Bill Rodgers: small displacement(s)
January 10 to March 1, 2009
Calgary-based artist Bill
Rodgers has been at work on the project installed for this exhibition
since 1994. Searching for a way to combine his work as a visual artist
with his interest in motorcycle racing, he wound up focusing on the
Tourist Trophy (TT), an annual motorcycle race held on the roads of the
Isle of Man since 1907. Continuing with his previous work with the
palimpsest, Rodgers took an art book on Matisse and rubbed out all of its
pages using a razor blade to get ready for his first work of art about the
TT. He arranged the pages in a grid and traced a map of the TT’s route,
complete with place names, overtop of the faded images of works by one of
the twentieth century’s greatest masters. Following this key piece,
Rodgers created a traveling-light version on Tyvek, which will also be in
the exhibition, along with other related works.
To prepare for this
installation, Rodgers gathered found objects, and has fabricated
reliquaries that contain items related to the TT, or at least the Isle of
Man, including shed fur from his own cat – a Manx.
Taken as a whole, the
exhibition is a sort of secular shrine to the TT, with elements of
mapping, myth, and chance, and sentiments ranging from a straightforward
love for the event, to a post-modern ironic stance in his ornate
reliquaries, which are obviously created with a tongue-in-cheek devotion.