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Alternating Currents, 2010
Rita MacDonald:Duplex
October 9 – November 28, 2010
Jeff Slomba

Alternating Currents, 2010

Jeff Slomba’s recent work is concerned with invasive species and the effects of world trade and industrialization on regional flora and fauna. The sculptures and recorded sounds in Alternating Currents explore the coexistence of the natural and manmade environments in an ever-increasing global market. Slomba uses the imagery of shipping containers, invasive species and discarded technological devices to create a narrative of cultural production merging with natural phenomena.

In the installation, Slomba displays the shell of a veined rapa whelk made of carved wood in which stereo speakers are ensconced. The large sea snail originated in the East Asian seas and was brought to the Chesapeake Bay in the bilge water of shipping vessels. The invasive species has decimated oyster beds and is disturbing the ecosystem of the Bay. A horseshoe crab, also made of wood, holds a music player and represents the indigenous component that is endangered by coastal development. The perforated shipping containers, which appear to have been eaten or attacked by sea creatures, house amplifiers. Together the audio components of these hybrid objects form a closed circuit that produces the acoustically similar but competing sounds of the shore and of highway traffic. The wall drawings of tire tracks made by sea snail sculptures refer to the I-95 interchange and its proximity to the Sound near the artist’s home in West Haven, Connecticut. Slomba’s work questions whether this arrangement is symbiotic or unbalanced or simply part of a continual system of adaptation and modification.

Jeff Slomba’s work has been exhibited by the Radius program of the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, CT; the Berkshire Museum, Pittsfield, MA; Artspace, New Haven, CT; and numerous college and university galleries in the eastern United States. He has received artist fellowships from the Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism and the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation. Other awards include a Weir Farm Trust visiting artist grant; a residency award from the Artist Enclave at I-Park, East Haddam, CT; and multiple Connecticut State University research grants. Slomba is an associate professor of art at Southern Connecticut State University in New Haven.

The Sunroom Project Space provides an opportunity for New York’s emerging artists to develop a special project or create a new body of work to exhibit in a solo show.

Assistant Curator: Gabriel de Guzman


Public Programs
November 14, 1pm, Meet the Artist

View press release

 
Alternating Currents, 2010
Jeff Slomba
Alternating Currents, 2010
Carved wood, polychrome, hydrocal, stereo amplifier, speakers and digital music players
Dimensions variable
Courtesy of the artist
 
The Sunroom Project Space series is supported in part by the Milton & Sally Avery Arts Foundation. Additional support for the Visual Arts Program is provided by the Lily Auchincloss Foundation, Inc., The Greenwall Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the New York State Council on the Arts–a state agency. Sustaining support for Wave Hill is provided by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs.
 
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Target sponsors free Tuesday and Saturday morning admission to Wave Hill, providing public access to the arts in our community.

      

 
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