Please join us for the opening of PROXY, CHIMERA, ORACLE, an exhibition at The Reef featuring new work by 34 recent MFA graduates from the School of Art.
The exhibition, curated by Nora N. Khan, presents aesthetic and imaginal strategies—proxies, chimeras, oracles—for living in the wake, after homes, communal spaces, safe havens, and any semblance of certainty have been evacuated.
Across two weekends—Oct. 18-19 and Nov. 8-9—CalArts presents a slate of public programs at The Reef organized by curatorial researcher, Erica Min (Critical Studies MA 25).
Events include artist talks, performances, readings, curatorial walkthroughs, and more. The weekends will also include poetic oracular interventions by CalArts faculty members Carribean Fragoza (Critical Studies MFA 06), Muriel Leung, Matias Viegener, Brian Evenson, Gabrielle Civil, and CalArts community members Kini Sosa (Critical Studies MFA 24) and Rowland Smith III (Critical Studies MFA 24), with Chimerical sounds by Stanley Zappa (Critical Studies MA 25).
11 a.m. — Sounds
Stanley Zappa and Stephen Linsley
A musical performance of noise and sorrow.
12 p.m. — Artist Walkthrough
Jayson Mittman & Yulya Valuy
A walkthrough with artists.
1 p.m. — On Sex and Death
Mike Bryant & Jade Smrz
A conversation with a fish biologist and an artist on chimeras.
2 p.m. — On Unnamable Disaster
Andrew Culp
A lecture on legibility, wake work, refusal.
3 p.m. — Group Reading
Rowland Smith III, Kini Sosa, Khalifa, Marta Brecht, Farah Abouzeid
A group reading responding to Proxy.
11 a.m. — Curatorial Walkthrough
Erika Keck and Catherine Wang
A walkthrough with artists.
12 p.m. — On painting placeness
Ranu Mukherjee & Catherine Wang
A conversation with a painter and an artist on scenic spatiality and
landscape painting.
1 p.m. — Group Reading
Rowland Smith III, Gio Alonzi, NK, Natanjah Discroll Harvey, Erica Min
A group reading of creative writing alums responding to Chimera.
2 p.m. — Donor Walkthrough
A'JaeCea and Cameron Masters, Faculty, Exhibition and Production Assistants
A walkthrough of the exhibition for people who have supported CalArts.
2 p.m. — Poker Tournament
Rocky Hayden
An introductory game of risk and chance for beginners with special prizes.
2 p.m. — Sounds
Stanley Zappa and Stephen Linsley
A musical performance of noise and sorrow.
3 p.m. — Artist Walkthrough
Kiko Thomas
A walkthrough of the exhibition with an artist.
11 a.m. — Lecture
Andrew Culp
A 12-part performance lecture on unnamable disaster.
12 p.m. — Curatorial Walkthrough
Steven E. Lam
A walkthrough of the exhibition with the Dean of Art and artists for critics and curators.
1 p.m. — Group Reading
Muriel Leung, Gabrielle Civil, Matias Viegener, Carribean Fragoza, Brian Evenson
A group reading responding to the afterlife.
2:30 p.m. — Lecture
Arne De Boever & Meixi Liu & Siqi Fan
A lecture on post-exceptionalism with two artists.
11 a.m. — Curatorial Walkthrough
Exhibition and Production Assistants & Erica Min
A walkthrough of the exhibition with artists and curatorial researcher.
12 p.m. — On Rhythm of Photography
Yuqiao Zhang and Zhu Dongchen
We will discuss and analyze the rhythm in photography, music, and its manifestation in daily life. The talk will take the form of Lecture intermittent with live music. It can also be considered as a radio FM, or a performance.
A bright light clicks on and intensifies. The eye tries to focus on the light through prolonged exposure past the point of pain, then closes. Afterimages dance inside eyelids. This visual sensation lingers long after the source has been removed, taking form as shadows, traces, and psychedelic blur. The afterimage holds the imprint of people and presence. Recently, science has found afterimages are more than surface retinal play. These apparitions are deeply linked to memory and central visual processing, influenced as much by imagination as by light. Sometimes, afterimages are produced by pure mental images of structures that never existed.
Afterimages, both as a metonym and metaphor, fill this exhibition. Welcome mats point to uncertain destinations. Studding the highways, sun faded billboards feature shadows of stock photographs for jobs in border patrol. Grooves in concrete slabs carry imprints of Dynasty Center, persisting under developer-driven threat of evacuation. We peer across infrared thresholds of houses in villages that are the last of their kind. Communal spaces, homes, and safe havens may seem nearly vacant, but as epigenetic memory shows us, any sudden evacuation has effects lasting through generations. Before the afterimage has faded, new structures are built atop, creating contemporary ghost stories.
The 34 artists in Proxy, Chimera, Oracle understand that the wake is best approached obliquely—through scores, assemblage, and rituals. Art seeds at the edges, an attempt to control the fallout of the wake. Each work functions as both diagnostic tool and survival manual, revealing how we live in multiple wakes simultaneously: in the aftermath of empire, in structures that persist through perceptual shifts, in the continued catastrophe of the present. They respond to psychic debts induced by loss, theft and enclosure with imaginal strategies towards alternative exits.
First, they build proxies to buy time and stretch sensation and remembrance. One finds body doubles, mother doubles, tongue diaries, hair stitched through skin, speculative scripts, neural networks, branded limbs, rehearsal architectures, and scores made in ash and smoke. Therapy mats, cement rags, and carbonated water stand in for invisible maintenance work and performance. Proxies, whether technological or literal, allow for provisional testing in search of a direction.
Second, they stage chimeric transmutation through alien embryos, molted snakeskin braids, meteor showers, and invented mythological creatures. Icons are pulled apart and put back together again. Transmutation is not a metaphor but a metabolic fact. Through fermentation, evolution, or engineering, systems hybridize, creating a host of chimeric intelligences in the place of one master.
Finally, and most optimistically, they invent oracles: predictive models, risk assessors, forecasts of future chaos, prophecies of performances that should be, divination through algorithmic augury, and games without ends in sight.
Yulya Valuy (Art and Technology MFA 25)