Concordia Journal, Canada
Feb 14 2008
A shoe for a flea By Barbara Black
David Wilson, the founding director of the Museum of Jurassic
Technology, is devoted to the arcane, the little-known, and the
downright weird aspects of human endeavour.
At his institution in southern California, visitors can wander past a
model of the giant horn that once grew out of a woman’s forehead,
exhibits of stink ants and ray bats, and painstaking expositions of
the work of eccentric and justly forgotten scientists. There is art,
and there is kitsch. One section is devoted to peach-pit carvings;
another, to objects collected by the denizens of trailer parks in the
Los Angeles area, including decorated pincushions.
This museum, which has existed for some 20 years on cosmopolitan
Venice Blvd., has come to fascinate intellectuals and lovers of
contemporary art. They detect something going on under the earnest
nerdiness of the enterprise: an elaborate put-on, or performance art;
at any rate, a new take on the role of the museum.
In a lecture at the D.B. Clarke Theatre on Feb. 7, Wilson, a slight,
soft-spoken man, chose to focus on one aspect of the museum
collection, micro-art. He called his talk `The Eye of the Needle,’
and that is literally where much of this art took place.
Photo: Most of Hagop Sandaldjian’s microminiatures are sculpted into
the eye of an ordinary sewing needle out of `motes of dust, specks of
lint, and wisps of hair,’ but this one has Goofy dancing on the top
of an needle. It’s one of the exhibits in the Museum of Jurassic
Technology.
Wilson described the work of the great masters of the art form, who
tend to be eastern European. He set the scene with care, reading a
long excerpt from Flann O’Brien’s novel, The Third Policeman, in
which the policeman reveals a series of boxes he has made, each
smaller than the last, to the point where `the dear knows where it
will stop,’ the point, literally, of invisibility.
The greatest exponent of art in the eye of a needle may have been an
Armenian immigrant to California, Hagop Sandaldjian, who crafted tiny
masterpieces out of human hair, motes of dust and bits of metal. His
subject matter often reflected his love for his adopted homeland,
such as his renderings of Goofy, Donald Duck and other denizens of
Disneyland.
When asked by a member of the audience to name the smallest made
object Wilson had encountered, he responded seriously that it was
probably a shoe for a flea made by a Russian micro-artist called
Nikolai.
This combination of the laughable, the awe-inspiring and the oddly
poignant rarely fails to intrigue those who visit the museum or hear
Wilson’s lectures. The Jurassic phenomenon was given international
currency through a 1995 bestseller by Lawrence Weschler called Mr.
Wilson’s Cabinet of Wonder.
You can watch David Wilson’s presentation by going to
finearts.concordia.ca/html/defi.htm
The third and last lecture in this season’s Defiant Imagination
series will be given by Carol Becker, of Columbia University, on
`Values Implicit in Schools of Art and Design,’ on Feb. 27 at 6 p.m.
in the D.B. Clarke Theatre.
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