Artist
Statement for Too Close
A Site specific piece commissioned by Cheekwood Museum of Art
Too Close
As
we continue to progress technologically, I am concerned that while we are able
to better connect with others, that connection is perhaps at the peril of our
private selves. Consumer-driven technology keeps us in touch but does not give
us time for reflection. It accommodates our superficial needs, but it can not
serve our innermost desires. American philosopher Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote
in The American Scholar, "Men, such as they are, very naturally seek money
or power
.this revolution is to be wrought by the gradual domestication
of the idea of Culture. The private life of one man shall be a more illustrious
monarchy, more formidable to its enemy, more sweet and serene in its influence
to its friend, than any kingdom in history."
Mechanically-driven,
Too Close acts as both installation and interactive event, inviting viewers
to reexamine their relationship with their environment. Three white, slightly
quivering, elongated cocoons hang from the ceiling. Each cocoon independently
creates its own dialogue with the viewer, deflating when a person gets too close.
The deflated cocoon reinflates only if the viewer remains motionless or walks
away.
Too
Close was created in collaboration with physicist David Piston.