Dysfunctional Chairs
Scott August
If I Had a Rocket Lawnchair
August 1 to November 1, 2009
A great topic for
conversation when relaxing with friends, or even strangers (while stuck on
an elevator, or in a traffic jam?) is things we used to think as children,
and later discovered were errors. One old friend of mine said that her
family of origin actually called these items "used-to-thinks,"
when sharing them. One that comes readily to my mind was a little boy who
used to think that the line "Sleep in heavenly peace" in the
Christmas song Silent Night was "Sleep in Heaven leap-ees,"
some really magical pair of pyjamas. My own younger brother "used to
think" that the city streets in Winnipeg where we grew up, moved
around all the time like wiggling organisms and he was amazed at my father’s
skill at the wheel of the car, finding his way to places like my
grandmother’s house for Sunday dinner, so unerringly.
And so we come to the new
work commissioned from Kelowna-based artist Scott August for our Dysfunctional
Chairs series, which he titles: If I Had a Rocket Lawnchair,
his own childhood mis-hearing – and along with his brother, thinking it
sounded so cool! – of the famous Bruce Cockburn song If I Had a
Rocket Launcher. (Cockburn was responding with anger to the 1984
bombing by the Guatemalan army of Guatemalan refugee camps located in
Mexico.) Motivated to create a work of art that would embody the feeling
and capabilities of his childhood vision, August has modified a common
metal lawnchair with rocket blasters. Emitting smoke, the chair hovers
above the ground, as though it is blasting off.
Although this piece is a
response to the commission for this series of chairs that no one can sit
on, the rocket lawnchair is not too far removed from the range of activity
that make up this artist’s usual practice. The same kind of border blur
at work in August’s Dysfunctional Chairs piece is a strong
component running through his other activities as a rock drummer, his
running of an art-reproduction business, his sound and performative works,
and his more-or-less straightforward visual art. In the past for one
photographic piece, for example, he dressed in a red fabric lobster
outfit. In another instance, for an exhibition, he created a
twenty-five-foot-high blown-up image of himself dressed as a cowboy.
Recently he began an ongoing series of work called Great Roadside
Attractions, the first of which was staged in the fall of 2008 just
outside of the BC interior town of Keremeos: a twenty-two-foot-high image
of himself as a cowboy hugging a bear billboard.
Visitors to the Kelowna Art Gallery might
recall his solo show from 2007 titled Pinecone Junction and Other
Favourites. This was an eight-by-sixteen foot sized relief
construction of montaged digital images, which had an interactive aspect:
a series of motion detectors caused lightbulbs to come on when viewers
passed in front of the piece. As with the If I Had a Rocket Lawnchair,
the overall mood was one of lighthearted hokum, with a construction style
steeped in hillbilly bricolage. Hopefully viewers will be prompted
to recall some of their own private "used-to-thinks" when
looking at August’s lawnchair. They may never be in a more conducive
situation to do so, nor one in which their own childhood misunderstandings
may not seem that far-fetched or embarrassing after all.
– Liz Wylie, Curator,
Kelowna Art Gallery