Interview by City Magazine

Name:  Mary Mattingly    

Based in: NYC (Live: LIC, Studio: LES)

Type of art: Photography and Sculpture

 

CM: What has been the highlight of your career so far? MM: The highlight of my practice is the project I am currently working on called the Waterpod, because the process is very challenging and when it is done it will really transform my life, and my live-work spaces in an experimental way, and Im not sure what the outcome will be.  The triennial at the International Center of Photography, titled Ecotopia, was a big deal for me because the exhibitions featured image was mine, and that attention has brought me many opportunities.  Currently, my work is part of the Prix Pictet, an international award recognizing sustainability in photography with a series of shows beginning with the Palais de Tokyo in Paris.

 

Who has been the biggest artistic inspiration in your life? To limit this as much as possible: Franois Truffaut, Constant Nieuwenhuys, Buckminster Fuller, and Samuel Beckett.

 

What are you currently working on now?  I am currently working on two bodies of work: Anatomy of Melancholy and Nomadographies. Anatomy of Melancholy is a study of both sculptural installations and actual spaces that provoke feelings of melancholy, based on the failure of an ideal or failing of a would-be utopia.  For instance, I documented the Biosphere II outside of Tucson, Arizona, a Titan Missile Silo, and Theodore Kaczynskis cabin.  Nomadographies includes photography, sculpture, and video and tracks a lone pilgrim in a hybrid bicycle.  I am also creating a living structure called the Waterpod that will be completed in 2009.  To do this, I am collaborating with an artistic and scientific team to make it an autonomous space created from all recycled materials, where we will experiment living in this permanently mobile structure made for the rising tides. 

 

 

Le Prix Pictet & le dveloppement durable / Nouvelle distinction pour les photographes, Photographie Magazine, July 2008

 

Dark Matter, by Mary Mattingly

 

There has been much talk about climate change. But not much about where we will see its first impact: water. Flooding. Drought. Contamination. Water is the vector of climate change. By 2010 an estimated 40 per cent of the worlds poorest people will lack access to clean water. Two hundred million may be physically or economically displaced. This is not the future. This is now.

 

July 2008 - VSD Magazine, "Vision d'artiste Apres le Deluge"

 

VSD: In Seven Firm Oligopoly and in The Overaccumulation crisis, you show a pessimistic vision of the future of the earth. Do you really think it could happen to our planet?

MM: I grew up in a flood-prone area and would regularly worry about, clean up after, and protect against floods. During my youth, water was a controversial topic in the town, as pesticides such as DDT from the surrounding farms had polluted the well water, and buying city water was a new solution to the pesticides found in the water table. I really started researching issues surrounding water when its privatization started to become more prevalent. I was reading articles about riots in Cochabamba, Bolivia, because the citys residents were not able to afford the price of the newly privatized water. That same year, the news described cataclysmic, devastating floods from the UK to Cambodia, and Madagascar to Mozambique. There was immense flood damage that year. Simultaneously, here in the United States, bottled water and jugs of water are an essential commodity in our society. Watching the position of water drift from being a natural resource to a commodity just literally scared me. It continues to scare me that, as an overall trend, people are depending on buying things, while forgetting how to make things, or, for instance, depending on a large levee and relying on an inadequate evacuation system. These are quick fixes for a global trend of not taking care of nature, and of no longer knowing how to.

 

I began working on wearable homes in 2001, largely as a result of the year 2000, during which I moved five times. I imagined that I was acting as a model for future nomads, as now we are beginning the culmination; to a point where everything is flexible, because it needs to be, because living is about survival, functional space is a luxury, products all want to be smaller, houses all want to be prefab, and waterfront property is on a market downturn. A wearable home should not only be equipped for the city nomad but for the future nomad who will need to travel through each of the prevailing climates of the near future: arctic, desert, and waterlogged tundra, illustrating different modes of survival.

 

For my recent work, I have been traveling to places that were and are in danger of drought, in need of water, or that have an excess of water due to melting glaciers or storms. I was able to experience hardships from lack of water and difficulties communities face from changing climates first hand, to study floodgates and rising tides, and at times I was fortunate enough to be able to help in relief efforts. With the inclusion of sculptures, the images that I make border fiction and reality. Depending on the particular image and the sentiment that I want to evoke in the viewer, I use 3D imaging programs and digital editing programs to create or alter initial photographs so that they may tell a story and suggest a feeling that borders between a warning and a reality I believe we are heading towards.

 

Are you inspired by the work of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, IPCC about the future of climate? Where do you find inspiration?

