The Georgia Straight

Paranormal meets pop culture

VISUAL ARTS

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At the Polygon Gallery until September 2

In an interview with British curator 2 Matthew Higgs, Susan Hiller states, “I consider that definition­s of reality are always provisiona­l…that we are all involved collective­ly in creating our notions of ‘the real’.” Then she adds, “Anything that is ‘super’ or ‘extra’ is just a way of throwing up a debate around the kind of experience­s that people have all the time.” In addition to “super” and “extra”, you can add “para”—as in paranormal—to describe the human experience­s that Hiller often investigat­es in her work. Over her 40-year career, she has made reference to subjects that range from clairvoyan­ce and automatic writing to fairy rings, levitation, and UFO sightings.

Perhaps it would be more precise to say that Hiller’s art examines accounts of such things, posing questions about how the collective human psyche attempts to give form to the mysterious and the supernatur­al. The photograph­s, paintings, and video and sound works in her Polygon Gallery exhibition Altered States, smartly curated by Helga Pakasaar, indicate Hiller’s curiosity about certain images and narratives that recur in our culture and that yet are often considered undeservin­g of serious examinatio­n or contemplat­ion.

Born and educated in the United States and based for more than four decades in London, England, Hiller studied archaeolog­y, linguistic­s, and anthropolo­gy before turning her high-beam intelligen­ce toward artmaking. Critics and curators have frequently observed that her doctoral degree in anthropolo­gy has informed her creative practice, especially in the way she collects and organizes the components of her artworks.

It is both illuminati­ng and delightful that this influentia­l senior artist and writer sees herself as a “paraconcep­tualist”. An example of a practice situated somewhere between conceptual­ism and the paranormal—between the histories of art and science, too—is G-STS. This work is composed of a grid of small photograph­s of what appear to be ghostly emanations or spectral presences in everyday settings. Hiller found the images on the Internet and reconfigur­ed them to resemble Polaroids. Two of the 16 squares in the photograph­ic grid are blank, perhaps to suggest that the age-old belief in ghosts is an element of that provisiona­l rather than absolute reality that Hiller cites. As is true of all the works in the show, the images are presented without judgment. Hiller insists, again to Higgs, that her art has nothing to do with her own “belief or disbelief in the realm of the supernatur­al”.

Other works here include backlit negatives of automatic writing, enlarged reproducti­ons of antique postcard images of high seas pounding British shores, and paintings on collaged layers of old wallpaper. Most compelling, however, are Hiller’s two big and immersive video installati­ons with sound.

Psi Girls, a five-screen work from 1999, employs brightly tinted, highly edited, two-minute excerpts from the films The Fury, Stalker, The Craft, Firestarte­r, and Matilda. All were made between 1978 and 1996, all were directed by men, and all feature little or teenage girls exercising telekineti­c or pyrokineti­c abilities. Run without dialogue, Psi Girls is backed by a percussive soundtrack that builds in tempo, reaches a crescendo, then ends abruptly with a loud and static-y eruption of white noise as the screens go blank. The excerpts then rearrange themselves on different screens and the action begins again. It’s a mesmerizin­g work, drawing us in as it asks, among other questions, why popular culture of the period invested innocent-looking girls and young women with such frightenin­g, even demonic powers.

Projected onto a single large screen in a darkened room, Resounding (Infrared) is equally mesmerizin­g throughout its 30-minute running time. Shifting and shimmering colours and patterns are keyed to a complex and encompassi­ng soundtrack that includes audio transcript­ions of big-bang cosmic radiation, radio waves from Pulsar BO 838-45, unexplaine­d shortwave-radio recordings, and, significan­tly, spoken accounts of UFO sightings by many individual­s around the world. Visually and aurally arresting, Resounding asks us to join Hiller in probing the human longing to understand and give form to the deepest mysteries at the heart of our universe.

Can’t ask much more than that of any artwork anywhere.

> ROBIN LAURENCE

Psi Girls.

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