NEW
CITY
| august 14, 2008
ART
REVIEWS
Barbara
Hashimoto/Chicago Arts District
by Jaime
Calder
Multimedia, Pilsen
RECOMMENDED
From the street, you may think it’s hay. Grass. Something
organic, harvested from right from the gallery floor. It streams
out of the walls, tapering down into tail formation, filament-covered
knolls flowing across the Chicago Arts District. The illusion,
however, is short lived, and quickly the landscape shows itself
for what it really is: paper. Tons upon tons of shredded paper,
culled from a single address. During a residency at BauerLatoza
Studio, artist Barbara Hashimoto collected staff members’
junk mail for one year, hand-shredding the unsolicited deliveries
daily. The resulting roughage—all 3,000 cubic feet of it—became
the primary medium for “Junk Mail,” which continues
to evolve with each performance by Hashimoto and her guest artists.
The message behind “Junk Mail” is obvious, but subtlety
is not the point here. It seems that for all our “Inconvenient
Truths" and green marketing, it isn’t until we are
slapped in the face with some tangible evidence of our eco-ignorance
(say, 3,000 cubic feet of evidence) that society recognizes the
true weight of their actions. Though “Junk Mail’s
performative elements are exhibited only on select dates, the
sight of so much day-to-day waste collected in one place is a
harrowingly effective wake-up call, even for those who think their
eyes are already wide open.

photo: Shelley Anderson