In October of 2005, the United Nations University predicted 50 million environmental refugees by the year 2010, as the result of environmental crisis and slow-motion disasters due to the instability of infrastructures resulting in famine, drought, disease, sea-level rise. I try to figure out survival solutions daily, especially for the nomadic, whom I feel will become a population majority in time. I have learned a lot through studying Inuit cultures that have been surviving in extreme cold for centuries, and nomadic desert tribes like the Tuareg tribe in Africa. This also helps me learn more about human nature and fragility, needs, strengths, and our intuition. I have worked much of this information into the Wearable Homes. I am inspired by a lot of work by different organizations including the IPCC. I read blogs related to the environment and technology, I regularly read magazines like The Economist and Mother Jones, am inspired by attending conferences, listening to a variety of podcasts, and reading a variety of theory as well as fiction.

 

Do you know what scientists think about your art? Did some of them come for example in New York, at Robert Mann Gallery, to see it?

The scientists I have met are largely intrigued by what I am trying to do, which is partly to add imagination to ideas based in science. Some own installations or photographs I have made. I have made inventions that are do-it-yourself interpretations and solutions to problems like purifying dirty water, for instance, by reusing three plastic bottles to create your own easy-to-make water purification system. My urge to make useful, easy to use and easy to recreate inventions comes from the need I feel to relearn people on how to live with nature, because we will need to. Some of what I try to express in my photos is the danger that comes with forgetting how to make things. We become dependent on having the option to buy everything, and that gives the sellers so much power over us. The Waterpod project is allowing me the chance to work closely with more scientists and inventors.

 

What about the Waterpod, is it currently floating around Manhattan?

The Waterpod will launch May 2009. Initially, I had planned to launch it this year, but the city of New York promised more support if I were to wait a year to do the project. This alongside the fact that in December and January I went to the hospital for two separate operations due to appendicitis. The additional year to work on the project has allowed me to expand it a great deal, I am now working with three other artists and a growing team of volunteer scientists and green builders. We now have more time and are gathering more support to do a wider experimentation with materials and the portability of the overall design.

 

What is the message you want to send to people?

I want to raise questions about the role of the individual in a society and on our earth. I want people to question their proscribed societal roles, and be independent from markets and other systems of control. I want to motivate people to feel that they have the ability to change things, make things, to create and recreate reality.

 

What do you think about the behaviour of US government about climatic problems?

The United States was, as of 2005, the largest single emitter of carbon dioxide from the burning of fossil fuels. The US government is largely ignorant and extremely slow in dealing with climatic problems, and it is apparent that this is because of the interest in big business. The fact that the government will not ratify the Kyoto Protocol until there is participation by developing nations is extremely immature and irresponsible. On the other hand, there is a very large grassroots movement (and not-so-grassroots movement) in individual states, towns, cities, in Silicon Valley, within organizations, and on individual levels.

 

July 2008 - Prix Pictet Shortlist Winners, Financial Times

 

 

June 1, 2008  - Benjamin Genocchio, New York Times, "Today's Landscapes, Tomorrow's Dystopia"

There are a lot of ways to depict the landscape. You can faithfully reproduce what you see; you can improvise, painting in an impromptu manner without prior preparation or thought; or you can imagine a fictional space. All of these options are sampled in Future Tense: Reshaping the Landscape, the Neuberger Museum of Arts behemoth of a summer painting show.

 

Even with 10,000 square feet of exhibition space spread across a pair of giant galleries, this exhibition of works by 60 artists still feels packed. But while half the works here probably would have done the trick, few joys in museumgoing can compare with the delights of an intelligently themed show.

 

Theme shows are about ideas, and Future Tense is no exception. It was conceived by its curators, Dede Young and Avis Larson, to demonstrate ways in which the age-old genre of landscape painting is changing and evolving to reflect more contemporary issues. It is a smart, alluring and wide-ranging curatorial thesis.

 

The landscape tradition originated in the Netherlands in the 17th century, but didnt really begin to flourish as an art form for another century or so. In the 19th century it came to be associated with Romanticism and the picturing of nature as a sublime, godly creation only to fall out of favor in the 20th century.

 

These days, landscape painting survives as a charming vestige of the past photography and film have all but replaced it as the dominant means of recording the world around us. They are faster and more accurate and far more accessible. But while painting itself may be arcane, this show suggests that a great deal of contemporary landscape painting is nonetheless timely and relevant.

