GEOFFREY SHEA
Video Sculptures and Installations
July 24 to September 14, 2008
More Info at Fabulous Festival of Fringe Film
A
Pathless Land
by Michael Tweed
We, humans, are a species of storytellers. It is said by
some that language separates us from the rest of animal-kind, but is
it not rather our obsessive need for stories? From the nursery rhymes
and bedtime stories of childhood to the gossip and novels of adulthood,
we crave stories. It is this need and its many guises that Geoffrey Shea
has taken for the subject of this exhibition, probing the ways in which
we individually and collectively interpret the world—the truths
as well as the lies, whether unintentional or deliberate.
For A Pathless Land Shea has selected five video-based installations
from the many new media projects he has created throughout his artistic
career. Gathered into a single open space a visitor’s first impression
may be the chaotic chatter of the competing voices and images echoing
about the gallery—a verbal hubbub much like that which we experience
each day due to the voices and images, both familiar and foreign, vying
for one’s attention. Yet as one approaches each piece and concentrates
on it, a poetic questioning of the stories we tell others and ourselves
begins to reveal itself.
On the two video monitors of Pilgrim’s Progress a brother and
sister retell radically different interpretations of a single unique
experience they once shared. Shifting between characters and monitors
a testament to the thin line between delusion and enlightenment is dutifully
recorded by a stenographer in a scenario reminiscent of the absurd tales
of Franz Kafka.
Elsewhere a radar antenna sweeps the skies, while embedded in the wall
a small video is framed by an electrical outlet. Moving closer to this
piece, entitled 1,000 Glances, the viewer discovers that each sweep of
the radar disrupts the poetic narrative recounted by a frail woman sitting
by a river; while through the static which continually garbles her train
of thought seep hope and despair.
Even our attempts to type out our own tale on the virtual typewriter
of the Writing Machine are ironically thwarted, as nothing is written
and a seemingly arbitrary word or phrase is spoken with each tap of a
key. Yet abandoning oneself to the keyboard one might discover a more
musical solution to the need to communicate.
Meanwhile, quietly cradled in a satin-lined oak case, Spiral
Text continuously
swirls on a small video monitor made ever the more precious by the refined
settings of its display. Try as one might to discern what is written
there, with each rotation the fragments and phrases seem to slip further
away escaping comprehension.
But it is in the installation entitled Speech (I
Want to Know) that
Shea not only reveals himself but also the powerful influence that the
medium has on the message. A video documenting an actual political speech
given by the artist—and
former West Grey councillor—takes the spotlight while a catalogue
of bylaws he proposed scrolls past. The seriousness and sincerity of
the message however is thwarted by the clever use of a canned laugh track
like those commonly heard on television sitcoms.
Stories. Trying to cope with reality we tell story after story, fragments
of the life which flows by heedless of our desire to capture it, no matter
how strong the need to create a narrative from the spray and eddies.
We carry on dictating our lives “as if understanding could substitute
for being”—a comforting folly gently revealed by Geoffrey
Shea in these five poetic installations.
by Michael Tweed

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