An Infinite and Omnivorous Sky
January 10 through February 19, 2020
University Galleries of Illinois State University
January 28: Curator-led tour
February 1: Artist lecture by Kambui Olujimi
February 1, 6, 8, 11, 15, and 19: Screenings of Kambui Olujimi's "Skywriters" at ISU Planetarium
February 8: Tour and workshop with Children's Discovery Museum
February 10: Stroller tour
February 15: All ages art-making workshop
Artists: Amy Balkin, Jen Bervin, James Bridle, william cordova, Rohini Devasher, Ala Ebtekar, Spencer Finch, Dianna Frid, Carrie Gundersdorf, Basim Magdy, Brittany Nelson, Demetrius Oliver, Kambui Olujimi, Lisa Oppenheim, Trevor Paglen, Katie Paterson, Dario Robleto, Cauleen Smith, and Kerry Tribe.
An Infinite and Omnivorous Sky, a group exhibition about the mysteries and militarization of outer space, features twenty-nine works by artists that critically engage in poetic, scientific, and geopolitical views of the cosmos. Although the sea of celestial bodies has incited philosophizing and dreaming throughout time, the sky has also become militarized. It serves as a site of international power struggles and an omniscient point of view for surveillance via countless satellites. Our knowledge is constantly evolving with the generation of new data via Mars and moon rovers, Hubble telescope images, Voyager and New Horizons probes, and the Large Hadron Collider, among others. As the human race faces unprecedented crises due to climate change and related global unrest, the sky may hold the key to our collective survival.
The works in the exhibition prompt dialogue about the need for rigorous scientific exploration, unrestrained artistic practice, and informed political action. For example, Amy Balkin's The Atmosphere, A Guide is a poster- essay that, in the artist's words, "depicts various human influences on the sky and their accumulated traces, whether chemical, narrative, spatial, or political." The thirteen cotton flags in Kambui Olujimi's installation T-Minus 0 feature photographic digital collages of failed rocket launches and shuttle attempts, while Kerry Tribe's video The Last Soviet addresses cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev's 311 days spent on the Mir space station during the fall of the Soviet Union. Cauleen Smith's video Space is the Place (A March for Sun Ra) follows a rainy Chicago performance of Afrofuturist composer and musician Sun Ra's "Space is the Place" by a high school marching band, and Brittany Nelson's large-scale Bromoil photograph Tracks 1 centers around an image the Opportunity Rover took of its own tracks in the Martian landscape. The series of nine clocks comprising Katie Paterson's Timepieces (Solar System) tells the time on Earth's moon and the eight planets in our solar system, while the green embroidered text spelling "THERE IS NO RETURN" in Dianna Frid's NYT, AUG. 22, 2015, JACOB BEKENSTEIN is excerpted from the physicist and black hole theorist's obituary in the New York Times.
An Infinite and Omnivorous Sky is curated by University Galleries' Director and Chief Curator Kendra Paitz. An exhibition catalogue will be published in Summer 2020. The exhibition, publication, and programming are supported by grants from The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and the Illinois Arts Council Agency. Field trip support is provided by a grant from the Town of Normal Harmon Arts Grant Program. University Galleries is collaborating with the Illinois State University Planetarium, Milner Library, and the Children's Discovery Museum during this exhibition. All events are free and open to the public.
University Galleries' website
WGLT interview
e-flux Art&Education announcement
University Galleries of Illinois State University
January 28: Curator-led tour
February 1: Artist lecture by Kambui Olujimi
February 1, 6, 8, 11, 15, and 19: Screenings of Kambui Olujimi's "Skywriters" at ISU Planetarium
February 8: Tour and workshop with Children's Discovery Museum
February 10: Stroller tour
February 15: All ages art-making workshop
Artists: Amy Balkin, Jen Bervin, James Bridle, william cordova, Rohini Devasher, Ala Ebtekar, Spencer Finch, Dianna Frid, Carrie Gundersdorf, Basim Magdy, Brittany Nelson, Demetrius Oliver, Kambui Olujimi, Lisa Oppenheim, Trevor Paglen, Katie Paterson, Dario Robleto, Cauleen Smith, and Kerry Tribe.
An Infinite and Omnivorous Sky, a group exhibition about the mysteries and militarization of outer space, features twenty-nine works by artists that critically engage in poetic, scientific, and geopolitical views of the cosmos. Although the sea of celestial bodies has incited philosophizing and dreaming throughout time, the sky has also become militarized. It serves as a site of international power struggles and an omniscient point of view for surveillance via countless satellites. Our knowledge is constantly evolving with the generation of new data via Mars and moon rovers, Hubble telescope images, Voyager and New Horizons probes, and the Large Hadron Collider, among others. As the human race faces unprecedented crises due to climate change and related global unrest, the sky may hold the key to our collective survival.
The works in the exhibition prompt dialogue about the need for rigorous scientific exploration, unrestrained artistic practice, and informed political action. For example, Amy Balkin's The Atmosphere, A Guide is a poster- essay that, in the artist's words, "depicts various human influences on the sky and their accumulated traces, whether chemical, narrative, spatial, or political." The thirteen cotton flags in Kambui Olujimi's installation T-Minus 0 feature photographic digital collages of failed rocket launches and shuttle attempts, while Kerry Tribe's video The Last Soviet addresses cosmonaut Sergei Krikalev's 311 days spent on the Mir space station during the fall of the Soviet Union. Cauleen Smith's video Space is the Place (A March for Sun Ra) follows a rainy Chicago performance of Afrofuturist composer and musician Sun Ra's "Space is the Place" by a high school marching band, and Brittany Nelson's large-scale Bromoil photograph Tracks 1 centers around an image the Opportunity Rover took of its own tracks in the Martian landscape. The series of nine clocks comprising Katie Paterson's Timepieces (Solar System) tells the time on Earth's moon and the eight planets in our solar system, while the green embroidered text spelling "THERE IS NO RETURN" in Dianna Frid's NYT, AUG. 22, 2015, JACOB BEKENSTEIN is excerpted from the physicist and black hole theorist's obituary in the New York Times.
An Infinite and Omnivorous Sky is curated by University Galleries' Director and Chief Curator Kendra Paitz. An exhibition catalogue will be published in Summer 2020. The exhibition, publication, and programming are supported by grants from The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and the Illinois Arts Council Agency. Field trip support is provided by a grant from the Town of Normal Harmon Arts Grant Program. University Galleries is collaborating with the Illinois State University Planetarium, Milner Library, and the Children's Discovery Museum during this exhibition. All events are free and open to the public.
University Galleries' website
WGLT interview
e-flux Art&Education announcement
Photo credits: Anthony Hamilton