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John Souza
Mezzanine
Sunday 13 December 1998 through Sunday 31 January 1999
main gallery exhibition with concerts by Deer Nuts on 9 January
and 30 January 1999
Los Angeles-based artist
John Souza has produced a wealth of images and objects over his
thirty-year career. During his lifetime, Souza has pared down his
possessions to the point of living with almost nothing, and he has
destroyed much of his own work in the process. In recent years,
he has sought to transfer his innate tendency to dismantle his physical
surroundings to a larger exploration of the law of entropy.
Mezzanine
consisted of a three-part installation that combined seemingly disparate
architectural elements executed and installed with Souza's trademark
precise engineering and refined detail. The three stations in the
installation offered opportunities for observation and repose, and
invite a perverse consideration of both.
The artist's intention
was to conceive of a quiet, contemplative space where nothing seems
to happen. But in fact, viewers were presented with a subtle yet
charged environment that illuminated the contradictions and gaps
between desire and objects of desire. About Mezzanine,
Souza said, "This is a fugue state that lasts for only a few moments."
Souza uses his artwork
to devise systems that organize a collection of personal memories,
which he integrates with collective histories in order to form new
sites for experience and reason -- and the subsequent complete erasure
of both. According to Souza, "Mezzanine is the place where
outcasts can celebrate rulers and their sidekicks."
In conjunction with
the exhibition, Souza with his band Deer Nuts performed musical
selections ranging from the horrific to the comedic. Deer Nuts is
an evolving entity comprised of between four and seven musicians,
most of whom are also visual artists. Souza, himself a guitarist,
describes the music of Deer Nuts as being "an eclectic mix that
keeps us entertained."
John Souza has been
one of Los Angeles's premiere, yet overlooked, artists with a career
spanning over nearly twenty years. He is regarded as a provocative
thinker and inventive sculptor who uses precise detail to suggest
his conceptual intentions. In 1994 at the Sue Spaid Fine Art Gallery,
Souza installed "Rememberentering," a micro-museum in
which he fabricated displays of an ahistorical view of the City
of Angels. The exhibition included medieval-like ornamental ironwork,
S & M rubber straps and chains, and a farcical sculpture of kitsch
home decoration objects, which combined to comment on trendy L.A.
pop deconstructionist architecture. The installation was a clear
critique of our constructed environment. In his work Souza exposes
the power of the mundane materials we pass by each day in order
to lead the viewer to a closer examination of architecture and elements
that surround us.

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