Sarah Walko X-Ray Series: (different)(the contents of our stomachs)(before we painted it in); (earth)(the contents of our stomachs)(before we painted it in); (Exactly) Sonatina (intangible arrows quiver) | This Land (sails, sailors, begin, how clean the sun) I met you dreamer, on a walk (you told me this ain't no dream system) 1, 2, 3 What makes this list potentially infinite | 5 line staff (fiction of the wide river) The strangest net we have ever seen (the history of walking)(and borrowing each others shoes) Six thousand photographs | This list is potentially infinite too | General Anatomy | bio

Note from the editor: This issue’s In Discussion feature evolved from my conversations with artist and writer, Sarah Walko, about the conceptual framework her creations exist within and explode out of. Instead of an interview, below, Sarah discusses in essay format what the lifespan of an individual artwork involves, from birth to the journey it takes after leaving her able hands. While her essay specifically focuses on the 3000 matchbox sculptures she recently finished, I asked Sarah to elaborate on the Shakespearian Braille pieces you will also see in this issue. Her response included the sentiment that she: “just like[s] the idea of drawing all over Shakespeare.” This answer encapsulates why Sarah’s work feels right at home in BathHouse. Of course, that was not her only motivation behind the Braille series:

I am always interested in how the senses interact to tell a story. The use of touch to read and a book by Shakespeare interpreted as an object (a seemingly blank book), expand the structure of story; turn it all around and upside down, allow it to literally and metaphorically grow past the container of words, and create room for a lot of play with interpretation of symbols. I like taking a rather dark play like Macbeth, filled with witchery and self fulfilling prophecy, and rewriting it.

Sarah Walko

There are a number of ritualistic acts within the process of my work making. I go on walks through parks and through thrift stores, collecting small things. I spot objects on the street and in subway stations that I pick up and put into small plastic bags that I keep on myself at all times. At the end of the day, the tiny collections are emptied onto my workbench, joining many other materials and objects which are found, made, or given to me.

The matchbook is an apt container for the size of objects I often work with and is therefore the perfect canvas for tiny worlds and words. Matchbooks are also symbols of potential light as well as of potential destruction. I determine the phrases and color of the words to be placed within the boxes and have them printed, eventually adding objects and images to make each its own unique sculpture. I have installed the boxes in exhibitions and placed them inside shadow boxes, however, the true life of these works is when they are re-released. I drop them in subway stations, at friends’ houses, in parks, on doorsteps, benches, phone booths and in bookstores all around New York City and everywhere else I travel. I also drop my sculptures in more prestigious places. I have unofficially placed them in many institutions all over New York and surrounding areas such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, MASS Moca, the Morgan Library Museum, the American Museum of Natural history, and the Rubin Museum of Art.

I have no idea if it will be a visitor, a curator, a janitor or an insect, that might happen upon these sculptures first and/or finally, nor does it concern me; in my mind, they become like fictional characters in a story, having adventures from that point on. I also place the matchbooks at statues and landmarks around the city, such as on the doorstep of the narrowest house in New York in the West Village, former home of writer Edna St. Vincent Millay.

I had a friend of mine walk into the house of her close friends to find one of my matchbook sculptures framed as part of the living room décor. Upon exclamation, “Oh! You know Sarah?” They replied, “No. We just found that”. I also have a very close friend who had a girlfriend he had been wanting me to meet for quite some time but our schedules never aligned. He met her once in the city and when he did, she was holding one of the sculptures. He exclaimed, “Oh! You met Sarah?!?!” And she replied, “No, I just found this”. These experiences often allow me to feel as though I can multiply myself.