The exhibition also includes a handful of photographs, sculptures and drawings, all of them related to the landscape tradition. Among this group is a pair of intriguing new photographs by Mary Mattingly. Her work focuses on environmental issues, from rising sea levels to the scarcity of and global competition for fresh water. Building Paradise (2007) depicts menacing ocean waves encroaching on eroded shoreline.

 

 Future Tense: Reshaping the Landscape, Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase College, 735 Anderson Hill Road, Purchase, through July 20.

 

 

May 2008 - Earth Bytes: Engaging Dystopia, Sun Valley Plum

Mary Mattingly, The Family of Man, 2007

 

Anne Reed Gallery's current exhibition, Engaging Dystopia, is a thought-provoking and visually exciting exhibition of artists responding to imminent ecological disaster. Joshua Jensen-Nagle creates poignant photographs of the animals with whom we share our world; Mathias Kessler brings stunning photographs of the shrinking ice flows of Greenland, and Mary Mattingly shares her vision of humans in a starkly beautiful new future. Plum TV covered the exhibition for its Earth Bytes segment. The entire story can be seen at: http://sunvalley.plumtv.com/stories/earth_bytes_engaging_distopia

 

For more information and images of all the work in the exhibition go to www.annereedgallery.com

 

 

 

 

 

December 2007 - Gundel-Maria Busse, Schon Und Schrecklich, Main Echo

File written by Adobe Photoshop 4.0

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

November 2007 - Von Sylvia Staude, Holt Uns Endlich Ab, Frankfurter Rundschau

 

November 2007 - Le Monde Magazine, France "Faut-Il Climatiser La Terre?"

 

 

 

 

 

 

Drome Magazine, Italy "Frontier, Mary Mattingly", November 2007

The Expedition, Mary Mattingly, 2007

 

 

 - PHOTO September 2007

Miranda Sharp, Work by Mary Mattingly, C-Photo Magazine

Issue 5: Mary Mattingly Portfolio excerpt Brownday, 25 x 50 Digital C-Print

 

July 19, 2007

Stephen Vincent Kobasa, New Haven Advocate. Stranger Than Truth"

What will we see at the end of the world?  July 24, 2007

Mary Mattingly, Hibernation, 2006.

 

What will we see at the end of the world? The long starving or the brief flicker of detonation? Mary Mattingly has produced some photographs from a possible future

 

Stephen Vincent Kobasa, Thursday, July 19, 2007 New Haven Advocate. Stranger Than Truth: What will we see at the end of the world? Post-apocalyptic nomads are just the beginning.

 

Neuberger Museum Interview 04/2008

In what ways does your work reflect a concern with environmental changes?

My work focuses on many environmental elements including water, from rising sea levels to privatization to water purification, to the effects on land and people in a situation lacking water, desertification of land, flooding of land, and mobilization of people.  Aside from being the only non-replaceable element on earth, water expresses change, movement, and relates to transmigration. 

When I create sculptures, the majority of the elements used are found objects.  I create machines and structures that are cobbled-together to represent new ways of living, surviving, and existing. 

I am concerned with the survival of people in a changing environment and at a time of cultural and economic change that is fueled by globalization as well as our changing ecologies.   How will these changes affect us? How will we prepare?  What will we do, will we create? Wander? Search?

 

From what sources do you gather information pertinent to your art?

My information-gathering process begins with my immediate, daily surroundings.  Whether I am residing in a city or countryside, I am affected by everything around me.  My daily practice consists of reading newspapers (NY Times, Financial Times usually), magazines (Economist, Wired, National Geographic lately), blogs (Worldchanging.org among a dozen others).  I often look at data visualizations of information and occasionally watch movies, usually read nonfiction, right now I am reading Nomadology: The War Machine  by Deleuze and Guattari, as well as Whiteheads Adventures of Ideas .

 

If you feel artists have a sense of social responsibility, how does your work reflect this? 

I do feel that as humans, it is our job to have a level of compassion for the world and others, and that encompasses a sense of social responsibility.  Personally, I feel a deep concern with my realization that humans are headed for multiple disasters because of the way that we exploit the earth and each other.  I feel paralyzed if I feel that I am not doing anything, even the smallest amount, about this.

 

How does the prevailing point of view in your work connect to the way you choose to live?

One of my current projects is the Waterpod.  The Waterpod is a floating sculptural Living Structure designed as a new eco-habitat for the global warming epoch. It will launch in New York in May, 2009, from the Newtown Creek between Brooklyn and Queens, navigate down the East River, explore the waters of New York Harbor, and stop at each of the five boroughs. As a completely sustainable, navigable living space, the Waterpod showcases the critical importance of the environment and serves as a model for new living technologies. The Waterpod is an extension of body, of home, and of community, its only permanence being change, flow, and multiplicity. With this project, I hope to encourage innovation as we visualize the future fifty to one hundred years from now.

