LOS ANGELES — Strolling into the huge Scottish Ceremony Masonic Temple to observe Doug Aitken’s Lightscape is like arriving backstage mid-movie at an old school drive-in. Intensive picket struts buttress the set up’s seven large-scale screens — every greater than 20 by 15 toes (six by 4 and a half meters) — that enclose viewers in a panoramic subject of ceaselessly shifting photographs and a soundtrack that features actors’ spoken ruminations; location sounds similar to automotive tires, garden sprinklers, prepare horns, and boots on asphalt; and snatches of minimalist musical compositions.
Constructed within the mid-Twentieth century to deal with the arcane rituals of the Masonic Order fraternity, the Temple is situated close to the Hollywood manufacturing enterprises which have lengthy made LA the epicenter of make-believe. This overlap of function between the economic Dream Manufacturing facility and the lapsed Masonic venture, which created ceremonial areas and corralled invented imagery to remodel the cultish into the cultural, makes the Temple an apt context for Lightscape’s quasi-mystical spectacle.
Aitken is a virtuoso at framing human actions by constructed landscapes out on this planet, going again to his 1999 set up Electrical Earth, which received a prize at that 12 months’s Venice Biennale. Lightscape masterfully shifts by such scenes in simultaneous pairings, triplets, and bigger ensembles. Easy but emotionally charged and dynamic tableaus of a raking gardener, lone drivers on journeys to nowhere, and dancing warehouse staff construct in cycles to numerous peaks with out overarching narrative. The last word type for the piece, then, presents as a centripetal loop, a montage of vignettes with the texture of old-school music movies or adverts for designer denims.
Set up view of Lightscape at Marciano Artwork Basis (picture by Brica Wilcox)
Lightscape’s message appears to be that we’re not simply impelled to comply with however ought to have a good time actions prescribed by trendy infrastructure of highways and retail shops, vehicles, and factories. And nonetheless beset we’re by the pressures of capitalism and modernity, going with the circulate can yield sure pleasures — as an illustration, that of being a shifting physique, even when one responding to machineries’ mandates. In Lightscape, peaks of those human behaviors play out as a solid of assembly-line staff, subway passengers, and pedestrian rave-seekers burst into ecstatic dancing.
Nearly all of depicted scenes are sited on vehicles, metropolis streets, and overhead highways, with prolonged sequences displaying extremely polished trendy properties, yard swimming swimming pools, and luxurious gardens. Although proposing a type of common connectedness of all issues, Lightscape’s settings stay circumscribed to very Southern Californian milieus. Solar-drenched deserts, seashores, suburban residences, and landscaped backyards alternate with networks of roadways, gritty city facades, and subway and warehouse interiors. The soundtrack straddles the ominous (deep wind noises, pulsing rhythms) and the transcendent (angelic voices), with music excerpted from Philip Glass and Steve Reich compositions. Semi-melodic voiceovers repeat banal mantras; one hooded, strolling lady muses, “Every day, the seasons change.”
It’s the looks of animals sporadically by Lightscape that leaves unsure the query of machinations in our shared world. Non-human creatures make cameos all through the piece, reminding us that they, too, are looking for some place or traction within the constructed world. A tentative coyote briefly wanders a metropolis sidewalk, a giant cat prowls inside a moderne residence in a number of longer appearances, and a recurrent horse carries a cowboy by diversified landscapes. These city adaptors don’t have a look at ease on this planet. They’re mascots, victims of the human impulse that marginalizes nature to the perimeters of pavement and infrastructure. Like Lightscape’s actors and immersed viewers, they’re careening by the detritus of constructed environments, succumbing to the rhythms of commerce and its mechanisms, awash of their stimulations.
Set up view of Lightscape at Marciano Artwork Basis (picture by Michael Anthony Hernandez)
Lightscape: Doug Aitken continues on the Marciano Artwork Basis (4357 Wilshire Boulevard, Mid-Wilshire, Los Angeles) by March 15. The exhibition was organized by the artist.