Press Release: Michael Velliquette

New Works 04.1
03.18.04

 

New Works: 04.1
March 18 – May 9, 2004

Michel François Brussels, Belgium
Oliver Herring Brooklyn, New York
Michael Velliquette San Antonio, Texas

Selected by Lawrence Rinder

About the Artist
Michael Velliquette has used drawing, sculpture, and video to delve into his psyche and daily life. Over the past decade he has recorded himself and his surroundings, and composed environments that reflect his personal journey. Using readily available materials classically associated with craft—paper, plastic, felt-tip markers, tape—he creates all-encompassing, fictional worlds that explore the relationship between the self and the universe at large.

With each project Velliquette crafts a space-specific piece that encourages thoughts about humans and the world around us. To hasten the contemplation of metaphysics he employs a wealth of visual stimulants reminiscent of 1960s psychedelia and more recent rave culture. In his installation The Depth of the Drop (2003), a darkened room was crisscrossed by paper streamers printed with images of the galaxy. Projected on one wall was a video of a storm, while looped on a monitor was footage of a starry-eyed mummy singing sad soul songs. The work sparked thoughts about the afterlife and where we go from here. Like his other work, the piece used dramatic means to distill attention onto the intersection of science, cosmology, philosophy, and religion.

Michael Velliquette was born in 1971 in Sandusky, OH and has lived in San Antonio, TX since receiving his MFA from the University of Wisconsin, Madison in 2000. Recent solo exhibitions include The Suburban, Chicago, IL (2004) as well as Three Walls (2003), Blue Star Contemporary Art Center (2003) and Cactus Bra Space (2003) in San Antonio, TX. Velliquette's work has been shown in group exhibitions at Deitch Projects, New York, NY (2003); the McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, TX (2002); and the Ontario College of Art and Design, Toronto, Canada (1999).


About the Project
Michael Velliquette's project at ArtPace is an explosion of color and material. With the ü in the i he has created an intense physical atmosphere that overflows with repeated visual motifs that enchant the eyes while moving forward his long-standing investigation of Self and the cosmos.

Velliquette has made a space within a space, constructing an enormous cardboard box inside of what would otherwise be a white, three-walled gallery. Like the closet in C.S. Lewis's The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, a doorway in into the space serves as the threshold beyond which lies another reality.

The viewer discovers the land by walking on a path of plastic tarps covering the floor. The road leads over a small bridge, toward a cave, and to a giant hand-shaped pillow lying on the floor. Passed along the way are neon pink and yellow sine waves, sunny rainbows of colored tape, watery cascades of blue plastic, and anonymous, double-sided profiles cut out of galaxy-printed paper.

Compounding the sense of a person exploring the past, present, future, and the world beyond, is the overwhelming presence of outstretched, searching fingers. From each corner hangs a six-foot cardboard hand punctuated by a planetary mobile. Giant palms reach out of the walls, and an enormous pair of inquiring eyes probe the space for answers.

The multitude of elements in the ü in the i encourages an acute awareness of one's place in the universe. It is a mysteriously ordered disorder—a potent metaphor for the rhythms of life on this planet, and perhaps what lies beyond.

Exhibition Dates
March 18 – May 9, 2004

Opening Reception
Thursday, March 18, 6:30-8:30 PM

Artists' Dialogue
Friday, March 19, 6:30-8:00 PM
Featuring Michel François, Oliver Herring, and Michael Velliquette. Moderated by Lawrence Rinder, Curator of Contemporary Art at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, New York.

Brown Bag Lunch
Wednesday, April 14, 12:00-1:00 PM
Join Education and Curatorial Associate Kate Green for a tour of New Works: 04.1 and a brown bag lunch provided by Sip. Please call Artpace for reservations.

Lecture: Art and the Stars
Thursday, May 6, 6:30-8:00 PM
Take part in this evening program contextualizing Michael Velliquette's project. Dr. Rafael López-Mobilia, Assistant Professor of Physics in the department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Texas at San Antonio, will speak about theories of universal order.

Event Locations
All events held at Artpace, 445 N. Main Avenue. Free parking at Flores Street and Savings. Artpace is open to the public Wednesday thru Sunday, 12-5pm, Thursday until 8pm and by appointment. There is no charge for admission.

About Artpace
Artpace San Antonio serves as an advocate for contemporary art and as a catalyst for the creation of significant art projects. We seek to nurture emerging and established artists and to provide opportunities for inspiration, experimentation, and education. Our programs support the evolution of new ideas in contemporary art and cultivate diverse audiences while providing a forum for ongoing dialogue.

The International Artist-in-Residence program is supported by The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts.

 

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