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Christopher “Alexander Supertramp” McCandles

as I get deeper into my studies of man in relationship to nature vs. city (metropical) and man in relationship to machines and the future (futurismo), I find myself reading Into the Wild – the Jon Krakaur book about Christopher McCandles.
Christopher McCandles was a young kid in the 80’s who, after graduating university, entered into a process to face his fears and become closer to nature and a purer way of life outside of the normative confines. He becomes a tramp moving across the states by any means necessary and fully experiencing life.
There is a running theme that I’m beginning to see in this research and it has to do with a physiological break in the comfort of the construct of modern society. Sometimes this is PTSD (Post-traumatic Stress Dissorder – post to come) or something less defined. It is a changing point in someones life where they see beyond – as cheesy as it sounds – the matrix. These people – fictional or real – begin to challenge the status quo.
McCandles challenged every person he saw to live a fuller life – less stuff, less safety. He was a HUGE lover of Landon, Witman and others. This is not some response to Adbusters or a Michael Moore documentary. This is a pure and personal attempt to create a world for oneself that is NOT defined by a social demand or vision.
There are some interesting observations in McCandles’ goals and his desire to sublimate the value of the human relationship. I feel this is the key of the destruction that these transcendentalist types inevitably become crushed by. There is a middle ground – but it is important to have the extremes as models.
Is McCandles crazy or is the modern society?


pris bladerunner

Sonny, i robot

Bishop Aliens

Maria Metropolis

3CPO star wars

gigilo joe and the boy AI

terminator

DATA star trek

ash alien

stepford wife

katrina's superdome
Every time Palais de Tokyo has an exposition, they print a corresponding magazine “PALAIS/”. It’s chalked full of the influences and thoughts behind the artist(s) and the works (in french AND ENGLISH – there is a god after all :) ) This current issue PALAIS/ magazine 06 accompanies their group exposition SUPERDOME.
PdT: The Superdome is a mythical stadium: built in 1975 in New Orleans (Louisiana), it has hosted numerous Super Bowls (the American football championship’s final), a Rolling Stones concert, Pope John Paul II, the Republican Convention and refugees of Hurricane Katrina. Paradoxical, the Superdome builds a bridge between the greatest entertainment and the greatest anguish. Inspired by its additional and schizophrenic logic, mixing “I can get no satisfaction” AND “Our Father in heaven”, Marc-Olivier Wahler puts forward SUPERDOME: a new session composed of five solo exhibitions balancing between entertainment and desolation, decibels and prayers, high-tech and chaos, as the continuation of a program testing the notion of the elasticity of art which started at the Palais de Tokyo with Five Billion Years.
After reading about the artists and works, the back of the magazine suggests reading material, music, and films that correlate with this exhibit. It’s at this point that I realize I’m not alone.
LIVRES/BOOKS:
The age of Spiritual machines – Ray Kurzweil
Only Revolutions – Mark Z. Danielewski
The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind – Julian Jaynes
Passport to the Cosmos: Human Transformation and Alien Encounters – John E. Mack
FILMS/MOVIES:
Blade Runner (you saw that one coming, didn’t you?)
Rollerball (I totally forgot this one!)
The Truman Show
Starwars
Musique/Music (aren’t you grateful for the translations?)
Tricky – Angels with Dirty Faces
Carlo Gesualdo – Tenebrae
YOG – Years of Nowhere
François Couperin – Leçons de Ténèbres
A close friend and fellow artist, Cori Crowley just curated a show in San Fransisco – HUM:
HUM responds to the fundamental condition of being human in a modern age – the fact that we are undeniably immersed in the kinetic drone produced by our industrial landscape. How is our experience shaped by an environment that is always humming, whether it be the buzz of a fluorescent light, the whirr of traffic, or the white noise that radiates from our computer screens? How is our relationship with technology evolving? To which industrial forces must we acquiesce and against which will we resist? For this exhibition artists responded to these questions through site-specific works.
The venue chosen for HUM, Project Artaud Theater, is critical in the realization of this exhibition not only because of its commanding architecture, but also because its history is thematically relevant. Built as a canning factory in 1925 and then converted to a performance art venue in the 1970s, Project Artaud Theater embodies an intersection of the industrial and the organic: while the movement of bodies has replaced that of metal and machinery, the industrial shell – a monumental structure – remains.
Bert Bergen often combines his visual work with performative elements. He is currently working on screen-printed wallpaper and enameled sculptures that depict the mythology of humanity’s relationship with nature. David Dampewolf’s manipulation of film alters both the audience’s visual and aural experience. Corey Fogel’s art practice revolves largely around his use of music through series of staged physical experiments that explore movement and narrative. Emily Malina takes a didactic approach to her artwork that often has an emphasis on sociology, gender roles and domesticity through intervention. Andrew Wilson is a video artist who combines humor with his critique of capitalism and the production of desire.
Curated by Cori Crowley and Rachael Cleveland
links:
http://www.odctheater.org/v5/pages/gallery.html
http://www.artaud.org/theater/
Write-up on Flavorpill.com
http://flavorpill.com/sanfrancisco/events/2008/7/16/hum
There will be an ODC Theater performance after the HUM opening. If you would like to stay for the show, you can pre-purchase tickets through the ODC website: www.odcdance.org
Details of the show can also be found at this website.