 

Artists have the ability to grasp momentous changes, so how can the arts have an influence over public consciousness?

The Arts can have an influence over public consciousness by illuminating what is important and presenting it in profound, indelible ways.  We can describe, depict, inform, and inspire, depending on how our work speaks to others.

 

How can art institutions, such as museums, make a crucial difference to the future?

Museums and art institutions can make a crucial difference to the future by elevating art and maintaining its position as ennobler, inspirer, and instigator.

 

If you feel environmental activism is a movement that will define a generation, or help define the beginning o the millennium, what would you say is key?

I would say that repetition is key.  As society reaches a tipping-point (I think this will be a large-scale disaster of some sort) if there is enough information reverberating in the sound waves, and in the general airs of conversations, the two will be associated, and this can create change.  It s like thinking about Uncle Tom s Cabin  as a tipping-point for a large percentage of the American population to realize that slavery of humans needed to stop.  We don t know what the tipping point will be, but the information and the facts need to be told repeatedly to a public who doesn t want to understand, and in this case, to big business, who doesn t want the public to understand.

 

In what way is your choice of medium influenced by the statement you want to make?

I like to work with photography and video because of what great tools they are for storytelling, especially the latter.  Photography is still associated with repeating what is physically there, and when we see a photograph, we want to believe it is real.  The Waterpod, to me, is creating the future for the present day, it is literally extracting some of my photographic elements (Seven-Firm Oligopoly, for example) from their place and time, and expelling them into the present, physical world.

 

How is your career fed/dueled by politics?

The money that helps make political decisions interests me more than the politicians who enact and implement them.  I don t follow politics as closely as I follow industry and market forces. 

 

 

Cover story by Jackie Delematre, Gimme Shelter, New York Press, April 2007

Japanese Esquire Magazine, "Photography in New York," April 2007

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

September 2006

Karen Rosenberg, An Inconvenient Half-Truth, New York Magazine,

(Photo: Courtesy of the Robert Mann Gallery)

In Mary Mattinglys photo series Second Nature, the Earth has been submerged, and the remaining humans eke out isolated, nomadic existences. Her images may be staged and digitally enhanced, but like the other photographs and videos in ICPs triennial Ecotopia, they seize on the very real anxieties created by a few seasons of hurricanes, tsunamis, and record-breaking heat. From Oregons clear-cut forests to Israels pine groves planted over the ruins of evacuated Arab towns, these artists show the natural environment as less a refuge than a global battleground.  Ecotopia, International Center of Photography; September 14 through January 7

 

 

 

 

 

Ecotopia, Aperture, September 2006

 

 

 

Brigid Hughes, A Solution to an Inconvenient Truth, A Public Space, September 2006

 

 

 

JAMES WAGNER

Mary Mattingly at White Box:  Fore Cast: An Environmental Disaster Opera installation and performance [an image from the performance of December 19]

 

 

Because of the ambience (shadows, respectful movement and low buzz) of dozens of my fellow acolytes at the opening reception on Tuesday, "Fore Cast", Mary Mattingly's ambitious "Environmental Disaster Opera" currently in engagement at White Box seemed to me to play almost as much as a recreation of a narrow historic scene as a prediction of a much larger and horrible future world. It was my birthday. I was in a very good mood, so I found myself thinking of the legendary (and much-lamented) "happenings" of the 1960's Cold War era as I was contemplating the artist's somewhat less happy theatrical representation of a world engaged in the details of survival during World War IV.

 

An excerpt from the press release provides a little more context:

 

Entering a water-filled and truncated landscape, viewers witness the land's predicted end-state, a reversion to its primeval condition and a topographical perspective of a sick new world. The marshy waterscape is the setting for the future of a civilization ensnared in an unceasing loop of WWIV, a war Albert Einstein foreshadowed as being fought with sticks and stones. Mary Mattingly creates an installation explains the tragic outcomes of this hypothesized war in the not-so-distant future.

 

Multiple video projectors arranged in a semi-circle fill the walls of White Box and present a "Fore Cast" that will loop for six days and one hour. (A new week, according to Mary Mattingly's proprietary uniform time scale, derived from ancient Assyrian and Babylonian astronomical methodology and translated to a system for future use.) The videos play continuously in White Box's waterlogged space. The main screen portrays WWIV, fought by six groups of combatants ---The World Economic Forum, The Council on Foreign Relations, Bechtel, Nestl, The United Nations, and B.R.I.C.--- colluding to capture and assert political and economic control over a shattered and borderless world. The belligerents' leaders plot together in a corporate conference rooms, ultimately degenerating into intercontinental world-scale conflict fought with the weapons of Cain and Abel, the war unfolding in disastrous environments everywhere.

