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About Eugene weekly. (Eugene, Oregon) 1993-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 2011)
BY SUZI STEFFEN Monumental Art from Monumental Junk Chris Jordan’s Running the Numbers opens at the J-Schnitz A rt from questions: How many commercial fl ights go over the U.S. every 8 hours? How many plastic beverage bottles get used in the U.S. every fi ve minutes? How many artists go on The Colbert Report and hang with Stephen Colbert? Answers Chris Jordan started thinking about this kind of thing — and other numbers, like the number of aluminum cans used in the U.S. every 30 seconds --- On The Colbert Report in 2007 (http://wkly.ws/10j), Jordan noted that because the U.S. waste stream spreads out across the country (and farther), it’s impossible for people to fathom how much we throw away, or recycle. In his Cans Seurat, for instance, he recreates the famous Seurat painting A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte with digitally manipulated images of soda cans. According to the 2007 numbers, people in the U.S. recycled about half of the aluminum cans they use, which per minute would be 212,000 cans. Half of that gave Jordan the Cans Seurat image. Jordan’s “Running the Numbers,” an exhibit of 20 large images, opens at the UO’s Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art from 6 to 8 pm Friday, Jan. 14. The museum’s executive director, Jill Hartz, says that the Seattle-based Jordan and his work fi t well into the ethos of the UO. “Sustainability and sustainable cities,” Hartz says, “is one of the university’s Big Ideas.” True, and the capitals are intentional: The UO set out its “Big Ideas” in 2007, with two of them — visible here: http://wkly.ws/10k — designated as Sustainable Cities and Green Product Design. In Jordan’s exhibit, even seemingly eco-friendly products like paper bags (recyclable, often made of mostly recycled materials) look irredeemable, and the statistic — “114 million brown paper supermarket bags used in the U.S. every hour” — seems not only huge but also ridiculous. Eugene, one hopes, doesn’t add very much to that tally, but looking at Jordan’s Paper Bags might mean considering holding a canvas bag close at hand at all times. Some of his work’s funny or tongue-in-cheek, like using a representation of enjoyment like a soda can to recreate a 7,000 Reasons to Move New Asian art curator hits the (green) ground running L ooking at Anne Rose Kitagawa’s curriculum vitae, one might be forgiven a startled question or two about her move to Eugene. She grew up in Chicago, the daughter of two extremely distinguished professors at the University of Chicago. Then she went to college at Oberlin and grad school at Princeton. She’s been working in museums, ranging from the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston to the Art Institute of Chicago and most recently, and for 15 years, at the Harvard Art Museum and was assistant curator of Japanese art there. So … not to put our town down or anything, but … Eugene? Well, to be honest, it’s all about the Asian collection at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, which has 7,000 items and thousands of square feet of gallery space and is close both to other large Asian art collections on the West Coast and much closer to Asia than is Boston. Kitagawa began her position as chief curator of Asian art and coordinator of academic programs at the JSMA in June, and she says she’s been going full-out ever since. “The collection’s so big, I’m just familiarizing myself with it,” she says. Museum executive director Jill Hartz doesn’t sound too much like the cat that ate the canary when she talks about Kitagawa, but it’s evident that the UO’s art museum, in a Hartz-led change, has started pushing harder and harder for a higher profi le in the world of academic museums. “Anne Rose is a scholar, and she’s very comfortable in academic museums — and there are so few academic museums that have a focus on Asian art, especially East Asian art,” Hartz says. Add the strong WWW.EUGENEWEEKLY.COM • BLOGS.EUGENEWEEKLY.COM scholarship of the Giuseppe Vasi exhibit of last term, and the museum’s reputation may, and should, begin to wax in other parts of the country. But within a museum, each of the rooms and galleries needs work, revamping, a fresh look so that the galleries don’t grow stale – and so that work in the galleries isn’t harmed by exposure. So Kitagawa’s been looking at each of the (many) Asian galleries in the museum, carefully altering each gallery so that light- sensitive textiles and works on paper, some of which have been up for several years, take a rotation rest in the vault while others come into view. She’s placed modern and contemporary Japanese and Korean art alongside some of the older work. “If you looked