Dominique Palladino and Bryan Christiansen rehearse their performance in the Sierra Arts Gallery.
Dominique Palladino and Bryan Christiansen rehearse their performance in the Sierra Arts Gallery.

Relationships. There is no simple description that can define
them. They are extremely complicated, exceptionally rewardingโ€”or
notโ€” but usually worth the give and take. They push us to better
ourselves, they introduce us to new ways of doing things, and, at
times, they even make us more determined to be alone. The exhibition
Significantly Other, on display at the Sierra Arts Gallery
downtown, offers some insight into the dynamics of relationships.

This exhibition focuses on seven couplesโ€”all artists creating
individual bodies of work separate from their partners, although some
of them have collaborated artistically before. Most of the artists
chose to make new work that addressed the theme, some indirectly
through process and others directly through content that speaks to the
nature of their relationship.

โ€œI donโ€™t think my piece or Annieโ€™s piece directly
address the relationship at all,โ€ says J. Damron speaking of his
video and Annie Hookerโ€™s painting featured in the show. โ€œWe
saw it more as an opportunity to interact as artists. Sheโ€™s a
painter, and Iโ€™m a new genres guy, so weโ€™re coming from
different perspectives.โ€

Their approach to creating their work was to give each other
โ€œidea generators,โ€ as Damron puts it, to spark their
individual creative processes. Hooker gave Damron a photograph, and he
gave her a piece of writing. Looking at their work in the show, the
pieces almost fit together as a diptychโ€”partially because they
are displayed side by side. The red chair in Hookerโ€™s painting
seems to be waiting for something or to be a fragment of a memory, as
does the figure in Damronโ€™s video that fades in and out of the
landscape.

Brian Porray and Kyla Hansen decided to try collaborating, which
they hadnโ€™t done before. They segued from thinking about the
chemistry that happens between two people when they fall in love to how
drugs affect the brain. Their piece, made up of tennis balls and wooden
dowels, resembles a chemical structure and references Andre
Agassiโ€™s use of crystal meth.

โ€œItโ€™s funny because youโ€™re so intimate with this
personโ€”you sleep next to them for four yearsโ€”but
youโ€™ve never interacted with them in this way,โ€ says Porray
about collaborating artistically. โ€œIt was greatโ€”but
weโ€™ll probably never do it again.โ€

Another piece in the show consists of two chairs facing each other
that sit on 8-foot-high legs. They are intended to be part of a
performance that the artists Dominique Palladino and Bryan Christiansen
will perform. The performance consists of a handfasting
ceremonyโ€”a traditional wedding ceremony that requires the couple
to join hands and bind them in some fashion. The precarious position of
the performers mimics the highs and lows of a relationship.

Ashley and Eric Jennings created a piece called
โ€œIntuitionโ€ that addresses their different styles of
interacting with the world. The piece is interactive, comprised of two
hand-sewn dolls representing the artists that have light bulbs above
their heads that glow depending on where the viewer is standing in
relation to them.

Other couples in the show include Marian Studer and Kyhl Lyndgaard,
Natalie Rishe and Bob Lukas, and Rob Brown and Christina Lee.

The work in the show is diverseโ€”responding to the theme in a
variety of ways that encompass many of the different symptoms of a
relationship: drama, laughter, confusion, detachment and intimacy.

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