 

Unlike the war itself, "Fore Cast" is going to have a very short run: When it closes at 1:00 am on Christmas morning it will have been open to the public for only six days and one hour (the doors opened the morning of December 19). There will be another live performance during the closing reception at Midnight, December 24.

 

March 2006

Martha Schwendener,

 

Mary Mattingly

Robert Mann Gallery

 

Loss-Accountability of Top-Down Ontologies, 2005, color photograph, 30 x 30

 

 

In a statement posted on the wall in her recent exhibition at Robert Mann Gallery, Mary Mattingly voiced a few concerns driving her new body of work. I think about technology, she writes, the constant mediator between you and me As technology expands exponentially, we will reach a point where we exist as wanderers in our own worlds, participants in simulated communities. She goes on: I think about mobility how it will become necessary for us to be able to move freely with no ties to a permanent home, due to environmental changes and the necessity to participate in a global economy.

 

 

But while Mattingly ruminates on technology and mobility, her lush, carefully crafted C-prints offer visions of a world thats less about expansion than decline: post-apocalyptic landscapes vaguely reminiscent of barren Yves Tanguy visions, in which civilization seems to have been overwhelmed by vast oceans and overgrown, some of them populated by aimless, ominous figures. Technology in these works is diminished, ad hoc, and scrappy. In constructing her images, the artist builds sculptures out of ragged bits of fabric, wire, wood, and metal, then situates them so as to suggest jerry-rigged communication devices in a world that has devolved into a posttech Dark Age comparable to the one detailed in David Mitchells novel Cloud Atlas (2004). Loss-Accountability of Top-Down Ontologies, 2005, depicts, with some digital help, an illuminated CVS sign nestled into a copse of pines on a deserted northern island a Romantic tableau reminiscent of an Asher B. Durand painting, reconfigured here in color photography as luminous as an image from an oil

companys annual report. Hirshworld 2, 2004, another island-scape, improbably hosts a Filenes department store, while Go Forth and Multiply, 2005, depicts a watery world in which trees sculpted out of paper-mch (one such object was exhibited in the middle of the gallery) bear multiple fruits, like an Eden turned bioengineering disaster. The figures are another story. Clad in costumes that conjure Commes des Garons or Philippe Starck via an array of egregious pointy appendages, they look like characters whove just wandered out of an avant-garde opera. In Brownday, 2004, three of them stand, posed, waist-deep in misty waters. Possibilities for Multilateral Communication, 2004, captures a man wearing a futuristic version of a Breton-style bonnet crouched on a barren beach. The alienated figure, sitting in front of a contraption that looks like a homemade radar dish, becomes in this context both advanced and anachronistic, harking back to Caspar David Freidrichs Lone Monk by the Sea, 1809, as he stares into the abyss. But while the humans (or humanoids?) populating these images must resort to making communications devices out of junkyard refuse, Mattinglys tools are state of the art. Her props, costumes, and backdrops (some based on photographs taken on trips through the US and Scandinavia) are digitally manipulated and/or based on downloaded images. Many of the finished works function like film stills, their subjects frozen mid-action, and the precise applications of her sculptures-cum-devices are usually implied rather than overt. In both respects, her aesthetic resembles Matthew Barneys and one cant help feeling that a

similar move into film and video might allow her to sidestep the provision of the contextual helping hands offered by titles and wall texts, and delve still deeper into her post-everything cosmology.

 

-Martha Schwendener

 

February 2006

Eric Gelber, Eric Gelber on Mary Mattingly at Robert Mann Gallery

Mary Mattingly: Second Nature

 

By ERIC GELBER

 

 

COVER February 2006: Hirshworld 2 2004, chromogenic dye coupler print, 30 x 60 inches

All images courtesy Robert Mann Gallery

 

Mary Mattinglys photography explores many themes and concepts: home, travel, cartography, human relationships, human interaction with the organic world, the corporate entities that have influenced and shaped so much of our lives, language, the privatization of natural resources such as fresh water, the blurring of the boundaries between reality and virtual reality. To do this the artist has invented an imaginary terrain populated by navigators who have wearable homes and are mentally and materially equipped to survive a rootless existence. Her navigators are humans who have learned to survive in a landscape reconfigured by the rising tides.

