Concerning tomorrow - press
Concerning Tomorrow
An exhibition called        "Concerning Tomorrow" could well be a real downer, but in fact—while there        are no feel-good pictures here and much that's dark—the show exhilarates        and makes you delighted to be in Chicago at this point in history. (That's        no mean feat, given this point in history.) Unlike Renoir's "Luncheon of        the Boating Party"—which confirmed for bourgeois Parisians of the 1880s        that they were living in the right time and place—these diverse pieces        don't romanticize our lifestyle, but rather critique it, with a        seriousness and ingenuity that ironically make you feel optimistic about        tomorrow.         Take Noelle Mason's series "X-ray Vision vs. Invisibility." The SAIC        grad took U.S. government x-ray photos of immigrants being smuggled into        the U.S., then commissioned a destitute Brazilian woman to knit the        images—for $2,000, precisely what a smuggler charges. The ghostly images,        in unsettlingly ornate frames that look like they came from Target,        condemn our inhuman immigration laws far more forcefully than ten New York        Times editorials.                 Elspeth Vance, the youngest artist in the show, presents a hand-woven        quilt that at first looks like something from Long Grove or a small-town        craft fair, until you realize it's a proliferation of pentagons set amid        stars and stripes—a scary, cancerous jumble of pentagons that speaks more        eloquently about, and to, the likes of General Petraeus than Pelosi-Reid        ever could.         Not all the work is angry. Melina Ausikaitis' "Pastoral Snooze," an        elaborate pencil drawing composed of small shapes repeated to build a farm        landscape, is restful and amusing. "We didn't want the show to be        didactic," Jason Lazarus, fine-art photographer and instructor who curated        it, explains. "Much of the work has an ambiguous connection to the future,        and there are both real and imagined futures." The exhibit includes        photography, sculpture, installations, paintings, drawings and textiles.         Harold Arts, which has run a residency for young artists and musicians        in Appalachia for the past two summers and is seeking to expand its        presence in the city with studio and gallery space for emerging artists,        hosts the show. Most of the twenty-six people represented attended the        residency.         "Concerning Tomorrow" shows at Harold Arts, 303 West Erie, through        October 12. 
(2007-09-18)

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