Carr has long been fascinated by magical moments of material transformation. This can be seen as early as
Air Guitar (2001), in which the artist turns from a teenage boy riffing in his bedroom to a smoke-clouded guitar god. Almost ten years later, Carr proposed another bogan transformation in
Burn Out (2009), as audiences watched the hypnotic and silent action of a young man, on a West Auckland morning, jubilantly turning the rubber of his tyres into clouds of smoke, in front of a sublime New Zealand landscape.
Since
Burn Out, Carr has become more focused on the complex relationships between materiality, magic, performance, and cinema that lie at the heart of his practice. One of his most radical breakthroughs has been his use of the Phantom Camera – an ultra-slow-motion tool more usually associated with nature documentaries or high-level sporting events.
For
The Science of Ecstasy and Immortality, Carr revisits the strange connections between our sense of time, our bodies, and what happens when we watch material undergoing profound transformation. In the first of two videos, Carr uses stock footage shot by a Phantom technician of a bubble popping on a cactus. Carr’s trick is to slow it down even further, turning seconds into whole minutes. In doing so, the footage morphs into a sci-fi epic, as the bubble sheds its skin, collapses on itself, and disperses into a spread of stars.
In the second video, Carr allows us to witness a similar transformation which also confuses our notions of cinematic time. Except here, there are no camera tricks. Instead we watch as two women methodically stretch rubber bands around a watermelon. Slowly the watermelon starts to change shape: first, the bands give it a vaguely hourglass form. As more are applied, things become severely pinched: a dramatic figure eight, and a brief pause before the watermelon explodes, spraying its flesh and seeds across the pristine set.
To heighten the relationships between his works and the limits of our bodies, Carr has worked with one of New Zealand's leading designers, Nat Cheshire, to create an immersive environment that draws the viewer to the centre of the space. Here they encounter the exhibitions third work; a small ball of rubber bands formed by the explosive force of the watermelon's final moment.
Steve Carr was born in Gore in 1976 and currently lives and works in Auckland. Recent exhibitions include
Stretching Time, Dunedin Public Art Gallery, 2014;
Burn Out, Edinburgh Arts Festival, Edinburgh, 2014;
Open Studios, Headlands Centre of Contemporary Art, San Francisco, 2013;
Majo, Outer Spaces Christchurch Art Gallery, 2013.
Image: Steve Carr,
Watermelon (still), 2015, Sony HD Xcam, duration 33 mins 9 secs
Press release courtesy Michael Lett.