Jason Patterson

Summer Exhibition


George Holliday Video March 3, 1991, 2011
Chalk pastel on raw canvas, under clear acrylic with black oil
Large canvas 48x27in. Small canvases 8x5in

 

This piece was a part of Accepted Knowing at Figure One Gallery. This was the one out of three pieces I summited to the exhibition that
was accepted. Here and here are the other two proposals.

Holiday Video statement for Accepted Knowing:

This work is a reproduction of George Holliday’s home video of the LAPD beating of Rodney King. Compositionally, it emulates the layout
of YouTube, showing the 1991 event in a contemporary format, 20 years after it was seen repeatedly on television. The pervasiveness of
this footage, in its time, foreshadowed the Information Age. It was seen by the public with a level of accessibility that can be compared to
significant national and world events today. Imagine the revolutions and conflicts in Egypt and Libya without mobile devices and digital
media. By presenting this historical event in a YouTube format, this work comments on our faith in, and dependency on, instant knowledge.

Through the public eye, this video was seen as a smoking gun. The officers in this video, however, were acquitted in The California State
Court, leading to the 1992 Los Angeles riots. Common sayings like “The camera never lies” and “Seeing is believing” allude to our
perception of video and our reliance on its ability to tell the truth. Video, like any form of documentation is a part of history. “All of history
is an archaeological attempt to construct coherent, finite stories from artifacts, yet artifacts (including pictures) are not simply facts.” *
This is the dilemma, we give visual information more weight than it deserves. Seeing is equated directly to knowing.

In my work, treating the image as an object is very important. These 9 images are drawings, rendered in chalk pastel. This is an unnecessary,
arcane and arbitrary way to make an image. The idea is to bring new relevance to the re-creation of images. The source image is not simply
a reference, but wholly the work’s model. This work is not solely about the beating of Rodney King nor is it a vehicle to subjectively show
the event. It is about how and why those images of the beating were created, and their historical and cultural importance. I am trying to find
new ways to recreate images, but still craft these works with traditional materials. I hope to highlight the gravity of these images and,
in some cases, their banality.

 

Note
* “The Heritage VI, 1996,” in Luc Tuymans, essay by Joshua Shirkey, p.138 (San Francisco Museum of Modern Art/ Wexner Center
for the Arts/D.A.P.; First Edition, October 31, 2009)

 
jason@jasonpattersonart.com

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