Musée Magazine Issue No. 16 - Chaos | Page 7

E D I TO R ’ S L E T T E R b y An d re a Bl a nch Chaos has become an unavoidable element that has explores the interdependence in the universe through always been present in our lives. I now have to worry chaos. Gideon Mendel explores chaos in its most natural about women’s pussies being grabbed, the presidential element of water by photographing floods in his series election, the “deplorables”, Kardashian security, our Drowning World. His images are structured portraits country, Musée, my cats Shait and Adjo, climate change, juxtaposed against the disarray of one of the most the art world, Syrian refugees, my nephew’s wedding, devastating environmental catastrophes. Shahid & Co. (Sam & Matt), sex trafficking, my social Fred Tomaselli’s The Times is a series of collages that life, and robots. What does this mean for humanity’s bring a subjective and disorderly universe to life in a relationship with it? medium proclaimed to be objective- the newspaper. How do we respond to chaos? In this issue of Musée, However, Tomaselli plays with the politically charged eighteen featured artists explore the ir relationships with ideas of ‘true impartiality’ that the media often sports chaos - examining its personal, societal, and environmental by prompting the viewer to wonder if his escapist implications. They take on the seemingly impossible task: imagery is any more subjective than an issue of The New making shape of a formless entity. York Times. In a similar vein, John Baldessari eliminates Amy Elkins’ takes on this challenge in her Parting the center of focus in his Crowds with the Shape of Reason Words series; she uses a careful arrangement of typog- Missing series, leaving viewers pining for more context. raphy over the black and white portraits of inmates His work deals with the chaotic resistance of personal who were executed in the state of Texas. Each piece is identity in the hive-mind of crowds. an insight to the mind of an inmate, a lost identity in a Chaos presents brilliant artistry to engage the viewer faceless institution. Jessica Dimmock’s The Ninth Floor in diverse narratives. However you might define chaos, confronts the viewer with a desperate narrative seen in as a void, a lawless anarchy, a formless entity, or an an addict - an individual whose existence is scattered indefinable mass you will be sure to find it represented in by the chaotic pursuit of a substance. While The Ninth this issue. I would like to thank the eighteen established Floor and Parting Words illustrate an introspective artists, as well as the emerging and spotlighted artists, viewpoint on chaos that brews inside the individual, who contributed their sagacious and unyielding work. other artists portray chaos as an external, all-encom- Through their lens, the concept of chaos evolves from passing force. Doug and Mike Starn’s The Big Bambu our own perspectives. Pari Dukovic, Grand Central Terminal, 2013. 5