Grass Valley sculptor and installation artist Matthew Gottschalk, 29, has an exhibition titled โโฆ and architecture became everythingโ at the Silverland Gallery in the St. Maryโs Art Center, 55 North R St., Virginia City, running Sept. 5 to Oct. 7. The opening reception is Sept. 5 at 6 p.m. It should be a great excuse for art enthusiasts to make the drive up Geiger Grade. For more information, visit www.silverlandart.org
Tell me about living and being an artist in Grass Valley?
Well, in a lot of ways, [itโs] really great. Iโve been here off and on for the last 10 years. Iโve moved around a little bit โฆ I just came back actually a few months ago, I was living in Davis for two years, going to school to finish my degree.
Whatโs your degree?
Art studio. A B.A. But the main thing about Grass Valley, I think similarly to the St. Maryโs Art Center that Iโm going to be doing my show in, I live and work in a historic former nunsโ convent called St. Josephโs Cultural Center, which is a pretty remarkable, huge historical building that has art studios and dance studios and a huge hall for various types of performances.
You live and have your studio in St Josephโs? So doing something at St. Maryโs makes some sense โฆ
Itโs funny. Itโs actually totally right up my alley.
What do you have planned for the exhibition?
It should be pretty interesting โฆ itโs actually part two of an ongoing theme. I did an installation work about four months ago at UC Davis that was entitled Please, Please 20,000 Leagues. And basically this whole work is dealing with concepts of fantasy and time and time travel and space-time continuums and a lot of it is referenced to actual science in terms of Einsteinโs different theories of relativity and expanding space and a lot of it is attributed to older works of fantasy and science fiction, like Jules Verne and Kurt Vonnegut.
Any references to the flux capacitor?
[Laughs.] Not specifically. Iโm not really specifically referencing any of these artworks. To me, itโs more like collaboration with these themes. But the work in Virginia City is going to be done very much site-specifically. And so, as of right now, Iโm packing up everything, and basically what the plan is, is that I have some paintings, and I have some specific sculptures that Iโve already built, but overall I just have a ton of tools and different found objects and a lot of strange different things, and once I get up there Iโll be spending the three days before the opening really planning it there.
Have you been to the space yet?
No, I havenโt. Iโve only seen photos of it. โฆ I have a lot of different ideas in my sketch book, and basically I have somewhat of an idea of what Iโm going to be doing there, but itโs very much open to the elements once I get there, which is how I like to work. Itโs a very exciting way to work.
So it gets to be really immersive, so you can just dive right in and see what comes out?
Yeah, exactly, and really try to work with the space as far as doing installation work. Itโs really important for me to make it specific to the site, where itโs something that really exists in that space and that moment in time, so itโs somewhat ephemeral in its nature.
So itโs site-specific in every way possible?
Obviously, some of it is planned out ahead of time, so itโs a combination of the two โฆ but thatโs definitely a very important factor to me.
