I was just told that the Time Out NY Magazine review of Dystopia + Identity 
Exhibition just came out at newsstands, so I braved the cold + the blistering 
street winds + coughed up the $2.75 and also bought a pack of menthol cough 
drops--(it's in the Dec. 28, 2000 - Jan. 4, 2001 issue).

[For those of you who don't have access to newsstands where a copy is 
available, i am including the article here; the color photo (by architectural 
interiors photographer Abel Yee) which accompanies the review shows the 
"Media Room" with (from left to right) works by John Boone ("Self Portrait," 
oil on canvas), Jonas Mekas ("Scenes From the Life of Andy Warhol," video), 
Hilary Maslon ("Boil Box," acrylic on canvas), Jenny Marketou ("Smell Picks 
2000," digital print), Andy Deck ("Pro-Regress," Mac SE), Daniel Garcia 
Andujar ("Phoney," cd-rom), and Shu Lea Cheang ("I.K.U. next_protocols," 
digital prints):

"Dystopia and Identity 
in the Age of Global 
Communications"
Tribes Gallery, through Jan 13 
(see elsewhere)

    "Tribes Gallery would seem an unlikely venue for an exhibition exploring 
our self-awareness in a technology-dominated era.  The lengthy show roster 
includes 54 artists, some of whom are represented by Web-based works.  But 
the gallery--contrasting with the show's theme, scale and technical 
requirements--is located in a cramped, second-floor walk-up on the Lower East 
Side and represents the last vestiges of the neighborhood's low-tech 
funkiness.
    Yet the show works well, mainly because curator Cristine Wang has 
organized the works in a way that emphasizes the fact that Tribes doubles as 
someone's home. (The gallery's owner, poet Steve Cannon, usually hangs out on 
a beat-up couch.) The front gallery is arranged as a living room, which it 
is, and the works come off as elements in a hip computer programmer's crash 
pad.  A video by Jonas Mekas, which features quickly edited scenes starring 
Andy Warhol, plays on a TV within comfortable viewing distance of the couch.  
And glossy stills from Shu Lea Cheang's cyberporn movie IKU are tacked on the 
wall, hanging above a sculpture by Andy Deck consisting of a gutted but 
somehow still functioning Mac SE computer.
    A large side room functions as a "salon," crammed with conceptual pieces 
ranging from a brilliant digital photograph--which updates a famous Tang 
Dynasty scroll painting--by Chinese artist Wang Qingsong to a goopy-looking 
sculpture by Roxy Paine.  Such works make the place come alive with playful 
ideas and sly wit, like a cocktail party with a smart guest list.  Finally, a 
sunroom in the rear features work addressing nature, including Yael Kanarek's 
stunning digital images of virtual environments printed on Plexiglas; Eduardo 
Kac's poster of himself with a genetically-altered bunny; and Mariah Corrigan 
and Jonathan Herder's moss-and-cement installation, which includes a video of 
breeding and dying flies.
    In the end, a sense of dystopian dread emerges as a direct result of the 
exhibition's homey, casual context.  The venue reminds us that the effects of 
technology are sometimes pernicious, and reach into every aspect of daily 
life."                  
                                            (Reviewed by Reena Jana)

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