Sept. 6 – 29
Why present an exhibition of art that focuses on Mark
Zuckerberg, you ask? The answer is, simply,
the discovery that a number of artists, from a wide variety of backgrounds, have
created work that takes the Facebook founder and CEO as its focus. (The artists in this show come from five countries
and span several generations.) The
question then becomes, why are artists creating work about Zuckerberg? The answer is—of course—for a variety of
reasons. Among the avenues explored: tech billionaire, ultimate data merchant,
CEO of the world’s largest social media corporation, enabler of Cambridge Analytica
and Russian trolls, goat slayer, Puli owner, embodiment of insatiable
capitalism, awkward person, possible robot, probable alien, privacy violator
supreme, etc.
The exhibition features work by Sandra Araujo, Marion
Balac & Carlos Carbonell, Bob
Bicknell-Knight, Ryan Garvey, Ben Grosser, Claire Jervert and Lane Twitchell.
In Marion Balac and Carlos Carbonell’s musical odyssey Mark, we follow a CGIZuckerberg (with Zuck head and Smurf-like body) from his birth in 1984, through
his rise—first to Facebook CEO, then to U.S. president, and finally to his cosmic
contemplation of a fusion with AI—all while remaining a socially awkward
person. Throughout, a choir, Zuckerberg
and AI sing their feelings and thoughts regarding their interlaced trajectories.
Mark Zuckerberg’s eyes, with their oft-remarked-upon unusual
quality, are the focus of Claire Jervert’s delicately rendered drawing. Wide open, largely without affect, and with sclera
seemingly darker than skin tone, their overall effect is both striking and
unsettling. The image also suggests a
visual metaphor for Zuckerberg-owned properties’ access to the personal
information of the combined 5 billion users of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp.
Sandra Araujo’s video u$aar v3.0 assumes the
look (and sound) of an old-school video game as it evokes Facebook’s role in
shaping social and political events, such as the Brexit vote and the 2016 U.S. presidential
election, via the Cambridge Analytica data breach. In an architectural setting based on Facebook’s
interface, Mark Zuckerberg, Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin make appearances, in
addition to a floating data-laden flash drive, Pepe the Frog and My Little
Pony.
In his painting Wicked World in 32 DPI, Ryan
Garvey compiles images of cable news chyrons related to Facebook which are,
like Facebook itself, designed to grab viewers’ attention and keep them engaged
for as long as possible. Additionally,
in the painting’s structure, Garvey visually and conceptually conflates the
vintage computer game Solitaire with the act of utilizing social media: both
are essentially a game of one, though the bleak, solitary socializing of social
media temporarily provides an illusion of connection and intimacy.
Bob Bicknell-Knight’s Mark’s Fifth is part of a
series of paintings that portray the Facebook founder as a trophy hunter. The
series was sparked by a recent interview with Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, who
stated that there was a year when Zuckerberg was only eating what he was
killing, and had a penchant for goat meat. Being served goat for dinner while
attending a dinner party at Zuckerberg’s house was Dorsey’s most memorable encounter
with Zuckerberg. The paintings imagine that Zuckerberg took this interest in
animal killing further, becoming a trophy hunter.
In Lane Twitchell’s Winter’s Discontent #3 (So-So),
multiple images of the thumbs-up icon that signifies a “like” on Facebook have
been grouped into a circular, mandala-like form, suggesting the focused and almost
religious devotion to the pursuit of likes.
The signature blue and white colors of Facebook have taken on a snowier
tone, as if this pursuit is ultimately unsatisfying and unsatisfiable. The
piece’s surprising point of origin was the well-known photograph of art critic
Jerry Saltz with former president Bill Clinton, which Saltz long used on his
Facebook page.
For Ben Grosser’s video, ORDER OF MAGNITUDE,
Grosser watched every public video-recorded appearance by Mark Zuckerberg from
2004 through 2018 and created a supercut drawn from three of Zuckerberg’s most
favored words: “more,” “grow,” and his every utterance of a metric, such as
“two million” or “one billion.” The result is a nearly fifty-minute film that
reveals primary topics of focus for the tech CEO, acting as a lens on what he
cares about, how he thinks, and what he hopes to attain.
The exhibition was organized by Galerie Manqué curator George Metesky.