 

The photographs in this exhibition are all extrapolations. Mattinglys work is Science Fiction (SF) in the sense that it is predominantly cerebral, focused on ideas. That is why they feel a bit cold. Humanistic values are forsaken and technology and humans become one in her vision of the future. As Carl Freedman writes in Critical Theory and Science Fiction (2000), SF is of all genres the one most devoted to historical specificity, for the SF world is not only one different in time or place from our own, but one whose chief interest is precisely the difference that such difference makes and, in addition, one whose difference is nonetheless contained within a cognitive continuum with the actual.

 

Exploration of the artists website [marymattingly.com] helps one learn about the visionary objects and garments appearing in these photographs. On a page titled theevolutionoflanguage Mattingly provides us with definitions of 26 new words, which are hybrids of existing words or word roots.  This generation of something new through the process of combining fragments of existing systems parallels what Mattingly does with her photographs. These terms help us to understand Mattinglys extrapolations concerning human consciousness and the material and natural world.

 

The nomadic humans of the future will have accessories -- elements as the artist puts it -- which will help mitigate the alienation they feel due to being unable to discern one architectural space from the next. They will wear celcerforms to protect against the growth of cancerous tumors. The headiest accessory described in this dictionary is the G-Simpod, a handheld device which provides for every need, at least in a virtual sense. One emergency button on this device makes the user feel warm and fuzzy in his/her brain and erogenous zones, and inspires them to spend money in a mall-space or store-space. The second emergency button satisfies all of the users cravings, such as hunger, by stimulating the brain or hypothalamus with electrodes. Mattingly suggests that this device is a God-substitute, providing graphics and sounds that enable the user to comfortably avoid human interaction by transforming the intangible into the tangible.

 

While it becomes apparent that some of Mattinglys futurology is tongue-in-cheek, it is clear that she concurs with the writings of Ray Kurzweil (who is quoted on her website), especially such optimistic notions put forth by the inventor/philosopher as We will literally multiply the intelligence of our civilization by merging with, and supplementing our biological intelligence, with this profoundly more capable nonbiological intelligence by a factor of billions, ultimately trillions. And that will dramatically change the nature of human civilization. That in a nutshell is what the singularity is all about. Because Mattingly believes that we can capture our authenticity through technology rather than through nature, her images are more earnest than ironic.

 

Mattingly uses digital photography to create images of a world she believes humans will one day live in. Her imaginings are based on current scientific beliefs, which she imaginatively builds upon. But they are also critical science-fictional estrangements, in that they provide a critique of the homogenization of the environment by corporations. Mattinglys photographs suggest that in the future we will be forced (or choose) to live completely nomadic lives or compete with corporate superpowers for the few remaining land masses or tiny islands that still exist. Humans will transform into comfortably numb spiritually attuned navigators, entities who no longer distinguish between reality and virtual reality, will be forced to live transient existences, constructing portable shells or ad hoc dwellings to protect themselves against unstable weather patterns, and will comfort themselves with technology.

 

Wearable homes, billowing, saggy, multi-pocketed garments, will act as mobile storage containers for security devices, vitamin supplements, and the above-noted gadgetry. This new transience will not lead to dystopia but will bring people together in accordance with The New Way, or the church of the customer. Mattingly imagines future populations becoming one through the virtual spaces of the net and building self-sufficient barges or islands where navigators can spend their days. We will measure time in a different manner, breaking the day up into four sections rather than the current arrangement of day and night.

 

People in these photographs are completely inward. They dont address the viewer or other people within the frame and they are completely absorbed by the imaginary devices Mattingly has equipped them with. They cling to them as they wander around the barren landscape or tinker with them in a complete state of absorption. Figures are half submerged in water, are plunged in a dense wall of fog or are completely alone on a desolate shoreline. Their facial expressions are blank. There is no room for angst or despair in this futurologists vision.

 

 

Mary Mattingly Always On 2005

chromogenic dye coupler print, 29-1/2 x 22-1/4 inches

 

 

In these photographs we see navigators and re-imagined landscapes created through a variety of means: there is seamless digital merging of imagery created with 3-D imaging programs like Bryce or Maya, topographical photographs taken in different parts of the world, and posed photographs of models in costume with hand made props. This blending of the completely fabricated and the actual increases the verisimilitude of Mattinglys vision of the future. Not unlike good SF books, Mattingly challenges our sense of the stability of reality by insisting upon the contingency of the present order of things.

