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![]() Eye Exam Wall Text
I paid a visit to Bill Gross's apartment gallery this past weekend, 65
Grand (online at www.65grand.com), where he was helping local artist Jon
Satrom with a new installation. As soon as I saw the announcement, I was
intrigued. Satrom, known for his work on such projects as the r4WB1t5
micro.Fest (http://r4wb1t5.org), was an unusual pick for the gallery.
Many of Satrom's projects are concerned with the connection between
technology, interactive visual images and language, regularly employing
"leet speak," a term that Wikipedia defines as having "evolved as a
way of forming exclusive cliques in online communities, notably
bulletin-board systems and online multiplayer games. The mechanism was
simple: by taking standard text and corrupting it with a dynamic cipher,
only those privy to the cipher could understand what was being conveyed
in the ciphertext."
Satrom has essentially translated the architecture of the space with
a program used for translating images into text. Using the artificial
light taken from nighttime photographs of the walls of Gross's apartment
as his map, Satrom translated the light-and-shadow pattern into text.
His program output as standard keyboard characters the various light
gradients in his source photos. The capital letter "X," for instance,
produces a higher density of dark ink on the page than the rows of
small-letter "c." These pages were then output onto rolls of paper
that stretch floor to ceiling, perfectly matching the existing light in
the room. Two intense spotlights from ceiling tracks are positioned
right in the middle of the center rolls, producing an odd layering
effect of light and light reproduced as text-based work on paper. I sat
down with Satrom and Gross to discuss the work, scheduled to open this
coming weekend. What script did you use to output these images?
Jon Satrom: It's a script that was written in the
mid-nineties, and there are a lot of different applications that do
this, called "pict2ascii." I'd used it back in the day, so I felt
comfortable with it. It's more of a process than just photographing and
translating it: we took a large-format picture of the wall, sliced that
up into columns and then, because the script could only handle like 64k
of memory or something, I couldn't do full columns so then I had to
slice it up into ten-inch strips, or paragraphs, as they came out, then
copy and paste those. I used Photoshop as far as looking at it,
visualizing, slicing it and all that. Each of the rolls are 126x36. Newcity: So the idea is essentially to transform the physical
architecture of this space into a text?
Satrom: Bill had seen a piece I did a while back, in a show at
Marwen, a picture I did of my girlfriend in ASCII, and then I was
thinking about how to engage the space, since so much of the work I do
is non-physical, more video or sound or web-based. This has made my text
work into an object. As with this cord, [indicating a cord plugged into
a wall outlet] this was photographed in place--but I took it out, and
it's weird because of the sunlight, but I just repainted just the
shadows [moves the cord, revealing that its shadows are actually part of
the underlying text pattern]. Tell me about this work on paper installed by Rebekah Levine
outside the front door of your gallery. I know Levine used to be a
member of the Chicago-based art collective Law Office. In this piece,
there's this recurrent phrase, "kernel panic," what does that
mean?
Bill Gross:"Kernel panic" is when a Mac OS X dies--I guess
the worst sort of computer damage, when it's really dead. She was
telling me that her fish and her computer died on the same day and
people where she works were saying she has electronic hands that were
killing things and there are people, I guess, who believe that certain
people have a magical talent for destroying machines. She wanted to make
work a piece about that. And as it turned out, she decided she wanted to
do a Kinko's-reproduced style work, so that synched up really well with
what I'd been discussing with Jon. New Kid on the Block
At her new gallery space on Fulton Market, Kasia Kay was catching up
on work this past Sunday. A former lighting expert, Kay has
professionally outfitted her new space next door to Linda Warren and
Function + Art galleries. Her first show in this location is meant as a
coming-out party for her stable of artists, and merits a visit. Formerly
an independent curator and a regular on the art-fair circuit (she's
heading out to New York for the ~scope show), Kay has received
well-deserved critical laurels for showing work such as Sandra
Bermudez's fantastic "Little Birds." Kay also has moved in as the
Chicago dealer for Carla Gannis, who shows with Pablo's Birthday in New
York, an artist who uses digital image-editing equipment to craft
saccharine, politically-charged surrealist works of social commentary.
No doubt Kay will prove a formidable addition to the expansive momentum
of the West Loop's meatpacking corridor. Jon Satrom & Rebekah Levine show at 65 Grand, 1378 West Grand
Avenue, (312)243-4325, through March 31. "Atmospheric" shows at Kasia
Kay Gallery, 1044 West Fulton Market, (312)492-8828, through March 11.
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