Raw concrete and exposed drywall 鈥攖hese rough materials form the skeletons of two immersive new shows at Locust Projects, yet each one explores distinct ideas about connection, communication, and forgotten architecture.
The bare walls of the mazelike environment constructed by William Cordova in the art center鈥檚 main space may seem forbidding at first. It鈥檚 easy to get lost while navigating the cramped, liminal rooms and hallways, reminiscent of urban legends such as the 鈥渂ackrooms,鈥 an extra-dimensional realm resembling a creepy, nondescript office environment that originated from paranormal internet fandom communities.
READ MORE: 40th anniversary oolite exhibition looks at the past, envisions the future
But this stripped-down interior is based on a pair of much warmer, fictitious houses. In the installation, titled 鈥渁lgo鈥itmos (2 tienes santo pero no eres babalao),鈥 Cordova has reconstructed the floorplans of two 1970s sitcom sets: 鈥淕ood Times,鈥 which aired on CBS for six seasons, and 鈥溌縌u茅 Pasa U.S.A.?,鈥 produced by local PBS affiliate WPBT.
According to Cordova, the aim of 鈥渁lgo鈥itmos鈥 is to compare and contrast these two shows, which ran concurrently. Both offer distinctive depictions of minority experiences in America, and in the process, ask probing questions about how media affects our perceptions of each other. The show reflects on the ephemerality of cultural memory. We find sculptures by Cordova reminiscent of various artifacts from the sitcoms: bead circles and Polaroid photos, a triangular ornamental mirror that resembles one hung on the wall in 鈥淕ood Times.鈥 Aside from these few pieces of decor, the stripped-down sets offer little indication of what was once there, a physical manifestation of our fading memories of these once-familiar homes and families.
There鈥檚 also content from shows that never were: A mini-TV plays video from 鈥淪ak Pas茅, U.S.A.?,鈥 an unproduced Haitian Creole version of 鈥淨u茅 Pasa.鈥 The only extant footage from the project, showing the title sequence, was recovered and digitized by Barron Sherer, a Miami-based media artist and archivist.
鈥淭he exhibit in general is this meditation on time, space, architecture, (and) subtle, nuanced narratives on race and culture 鈥 and who is interpreting those narratives,鈥 says Cordova, who grew up watching both shows. 鈥淲ho鈥檚 writing it, who鈥檚 producing it, and who鈥檚 presenting it? And is it flawed? Is it real? Does it matter?鈥
Though similar in many ways, the two shows were made for very different reasons. 鈥淕ood Times鈥 focused on the working class, African-American Evans family in a Chicago housing project. it was a commercial sitcom produced in Hollywood and was part of what was essentially a sitcom franchise under the umbrella of Norman Lear and his influential, politically contentious hit 鈥淎ll in the Family.鈥
鈥溌縌u茅 Pasa U.S.A.?,鈥 meanwhile, looked at a Cuban immigrant family in Little Havana, the Pe帽as. Made entirely in Miami, it innovated as America鈥檚 first bilingual sitcom and was relatively successful for a PBS show, yet it only ran for four seasons (39 episodes) and was cancelled when its funding, which came from a federal grant, ran out. Production issues are reflected in Cordova鈥檚 work: But he considers the program to be even more challenging than even Lear鈥檚 socially-minded shows.
鈥淚t was way ahead of its time because it was addressing, and not in a two dimensional way, themes of race, of religion, of homosexuality, of class, the hypocrisy of people鈥檚 nationalisms 鈥 just a plethora of information on themes that were going on that you would never see, not even on 鈥楢ll in the Family.鈥 You just didn鈥檛 see that there. You saw certain things, but it was mostly laughable.鈥
Nearby, another project has similarly transformed Locust鈥檚 space, with markedly different results. 鈥淒rawn Breath, Exhaled Frequencies鈥 is a collaboration between three artists: Michael Webster, a sculptor and photographer based in South Carolina, and two spoken-word artists, Arsimmer McCoy of Miami and Selina Nwulu, who is of Nigerian-British heritage and lives in London.
The installation is concerned with communication in a time of crisis: An arched doorway lined with soundproofing foam leads us into the art center鈥檚 project room, where we find a group of satellite dishes hewn from what looks like raw concrete (really a combination of wood and a water-based sculpting material called Aqua Resin) emitting curious messages.
The satellite dishes are meant to evoke sound mirrors, the massive concrete structures that were placed all along the south coast of England between the World Wars as an early warning device in case of aerial invasion. McCoy, Nwulu, and Webster have repurposed the idea for a novel form of transatlantic exchange.
鈥淲e thought about this as a conversation across the ocean that was an early warning system in itself,鈥 says Webster. 鈥淗ow can poetics and writing and performance become a system of early warning that鈥檚 more about experience, and about perspective, and about the ongoing kind of political and social climate that鈥檚 happening between the two countries?鈥
McCoy sees the work as a response to the multitude of crises facing both the United States and the United Kingdom. 鈥淚 think we鈥檙e not tacking on one thing, because it鈥檚 all insane from every angle, from every point,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his is the warning that if we do not address them, if we do not take the time to heal and to take care of ourselves, what the end result will be.鈥
She continues, 鈥淭he politics of pushing past is what I think I鈥檓 addressing through this work. And I think we are all kind of having that conversation. And so the warning is like, what is the cost of the push-through? What is the end result of just sucking it up and saying 鈥榦h, that鈥檚 life?鈥欌
In all, four mirrors occupy the room, two on the floor and two mounted on a wall. The higher pair are each equipped with a speaker playing recordings of poetry from McCoy and Nwulu. Viewers can sit in front of the lower mirrors to hear one side or wander through the room and listen as the two voices mix, forming a kind of sonic architecture.
Though Webster provided the initial concept of the show and brought McCoy and Nwulu on later, all three consider themselves equal partners.
鈥淪ome artists will ask for collaborations, but really it鈥檚, you know, plug and play into my vision. And this is very different,鈥 says McCoy. 鈥淭his is, yes, his pieces, he made them, but he has brought us in to also be sculptors in our own right. All of our names are on the wall, and that doesn鈥檛 happen all the time.鈥
IF YOU GO
What: 鈥渁lgo鈥itmos (2 tienes santo pero no eres babalao)鈥 and 鈥淒rawn Breath, Exhaled Frequencies鈥
When: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday. Through Saturday, Oct. 25.
Where: Locust Projects, 297 NE 67th St., Miami
Cost: Free
Information: (305) 576-8570 or .
is a nonprofit news partner of SA国际传谋, providing news on theater, dance, visual arts, music and the performing arts.