NEW YORK, NY.- Language Pit is Gary Hills second solo exhibition with
bitforms gallery. Through an ongoing investigation of language, Hill offers works that explore the physicality of language in a multiplicity of ways through silkscreens, watercolors, sculpture, and video installation. Exhibited works probe both the visual and auditory components of the spoken word.
None of the Above continues Hills obsessive parsing of language and its myriad of possibilities. A large video projection installed in portrait orientation depicts the artist performing a bricolage of words and syntax. Uncannily, the work parallels a similar terrain to the pronoun landscape for its runaway of complexity. Hill enunciates each word while moving his hands in tandem with his discourse. The poetics playfully feeds back on itself, enveloping and unraveling with each line like an ouroboros that builds upon itself in an evolving loop. The artists hand gestures continue alongside his monologue in an allusion to the idiomatic triadsee no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil. Hills longtime engagement with language confronts the limits of speech, writing, and gesture, situating language as a physical form with an integral relationship to the body.
Language Pit is a two-channel video installation with a set of raw speaker cones presented on a plinth. A loud acerbic voice delivers a dialogue that alternates between the speakers, utilizing short phrases derived from political sound bites and idiomatic expressions. Micro-cameras wired to small circuit boards lay upon the speaker skins in sinusoidal positions like a pair of undisturbed snakes. Each happenstantial burst of speech awakens the eyes and live video feeds become momentarily dynamic. As percussive elements of the dialogue occur, pinging back and forth between speakers, the onscreen imagery makes radical abrupt shifts that reveal slivers of the site, familiar details, and glimpses of viewers present.
The Engender Series is a project that conjoins personal pronouns using logic. Boolean logic is a binary system that produces either a true or a false output, and is the foundation of computer programming. Hill applies this process to personal pronouns, which he interprets as a kind of analog element of identity. After each function (XOR, AND, OR, A-B and B-A) has been applied, the pronouns cease to be pronounceable but can be read, or visually decoded. Sculptural works from this series show all five logical functions, highlighting the similarities and differences of implemented gates. For example, a XOR function of she/he produces forms where only the parts of either she or he exist unto themselves, whereas an OR gate merges both into one form. Hills visualization of pronouns explodes the binary conundrum, mirroring the complexity and depth of inquiry concerning gender identity as well as linguistics.
bitforms gallery
Gary Hill: Language Pit
February 1 - March 16, 2024
Opening reception: Thursday, February 1, 6 - 8 PM