Eerie glow from below
The felt tableau of the installation ‘Understory’ adds a mesmerizing tinge to an ordinary setting
Trickster spirit suffuses “Understory,” a brilliant installation by Timothy Paul Myers and Andrew Barnes at Walter Maciel Gallery. “Understory” replicates a suburban American basement, that familiar subterranean entertainment center, junk repository, work area and family archive — a site that, in itself, collapses categories and time periods. Myers and Barnes furnish the space with all the typical contents, from laundry machines to dart board, sheathing every object and every surface — including f loor, walls, stairwell and beamed ceiling — in felt.
At first, the scene confounds the eye. Illuminated by a few bare light bulbs, the atmosphere of the room appears luminous and granular, as if seen through a fine mist. Maybe this is what James Turrell’s basement looks like. All of the objects (and most are the real thing within) appear dipped in thick-tongued light. In a crayon box, the pale, pinkish color might be labeled Flesh. The whole has a disorienting, homogenizing f latness and at the same time a weird radiance.
And how alive the assembly is with emotional resonance. So many touchstones of the everyday and of the life of a family are there: the stowed-away baby toys, the guitar leaning in a corner, the pegboardhung tools, the random old appliances, the unused pet-food bowl, the stray ping-pong paddle.
Myers and Barnes, based in New York, created a tableau in gray felt here last year, a living room whose fireplace gushed with flowers. The mundane and fantastic converged with uncanny, mesmerizing presence.
“Understory” astonishes on a larger scale, and slightly differently. Everything in the basement is ordinary, remembered as much as reimagined. The felt imposes an extra layer between now and then; it mutes and neutralizes. But the act of encasing everything in this second skin is a worshipful sort of labor that also amplifies each object’s significance.
The artists’ method might seem like a single, formal conceit having to do only with the outer surface of things, but driven by the trickster impulse, it yields a perceptual friction that reverberates deeper and deeper inward.
It’s what Lewis Hyde called the ambiguity, the doubleness, the paradox of the trickster — a disrupter and a master of the kind of creative deception that is “a prerequisite of art.”