The Tahoe Gallery presents “she’d hallucinate ghosts,” an exhibition of drawings and projections by Chris Lanier from October 13 to November 7. The exhibition traces the contours of a mind that’s in the process of failing. There are multiple images of a frail old woman, sometimes surrounded by visions that don’t quite correspond to the reality around her. Two large-format drawings are “colored in” by digital projections, which include brief animations that provide missing elements of the drawings themselves. The old woman’s hallucinations of ghosts, and of improbable visitations by gatherings of birds, alternately seem to comfort her, and to provide her an index for her deterioration.
There will be an artists’ talk, and a reception, on October 23, at 5pm.
Chris Lanier is an artist with a background in both traditional and digital media, and a demonstrated interest in hybrid forms, having worked in multimedia performance, digital animation, web production, and comics. His animation has screened at Sundance and won awards at several international festivals, including the Grand Prize for Internet Animation at the Ottawa International Animation Festival. Most recently, he collaborated on “The Mapping Project,” a dance theater performance involving two dance companies, multimedia projection, and an art installation for the 2008 San Francisco International Arts Festival. He is also an essayist and critic whose art criticism has appeared in a variety of online and print publications, including the San Francisco Chronicle, Salon Magazine, the High Hat, the Shotgun Review, the Bay Guardian, and the Comics Journal. He is currently the Assistant Professor of Digital Art at Sierra Nevada College.
Gallery hours are Monday-Friday, 9am-5pm.
For additional information, please contact the artist directly at chrislanier2001 [at] yahoo.com, or 775-324-1303. For more information on the Tahoe Gallery, contact:
Carole Hutchison
Tahoe Gallery Coordinator
Sierra Nevada College
775-831-1314 ext7525
chutchison [at] sierranevada.edu
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
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