 

Mattingly is so dedicated to her inventions and the belief that one day they will be used to alleviate the suffering of populations dealing with limited natural resources, that she spent a month living in the desert outside of Bend, Oregon experimenting with prototypes that appear in these photographs. I wore a wearable home, equipped with a toolbelt, a tazer and pack of 9V batteries, solar-recording equipment from sponsor companies like Spy Emporium, pockets for a months worth of vitamins and other compact food sources, compass, diary, analog camera, and a prototype Blackberry that would pick up signals as far as 50 mi. out of range. She also admits to living a vagabond existence, moving over five times within a short span of time. So her visual predictions about the fate of the earth, her jarring cognitive estrangements, have a personal dimension, are perhaps the wish fulfillments of a person with a restless temperament. These nomadic figures could also be stand ins for the wandering photographer who leads a sort of transient existence, searching out new subject matter with camera in hand.

 

A number of these carefully constructed C-prints are mediations on the tenacity, longevity and hubris of corporate entities through time. In Go Forth and Multiply, 2005, weird manufactured tree shapes loom in a flooded coastal zone. It is hard to make out what is sprouting from or dangling from these faux trees, but the actual sculptural prop appearing in the photograph is placed in the middle of the gallery and we can examine it more closely. Plastic dates, bananas, pineapples, and apples hang from the tree and all of them are branded, Banana Republic, Lexus, Nestl, etc. Considering that corporations are currently copyrighting parts of our genetic code this doesnt seem so far fetched. In a darkly humorous and enigmatic C-print titled Hirshworld 2, 2004, there are two desolate looking tree filled islets in close proximity to a cleared islet with an ominous looking Filenes Basement on it. This retail store/evil castle has an ominous presence in the waterscape because we dont know what relationship exists between it and the humans who pass it by on their ad hoc flotation devices.

 

In the most disturbing C-print in the exhibit, Loss-Accountability of Top-Down Ontologies, 2005, we see a tree filled islet with an ominous CVS sign with accompanying digital billboard advertising a sale on bleach rising above the trees, and a long metal utility pole with a security camera mounted on top of it, scanning the surrounding waters. This photograph is not a prediction of the future, but it does estrange us from our present reality. A chainstore located on a desolate islet surrounded by large stretches of water is absurd but it forces us to think about how ubiquitous corporate entities are in our lives.

 

Hopefully Mattingly will challenge herself in the future by adding more layers to her extrapolations, different scientific concepts, some theoretical and some backed up by more concrete evidence. Her constructive, photographic, and sculptural imaginings are fanciful but it is important to the artist that we believe that they could be a reality someday. Her discovery that digital manipulation of photographic material can be used to explore possible futures for the human race and the planet is the most exciting thing about her work.

 

She believes that when humans and technology arrive at a common center it will be a positive event, the necessity of nomadic lifestyles in the future will be aided by and made tolerable with the help of the portable technology we have slowly come to love and depend on. Interestingly, Mattingly tries to convince us in her photographs that humans will become more humanized or self aware through their deepening dependence upon technology. Although people might consider the landscapes in these photographs to be dreary and barren (There will be little difference between here and there.), the images try to convince us that the homogenization of the landscape through cataclysm might free us up from  dependence upon possessions and property and allow us to explore inner spaces without hindrance.

 

ERIC GELBER is Associate Editor at artcritical.com. An artist as well as a critic, he has also written for Sculpture, Artnet and the New York Sun.

 

 

 

Joshua Johnson, "Mary Mattingly at Robert Mann".

Mary Mattingly at Robert Mann by joshua johnson, January 2006

 

Evoking a post-Katrina New Orleans scavenged by Techno-nomads was probably not Mary Mattinglys intention, but that image gives credence to her ability to produce work with hermeneutic flexibility. Now showing at the Robert Mann gallery, Mattingly produces work that draws from a variety media and disciplines. Her digitally manipulated photographs give us a glimpse of a water-soaked world where the boundaries between nature and technology blur and become indistinguishable. These images, often hazy and heavy with atmosphere, open into a near deserted world, where lonely travelers, dressed in costumes that recall something between the movie Dune and Pieter Brueghal, attempt to survive on the gleanings of a post-globalized society.

 

Mattingly, in her writings, often confronts the increasing homogenization of culture, and the destruction of the environment as major sources of inspiration for her work. Perhaps, then, it is not so far off to draw parallels with New Orleans when approaching these images. The disaster that is Katrina may have been the result, not only of a distressed environment, but also of a political system that is increasing nationalistic in a globalized world. Let us not forget that Washington has focused most of its energies on the war in Iraq (a go-at-it-alone war that has lead to no small amount of ill-will in the rest of the world), leaving FEMA with reduced resources and incompetent management. The sort of post-apocalyptic culture that Mattingly envisions is a kind of cautionary moral, warning us of the dangers of the rapidly changing political and environmental landscape.

