Thursday, October 11, 2007

Joe McKay Art Review

Joe McKay @ vertextlist

Overall I thought that this show was more than I was expecting, because it had a variety of pieces using the cell phone and in ways that were fun and unexpected. It had the sort of feeling of a child making toys out of ordinary objects (not all of them, but that sort of sensibility with the cell phones NOT being used as cell phones or all post modern and being about dead cell phones).

Graveyard was oddly surprising to me, because I have never looked at a cell phone as a tiny plot of land. It was like a miniature, intimate scene with no bodies or graves but I imagined what would be there. Somehow the ones using the screen were more "cellphony" because that is what we always look at on a cell phone. My favorite pieces was (and the most fun) the cell phone keyboard, because who doesn't like playing with a noisemaker? I just really enjoyed the interaction and trying to figure out the mapping patterns. Finally, the most intriguing piece was Sunset Solitaire. It was compelling in a very subtle way because it was not apparent what it was or did initially, and it has a beautiful aesthetic that is simple yet sublime.

Perhaps I liked the show a bit more than the rest of the class because I too have fantasized about "what can you do w/ a cell phone?" There was a creativity exercise I remember doing in elementary school that involved giving us a simple every day object, like a safety pin. Our task was to make a list of all the things you could do with the object. I always kicked ass at that exercise, because I came up longest and most creative list. I almost feel like Joe looked at his pile of phones and let his muse make something out of what most people would consider garbage. ANYWAY, I too have all my old phones, plugs and accessories from ALL of the phones I have ever owned. It's a bit nostalgic like old pairs of glasses and retainers.

Sidenote: Cell phones are very personal and intimate device, so I definitely like his use of a ubiquitous and contextual technology. I can't wait until I upgrade to an iPhone or a slick looking Chocolate because I seriously hate my phone (never before, so this one might go in the trash). I always wondered if someone ever invented a cell phone that could vibrate as well as a top quality vibrator? Pleasure on the go...?

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