Arts Benicia's Artist in Residency (ABAIR) Project for Installation Artists
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Installation
Open Hours: |
Exhibition: August, 12 - 20 12:00-5:00 pm Thursday - Sunday |
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| Artists Reception: Thursday, August, 12, 7:00-9:00 pm |
Family Art Day: |
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| Artist Talk: Saturday, August, 21, 1:00 pm |
From July 20 to August
20, 2010, Arts Benicia opened its doors to installation artists Alex Potts
and John Ruszel. These artists were given the unique opportunity to create
an installation in Arts Benicia's gallery space over the course of four weeks,
a substantial length of time that is unusual in the art world.
For this project, Potts and Ruszel created a "site-specific installation".
In this contemporary form of art, the artist deals with the totality of a
given space. Just as painters will use colors, lines, and shapes to create
art on a canvas, installation artists create art within the space of a gallery
using a variety of materials. In this way, they create an environment in which
the viewer not only looks at the art, but is immersed in it.
Good craftsmanship and a comprehensive use of space were important to both
artists. With over 2,000 square feet of gallery space at Arts Benicia to "play
around in", they were able to explore the possibilities of their art
on a much larger scale.
John Ruszel said: "In the past, my sculptures have been limited in scale
and scope by the spaces where I can install them. The ABAIR program will give
me the opportunity to more thoroughly explore and experiment with my ideas
in the much larger context of the Arts Benicia Gallery."

John Ruszel
The ABAIR project also provided both artists with ample time to work out ideas
in Arts Benicia's galleries, which is situated in the heart of Benicia's historic
Arsenal District. Installation artists are usually forced to work within the
constraints of a typical exhibition timeline. They may need a few weeks to
create something in the space, but are given four days, which is what a painter
or sculptor would need. With the ABAIR program we gave them four weeks to
work in the space, but the final work was displayed for just one week.
Alex Potts said: "Having installed large-scale, interactive sound sculpture
pieces in various venues across the U.S. and Europe on often very tight deadlines,
I'm very excited to engage in a residency at Arts Benicia where I will have
significantly more time to install new work, allowing me to give more consideration
to the environment in which the art will live and different ways in which
the audience may interact with it."
Alex Potts is a sound sculptor who works with gourds. Alex places speakers
in each of the dozens of gourds hanging in his installations and uses them
to amplify ambient sound. The gourds are arranged in the space to create sweeping
shapes that transform it visually as well as sonically.

Alex Potts
Artist Alex Potts said: "Gourds are significant, as they are known to
be the first plant domesticated by humans. They traveled around the Earth
millennia ago during human migrations - from Africa, through Asia, to the
Americas. Used as vessels since ancient times and throughout countless cultures
today as musical instrument resonators, gourds are used in this installation
as vessels to carry the sounds of people."
Both artists looked forward to expanding upon their previous artwork.
Ruszel said: "With this installation, I plan to expand my explorations
of physical forces such as gravity and tension to include the more subtle
and subjective relationships between separate structures - the ways that components
need not touch to interact, and the ways that parts can form a whole. Hopefully,
these structures will press people to move beyond the regular viewer/artwork
mindset and experience the work more intimately."
Potts said: "The ABAIR residency will permit me to create an installation
piece that will uniquely relate to Arts Benicia's gallery in the historic
Benicia Arsenal. I plan to explore and show new interactive kinetic pieces
that expand upon my previous suspended sound sculptures while involving the
community in tuning and giving feedback on the "living" nature of
the work."
Alex Potts holds a Master of Fine Arts (MFA) degree from San Francisco State
College. His work has been shown widely in the Bay Area, and also in New York
and Copenhagen, Denmark.
John Ruszel recently earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from Cornish College
of the Arts in Seattle, Washington.
Over the course of the ABAIR project, the public was able to engage with the
artists at work on the weekends of 7/24, 7/31, and 8/7 from 1-5 pm. After
the work was completed, the gallery was open Thursday-Sunday, 12-5pm, from
August 12-August 20.