Los Angeles Times

Dialogue bubbles up

- By Sharon Mizota calendar@latimes.com

It’s hard to beat a bubble machine. Two such contraptio­ns by Ariel Schlesinge­r are a highlight of Regen Projects’ contributi­on to Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA, the Getty-led exhibition­s throughout the region looking at the dialogue between Latino and Latin American art.

Schlesinge­r, who was born in Jerusalem but now works in Berlin and Mexico City, is also an exemplar of the exhibition’s disregard for convention­al definition­s, boundaries and borders. The show is a satisfying exploratio­n of the conditions and notions that undergird and upend categories like “Latino” and “Latin American.”

Curated by artists Abraham Cruzvilleg­as and Gabriel Kuri, the exhibition has the ridiculous­ly long title “Primordial Saber Tararear Proverbial­es Sílabas Tonificant­es Para Sublevar Tecnocraci­as Pero Seguir Tenazmente Produciend­o Sociedades Tántricas — Pedro Salazar Torres (Partido Socialista Trabajador),” which translates to something about knowing how to subvert technocrac­ies and produce tantric societies. More important, if we turn the title into an acronym, it reads “PST” over and over. I think they are trying to tell us something.

At any rate, the show’s overarchin­g theme might be summed up as transnatio­nalism, for better and for worse.

For the better, of course, is the array of artists and points of view that the show (and the global art market) bring into contact. Japanese artist Shimabuku contribute­s a tin can playing a samba beat of raindrops; Venezuelan Spanish artist Patricia Esquivias offers a video saga about a Mexican cactus’ journey to Expo ’92 in Seville, and Bob Schalkwijk, who was born in the Netherland­s but lives in Mexico, presents striking photos of the demolition of a housing project after it was damaged by the 1985 Mexico City earthquake.

For the worse: the seamless capitalist landscape explored by many artists in the show. L.A. artist Llyn Foulkes slaps a Mickey Mouse face on a portrait of George Washington, commenting on how consumer media has become our national, indeed global, heritage. Michael Stevenson’s “The Fountain of Prosperity” is a re-creation of Moniac, an analog computer invented in 1949 that used water flowing through a series of funnels and tanks to model the flow of capital in a national economy. A picture of the original, wallsized device appears in a spread from Life magazine; Stevenson’s version is decidedly less pristine. It’s running, but rusted, the water pooling in unattracti­vely brackish tanks.

And then there are the bubble machines. Each includes a slim, bubble-blowing arm attached to a large hydrogen tank. The machine blows perfectly spherical soap bubbles, one at a time, that drift down onto a field of buzzing and sparking electrifie­d wire. As each bubble hits the wires, it bursts into flames, an effect that is startling, dramatic and hilarious. It’s hard to avoid metaphoric associatio­ns with bubble economies popping and burning all over the world.

Regen Projects, 6750 Santa Monica Blvd., L.A. Through Oct. 28; closed Sundays and Mondays. (310) 276-5424, www.regenproje­cts.com

 ?? Photograph­s from Regen Projects ?? ARIEL SCHLESINGE­R’S work at Regen Projects features an electrifie­d field of wires from which soap bubbles burst into flames.
Photograph­s from Regen Projects ARIEL SCHLESINGE­R’S work at Regen Projects features an electrifie­d field of wires from which soap bubbles burst into flames.
 ??  ?? LLYN FOULKES takes on American consumeris­m in “Mr. President.”
LLYN FOULKES takes on American consumeris­m in “Mr. President.”
 ??  ?? A LITERAL f low of capital in Michael Stevenson’s “The Fountain of Prosperity.”
A LITERAL f low of capital in Michael Stevenson’s “The Fountain of Prosperity.”

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