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Orange Coast College’s Doyle Arts Pavilion explores humanity and nature’s connection

Laurie Hassold, "Fossils From the Future," wall installation, 2020-21, mixed media, 120 x 144 inches.
(Courtesy of Frank M. Doyle Arts Pavilion, Orange Coast College)
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Examining the inseparability between humanity and nature is a task that requires a certain vigilance, since humanity and nature are constantly changing. Orange Coast College’s Frank M. Doyle Arts Pavilion exhibition, “What Will Remain: Art in the Time of Human Dominion” explores that theme and recognizes that “humans have clearly marked the earth in a way that may be detectible millennia from now when future archaeologists dig through sediments yet to be.”

The group show, running Oct. 11 until Dec. 4, is curated by the Doyle’s director, Tyler Stallings, and features work from faculty in the departments of Art, Digital Media and Design, Film and Television, and Photography from the Visual and Performing Arts Division at OCC. Twenty-five individual artists and one collective of five artists for a total of 30 participants are featured.

“What Will Remain” frames the connections of humans to nature through a variety of lenses.

“Through lyrical visions, metaphor and visual play, and using varied media, ranging from painting, drawing, sculpture, ceramics, photography, video, digital media and documentation, these artists explore ramifications on the environment resulting from a human-centric viewpoint,” said Stallings.

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Laurie Hassold’s “Fossils from the Future” series, for example, uses sculpture to imagine “cross-breeds” of rock, bone, tree and flesh bridging the separation of living and unliving things. Hassold said her series reflects what might remain after we’ve become extinct and what other things might be allowed to flourish and grow.

“They might evolve or use whatever we left behind for ornamentation, or defense even, armor or attraction mechanisms for mates,” said Hassold, a member of OCC’s Art Department.

Similarly, Matthew Newman’s “Gorehoundz Action Figures” uses stylized reimagining of action figures of the late 1980s and early 1990s to explore the way contemporary artifacts might be examined in the future.

Matthew Newman, "Gorehoundz Action Figures and display," 2021, cardboard, plastic, resin figure.
(Courtesy of the Frank M. Doyle Arts Pavilion, Orange Coast College
)

“For me this is an other dimensional relic from the ‘80s that was recovered after our world has ended,” said Newman.

Stallings notes that toys can also be a signifier of the times in which they were created.

“This takes it down to the lessons that are taught to young people, through toys,” Stallings said.

Newman is in OCC’s Film and Television department, and an analogue-style video accompanies his classic 4.5-inch figures.

“I did it like a VHS was recovered, and if you saw a commercial from back then, what would it look like?”

Stallings said his description of the show intentionally leaves out the word “anthropocene.”

“I purposely did not use that word in the description because one of things that struck me as I was doing research was that there is some disagreement around the word,” said Stallings, “because it keeps the human at the center of conservation.”

All of the work in “What Will Remain” asks humans to reframe their viewpoint about their connection to nature, a process that Stallings said is only just beginning.

“There are other words, like symbiosis, that suggest a mutual relationship. So I tried to suggest that in the description and to get a different orientation,” Stallings said.

Besides Hassold and Newman, other artists include Cheryl Cotman, Rebecca Erbstoesser, Blade Gillissen, Ed Gomez, Will Hare, John Hesketh, Chelsea Mosher, Kevin Myers, Dakota Noot, Kerri Sabine-Wolf, Kevin Scianni, Richard Kraft, Katherine Sheehan, Natasha Shoro, Timothy Robert Smith, Yuki Toyooka Smith, Noah Thomas, Holly Topping, Cora Volkoff/Debbie Dunne, Roger Whitridge, Sam Yip, Dean Abernathy, Joy Brenneman, Kim Garrison, Leland Means, Steve Radosevich and Kelli Elliot.

An installation view of Ed Gomez's "Pale Rider," left, and paintings by Kevin Scianni.
(Courtesy of the Frank M. Doyle Arts Pavilion, Orange Coast College)

A preview reception is set for Oct. 14, from 5 to 7 p.m., and an opening reception is set for Oct. 16, from 2 to 4 p.m. Admission is free, and parking is free throughout the campus during the Fall 2021 semester. Modified gallery hours for Fall 2021 are Tuesday through Thursday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and First Saturdays, noon until 4 p.m. The gallery is closed on Fridays and school holidays.

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