Peachy the Magazine June July 2014 | Page 141

ART + ARCHITECTURE Katey Crews’ “tactile assemblages” examine the manner in which nostalgia can be leveraged as propaganda. Her manipulation of fabric echoes the “manipulative nature of historic imagery”. Kate Nartker confronts nostalgia by investigating our attachment to remnants from the past. In a laborious process, she deconstructs video footage shot by her father, “renders out frozen stills, and weaves the images on a Jacquard loom.” Other standout shows at REDUX have included Andrea Stanislav: Nothing is New, Everything is Permitted, Sinisa Kukec: From Void to Void, Lauren Kalman: Spectacular, and Keith Lemley: Ecstasy of Knowing. The Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art is another enthralling arts venue in Charleston, and one recent exhibition, The Paternal Suit: Heirlooms from the F. Scott Hess Family Foundation, was particularly compelling. The show ostensibly explores the lineage of Los Angeles artist F. Scott Hess through a collection of seemingly disjointed artifacts. Tracing his American heritage back four hundred years to puritanical New England and the antebellum South, the exhibit “tells Hess’ story through more than 100 paintings, prints, and objects created by Hess, but presented as legitimate historical artifacts, and supported by photographs, documents, and historical ephemera. Each object and artwork bears an artist’s name and detailed provenance and has been executed in the style of the century from which it supposedly originates. Sculpture, ceramics, furniture, toys, newspaper clippings, historic photographs, guns, and costumes advance the story. Hess does not claim authorship for the works on display. Instead, he ascribes to them fictional artists, referring to himself as the Director of the F. Scott Hess Family Foundation.” The subtext here is clearly the ruse of history…query if there is ever a way to objectively present the past. There is also a psychological tension driving the work, as Hess suffered an absent and disconnected father. The fact that the artist’s research into his lineage also revealed that his ancestors were slave owners deepens the fraught psychology of the work. The exhibition as a whole is sweeping in scope yet intensely intimate. “Through the prism of his ancestry, Hess examines the impact of false history and deception within each generation and throughout society as a whole, and questions these perceived truths.” JUNE JULY 2014 139