Christopher Flower
Science of the Quotidian
August 2 - September 16, 2007
Both
science and art are about seeing. Through careful observation and scrutiny
new ideas emerge, sometimes shifting our overall relationship to life
and the world, or at least to the objects and events that populate it.
In Science of the Quotidian, which features work from an ongoing series
by Montreal artist Christopher Flower, this dual principle is evident
in suspenseful, minute events that recast commonplace objects as paradoxical
and strange.
For the past five years Flower has been looking closely at the everyday,
the ordinary and the banal. His studio serves as a laboratory and stage
where he puts mundane objects first into boxes and then under the magnifying
glass of a video camera. To make the commonplace into an aesthetic experience,
Flower had to eliminate two particular aspects of everyday rawness: use
and habit. With wit and ingenuity, he uses the intimate scale and time-based
properties of video to transform simple items such as beer bottles, bagels,
beads, eggs and soccer balls into actors in an ironic play. Each short
vignette invents a dramatic moment in the life of an ordinary thing,
filled with suspense and surprise and which gives these inanimate objects
a kind of body language and attitude.
Each snapshot illuminates unexpected facets of the familiar - the extraordinary
within the ordinary. The objects shown are real but the things are not
what they seem. Unseen forces disrupt the expected conditions, infusing
the objects with life and importance. Through a metaphysical shift, bottles
shatter under the impact of no apparent force, a cat is trapped in an
absurd vantage point, and water pours unexpectedly in the wrong direction.
In carrying out these manipulations, Flower deliberately chooses the
unrefined over the polished, the do-it-yourself over technical sophistication.
His low-tech videos are playful, whimsical and irreverent and he dismisses
the arsenal of video tricks, the digital age has made available.
Science of the Quotidian is a series of engaging mini-narratives full
of visual experimentation and play that reveal the poetry and magic in
the everyday.


|