at the galleries, in some of them it seemed like the art stopped around 1900,” she says. Though the carpets of the Japanese gallery still showed the lines of old vitrines a few months after Kitagawa altered the space, a delightfully smart, playful, rooted in art history but fi rmly contemporary work, Magma Spirit Explodes, Tsunami is Dreadful by Aoshima Chiho, hangs on the wall, entrancing both the eye and the mind. It’s not that Kitagawa wants to put away anything from before 1950, not at all; she just wants to freshen up the galleries and get the older pieces scene of the French working class on their day off, or the Barbies and the Benjamins. The Barbies, 32,000 of them, combine to form a white woman’s torso. That number’s the total of elective breast augmentation surgeries in the U.S. every month in 2006. The Benjamins, which would be 125,000 $100 bills or $12.5 million, or the amount the U.S. government spent on the war in Iraq every hour from 2003 to 2008, form a portrait of Ben himself. Hartz says the show combines well with the upcoming artist’s residency of Jen Van Winkle, an artist from Virginia who works primarily with reused materials and kids or others in workshops that culminate in public art projects. “It’s an opportunity to link with new communities on campus and off,” she says. In addition, the Jordan show will be lit by LED bulbs in an experiment that’s part of a larger study of museums and LED lights. “They have no heat, and the energy savings is amazing,” Hartz says. “But they haven’t been able [until now] to cast the kind of light you can look at art with.” “Running the Numbers” has traveled all over the place since Jordan mounted it in 2007, mostly to galleries, museums and university museums on the West Coast (including a few stops in British Columbia). Jordan has always hoped that with this show, viewers might change their habits and consume less — perhaps not replace one cellphone a year, not drink so much bottled water or soda, not consume a Seurat’s worth of aluminum cans every month, not leave their pets unfi xed, maybe not buy so many SUVs. That might be preaching to the choir in Eugene, and the bluntly didactic message also might seem a little less artful than the usual show at the museum. Hartz says, “Some work better than others as amazing, beautiful photographs, and if sometimes being blunt works better [for Jordan], well, we’ll see what the audiences think!” ew “Running the Numbers: Portraits of Mass Consumption” opens Saturday, Jan. 15, and stays up through early April. An opening runs 6-8 pm Friday, Jan. 14, and exhbit curator Chris Bunch, from Seattle, speaks at 2 pm Jan. 15. Artist Chris Jordan gives two talks Wed. Jan. 26, one, about switching careers from corporate lawyer to artist, at the Knight Law School at 12:30 pm; one an exhibition talk at 5:30 pm in 177 Lawrence Hall, both on the UO campus. in visual conversation with newer works. And now, along with new fl atscreen monitors that give information about the works in the galleries, Kitagawa works on making sure that info comes in several languages. Her dream is to have Japanese, Korean, Chinese, Spanish and English (at least) available for all of the galleries, but for now, at least, she and a team of translators and helpers keep hard at work on making sure the Korean art has Korean- language information, the Japanese art Japanese- language information and so forth. The museum began adding bilingual labels, catalogs and information with the fall 2008 “Cuban Avant- Garde” exhibition, and as Kitagawa says, once a museum opens that door, it’s not possible to start limiting access again. The new curator says that one of the great things about living in Eugene instead of Boston/ Cambridge is what she calls, with air quotes, “the commute.” In the crowded cities of the Northeast, though the public transportation options covered most of the ground, getting to work wasn’t exactly pleasant. “My ‘commute’ is seven minutes long through some of the most beautiful landscape,” she says, laughing. But she’s been so busy that she hasn’t had time to see much of the vaunted Oregon natural beauty (that’s right, she’s been immersed in the “great city for the arts” portion of the city motto), and she longs to go horseback riding, see Crater Lake and generally become more familiar with the landscape. Hartz says that she’s enjoying working with Kitagawa and seeing her work with the rest of the curatorial staff. She adds, “We deserve her; we deserve this quality. We want to be one of the fi nest university museums in the world.” — Suzi Steffen TRASK BEDORTHA DEPICTS 32,000 BARBIES, EQUAL TO THE NUMBER OF ELECTIVE BREAST AUGMENTATION SURGERIES PERFORMED MONTHLY IN THE US IN 2006. (DETAIL ON RIGHT) CHRIS JORDAN, BARBIE DOLLS, 2008, DIGITAL PRINT visual arts EUGENE WEEKLY JANUARY 13, 2011 25