 

That is not to say that her work is didactic in any sense. The themes that Mattingly has touched upon, while contemporary, also maintain a sense of timelessness. Her work draws upon the sort of binary opposites essential to the structural properties of mythologynature vs. technology, man vs. nature, etc.and weaves them into a cohesive aesthetic. Like Matthew Barney, her work builds upon the new media experiments of the last decade, and, rather than focusing on their formal characteristics, wields them in service of a larger narrative. This narrative, while it carries a warning, also holds the hope that the continuing intersection of cultures and the environment generates a world where man, however lonely he may seem, can still survive, even when he appears lost in the sea.

 

January 2006

The New York Sun,  "Second Nature at Robert Mann Gallery."

 

 

 

 

Shows of note Friday, May 13, 2005 Mary Mattingly

What to make of this exhibit by Mattingly, a graduate of New York's Parsons School of Design and Yale fellowship. The artist is presenting new photographs, video and installation work at the Pacific Northwest College of Art's Philip Feldman Gallery in a show co-presented by Disjecta. Mattingly uses drawings on Plexiglas, film and Styrofoam to "instruct and construct an environment of the future. It will be interactive and, with a bit of luck, frighteningly lucid." Her works -- described as "somehow ethereal beyond ethereal; a vision of the future so clairvoyant and harmonized and beautifully rendered that the format she works in is barely recognizable as one of the present" -- are, according to the release, based on work Mattingly did while in residence at Duende in Rotterdam, where she "delved into art prophesy as a comment on contemporary society. Developing a new rational for mobility and convenience, she introduced the world to wearable homes as an abstract concept and a modern reality. . . ." She's got us thinking already. Pacific Northwest College of Art, Philip Feldman Gallery, 1241 N.W. Johnson St.

The Portland Mercury,Review, We Go Round and Round in the Night, May 2005.

We Go Round and Round in the Night by Ryan Dirks

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Video still from I Die Daily

 

We Go Round and Round in the Night

Mary Mattingly, PNCA's Feldman Gallery 1241 NW Johnson, through June 25

"I believe wearable homes will be a necessity in the future," said artist Mary Mattingly, seated in front of a small gathering at PNCA's studios. "They will have pockets for your medications and artificial arms so you don't have to actually touch others"

Part science fiction novel and part political critique, Mattingly's work explores a world that is both bleak and alluring. Her current exhibit at PNCA's Feldman Gallery utilizes photography, film, and installation, touching on the related themes of corporate monopolization, globalization, and the increasing atomization of the individual. "Nomads," "island builders," and "survivors" wander desolate landscapes of sand and water, crafting strange technological machines in homage to a consumer society that has defeated them. A lone figure--draped in one of Mattingly's flowing wearable homes--traverses a watery infinity like a zealous pilgrim with no destination, or sets up a make-shift satellite phone for a conversation with some distant, automated voice.

The PNCA exhibit is a homecoming of sorts for the artist, who graduated from the school in 2002 before moving to Brooklyn, NY. Her website (www.marymattingly.com) serves as a virtual decoder ring, collecting vocabulary words, symbols, and products, all of which drive home the homogenous existence we will all soon live. Mattingly couples her "message" with a sense of wonder and a very tactile aesthetic. Her constructions--made of fabrics, cardboard, metal, and rubber tubing--have an attraction unto themselves. The future may be doomed, but apparently it still has a pretty great view.

PNCA is not Mattingly's only Portland connection. She has been collaborating with Paul Middendorf (creative director of Manifest Artistry, visual arts director of Disjecta) on the Lifeboat project. The two set up temporary islands or boats off the coast of major art fairs, where they curate mini-exhibits that "speak about changing borders in the USA, policies for immigration, nautical utopias, pirates, flags, and other symbols of limited realities." I've heard they also have a lot of fun.

 

 

 

 

 

Photography Quarterly Cover and article Mary Mattingly, March 2004

 

 

 

 

 

February 26, 2003

Village Voice, Mary Mattingly by Vince Alletti.

 

Mary Mattingly

 

Mattingly isnt exactly breaking new ground with her pictures of anonymous    urban and suburban nightscapes (a few of which are of scale-model constructions), but shes got a sure sense of color and composition, and she succeeds in rendering these empty expressways, parking lots, and other transient spaces under blazing street lamps as a weirdly desolate, gorgeously cinematic no mans land.