediately comes to mind.
For the most part eschewing traditional art media and relying instead on
scrap materials and otherwise ignoble objects and means, artists of Colab
made images and installations on street fronts and in abandoned buildings
in order to take their message from the privacy of their studios to the
public realities of the urban environment.</font></font>
<p><font color="#12918B"><font size=+1>The Williamsburg artists share this
insistence on making art out of materials known from daily experience,
but for many of these artists, interests extend from pedestrian materials
to the mechanical devices and applications of the computer, the video camera
and other technologies.</font></font>
<p><font color="#12918B"><font size=+1>Among the artists using humble and
commonplace materials, Luisa Caldwell describes her point of view as "definitely
political and feminist."</font></font>
<p><font color="#12918B"><font size=+1>Her "House and Bullets" is composed
of a small (about 18 inches tall) house form made of wood and coffee grounds
surrounded by nearly 50 concrete bullet forms, each of a height nearly
equal to the house. The scale juxtaposition (the greatly reduced house
and much enlarged bullets) offer what the artist describes as a deliberately
unclear message about whether the ammunition is protecting or protruding
upon the home environment.</font></font>
<p><font color="#12918B"><font size=+1>Yvette Helin, a noted theater costume
designer, merges the visual arts and theatre by presenting bizarrely outfitted
performers who interact, sometimes in an improvisational manner, within
public urban spaces. A video documentation of her "The Pedestrian Project"
indicates how, in her own words, the marionette-like actors "create pictures
which illustrate the effect that city systems have on individuality."</font></font>
<p><font color="#12918B"><font size=+1>Ebon Fisher combines his studies
of the natural sciences with an attraction to high-tech media. His "System
for Equalizing Heterosexuals" is an installation piece which is composed
of small dark rooms connected by a narrow corridor. The innermost chamber
is dominated by a 6-foot-tall painting of a heart, a realistically rendered
image which seems to hover and glow within its nearly blackened chamber.
A crisp computer-generated image of a cell-like unit is projected through
a slide onto the floor and the room pulses with the echoes of mysterious
sounds. The feeling engendered by the room is strangely quiet and meditative.
The space is fully capable of rendering for its entrants the emotion which
Fisher considers to be the most precious of all -awe.</font></font>
<p><font color="#12918B"><font size=+1>As he was in Champaign for the opening
of the exhibition, Fisher noted that he wanted the Williamsburg artists
to be understood in context. He brought along a variety of posters and
pamphlets of the type which one normally could find posted on walls throughout
the Williamsburg neighborhood. This printed matter announces art performances,
discusses recycling, addresses political and health issues: the presence
of this material successfully underscores a major message of the show -
that art is issued from a culture as well as an artist.</font></font>
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