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Yerba
Buena Center for the Arts shows things made with artistic intent alongside things
that might be mistaken for art if nothing was known about their intent. This practice
fits a time when anything at all may turn up under the rubric of art.
'Multiple Sensations', which opens today, fulfills the center's curious mission as
well as any set of exhibitions it has presented to date.
Birth and death, sex, drugs, distraction and destruction, the moon and the stars
(of stage and screen) all figure in, loosely strung on the theme of collections... |
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Holograms
of card catalog shelves make up an eerie part of 'Bibliomancy' by Michael Wenyon
and Susan Gamble.
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...Another quiet
passage in 'Multiple Sensations' is Michael Wenyon and Susan Gamble's 'Bibliomancy',
a corridor lined with softly glowing holograms.
Along one wall are the spines of books chosen from the venerable Boston Athenaeum,
including Rudolf Arnheim's 'Art and Visual Perception,' 'Art Criticism From a Laboratory,'
'Wonders of the Invisible World' and 'Books for Tired Eyes.'
The opposite wall displays holograms of old card catalog drawers. The holograms give
the books and drawers the look of specters at a seance in a future, postliterate
age...
San Francisco
Chronicle, August 5th, 2000, "Datebook" section, p B1
©2000 Kenneth Baker & San Francisco Chronicle |
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