Just four days before the opening of his exhibit Western Star in the Sheppard Gallery, Jeff Erickson was still making decisions about his installation. This wasnโt indecisionโit was part of the creative process. When artists who work in traditional mediaโlike, say, oil paintsโinstall their work in a gallery, their primary concern is to display their artwork in a representative manner. But for a site-specific artist like Erickson, the installation process is the artwork.
โItโs about making aesthetic choices,โ he says. โWhere a painter might make the decision to use more red โฆ I make the decision to put more monitors in a room. โฆ People sometimes ask what media I work inโโWell, right now Iโm working with a dog kennel, salt, mirrors.โโ
Western Star is a three-part exhibition intended to take gallery visitors on a journey. The visitor starts by entering a corridor lined with reflective glass. The tight corridor and hall of mirrors makes even the most arrogant visitor feel self-consciousโit also has the effect of completely transforming the space and visibly placing the visitor within the installation.
โI work with smoke and mirrors,โ says Erickson, with a smile, โliterally and figuratively.โ
The first part of the exhibit is titled โorsa,โ a Latin word meaning โbeginning.โ Even with the opening a few short days away, Ericksonโs ideas were very much in flux, so the exact nature of the piece had yet to come together. But it will center on a small sculpture made of glass and plant life and soft, cloth materials. The piece is inflatable, and fluctuations in its air pressure will trigger a key part of the second portion of the installation: a clay pigeon launcher.
The second portion of Western Star is called โsingultusโโLatin again, this time meaning โviolent death.โ In a small chamber a little farther down the hall, the launcher shoots fluorescent clay pigeons directly against a wall perpendicular to the mirrored corridor. Shards of smashed orange clay litter the floor, splinter the walls and glow in the ultraviolet light that illuminates the small chamber. Nearby, closed-circuit video monitors document the glowing shards and recast them as the scattered lights of a rural landscape or a rotating star field.
The final part of the exhibit is โfinis,โ the end or goal. An abandoned dog kennel, sagebrush grown into its chain links, surrounds a mound of salt gently illuminated by neon light underneath.
โSalt is a material Iโve used for a long time. I like it for its history, and the way itโs been mined, but also how itโs something we need in life โฆ but it also has this desiccating quality. โฆ And it has this really fantastic glow when illuminated. And it has a grounding quality that, for me, says human and Earth at the same time. If I were to use dirt, youโd just equate that with Earth, but with salt, thereโs also a human quality to it.โ
Western Star is a very personal piece for Erickson. Itโs part of a series of works titled Landscape of Absenceโa title that reflects Ericksonโs fascination with the desert landscape as well as the sense of loss he has experienced since the tragic death of his infant daughter.
โItโs not clear to me how I feel about it,โ says Erickson. โItโs not resolvedโand I donโt think it ever will be. Itโs something Iโm working through as an artist. And something Iโm working through as a person.โ
The dog kennel is an empty containerโintended to house a living being and noticeable for the lack thereof, except for a pile of salt, arranged like a burial mound of glowing crystal embers.
One of the central ideas of artistic composition is finding balance. A painter does this by contrasting complementary colors, orange and blue, for example. But for an artist like Erickson, working on the scale of installation, balance is found with contrasting materials and dichotomous ideas: hard and soft, solid and ethereal, quiet and loud, absence and presence, peace and violence, land and sky, life and death.