My favorite part of the process has been giving them to others to give away on their travels. For example, Thaddeus Pawlowski recently took a trip to Nepal to hike the Himalayas for one month as a spiritual pilgrimage. Below are two excerpts from his Nepalese journals:

I was walking along a high ledge over the Marsyangi River Gorge in Central Nepal, at the base of the Annapurna range of the Himalaya [range]. There are many shrines along this trail, and it is expected that locals and travelers leave important objects at them. This is to appease the mountain gods who often smite the proud with landslides and erosion. On the mountain across, men were jackhammering away at the granite, building a road, producing a horrible sound that echoed everywhere. I stopped for a rest and a ginger tea at a little shack where a group of porters were playing cards. A little girl — maybe about three years old–crawled up to me. Her head was unevenly shaved, probably for lice. I could only assume that she lives her whole life here in this shack with these men. In my backpack I was carrying a concert of objects passed on to me from Sarah Walko. Each of these objects was arranged carefully in small fugues and bound to a matchbook. I pulled out one matchbook with a very small music box that played “Hey Jude” attached to it. I removed the music box from the matches (she was too young for those, but I gave them to an older boy in the next village). I could see that she knew it was important and she would keep it and learn it. I turned to the group of men and held up the box and motioned that I was giving it to her. They nodded. Sarah’s work came to this girl, to give a little bit of private harmony in this noisy place.

Another sculpture found a nice home in the ancient village of Lubro, a few miles up in the mountains away from the Kali Gandaki Valley, the holy city where all five elements meet. We wanted to see Lubro because it is one of the few remote villages left where they still actively practice the b’on religion, an animist belief system That predates Buddhism here by ten centuries. The b’on worship all aspects of the mountains. We had a tough but thrilling walk there, high up into the clouds, passed singing goat herds and bright red wildflower[s], onto a plain that opened up the clouds all around, with grassy knobs on both sides, it felt like the entrance into another world, then we came down through rock fields with cephalopod fossils everywhere, pushed to these mountaintops from the bottom of the sea when the Indian plate crashed against the Eurasian plate 50 million years ago. The Hindus thought that these serpentine creatures were evidence of the god Vishnu. The villagers stared at us in dumbstruck confusion. We explained that we came to see the b’on monastery. An old woman let us in and we studied the ancient frescoes and sculptures. Taking notes on the strange iconography. This is where the swastika comes from and many other mysterious symbols. Another old woman invited us for tea, as neighbors butchered a goat on her roof. She taught us b’on mantras and gave us milk tea. I gave her a matchbook with a feather and the blue rocks. We talked about the elements it might represent. She held it in both hands and kissed it and put it up in her cabinet …

The objects we surround ourselves with and the rituals we do in our everyday life are too often dismissed as arbitrary or marginalized when in fact they affect our individual and collective psyches tremendously. Anthropologist Margaret Meade said, “When justice is lost, we have ritual. We need more ritual in our daily lives.” The entire process of these small sculptures from beginning to end is my ritual, my form of release through creation. The object then carries that process within it and interrupts the flow of the environment and perception of the viewer like a tiny seed or crack, the mysterious evidence of this string of acts. This allows me to move fluidly between and within private and public space. Similar to a book, finding and reading a matchbook is an intimate yet vast experience. A reader and an author have a conversation between two which expands and/or collapses time, regardless of the surrounding space, which has the ability to be incredibly personal or shared. The matchbook as an object can pull one inside a tiny world and words and yet the scale of the object is so small that the viewer is huge, becoming the master of a small world. Ultimately, I hope it triggers both experiences for the reader, so they can fluctuate between micro and macro as well as be brought to the present and allowed to hear the matchbox’s message: “You are nowhere else right now but here and this is the invention of questions.”

Recently, at my workstation, I came to the end of my box of custom printed matchbooks. As I finished the last few, I realized, when I placed the order, I had, in fact, ordered 3000. Therefore, thousands of matchbook sculptures are out in the world. I don’t care if they are mounted and framed on mantels, nor if the music boxes are removed from their compositions in order to give to a little girl who is too young for the music box’s container. I hope they are used for exactly what they are supposed to be used for, to light a candle or a fire until they are completely used up. I want my creations to question the idea of the precious collection and the unnoticed accumulation of vacant things, be it in a museum or products in a store. They are created and destroyed, come and pass, and are a simple container for ideas and spirit in flow. Placing them all around New York City and all around the world completes the cycle of gift exchange, as so often the object I place inside of them came to me first. They are pocket sized, to fit in the palm of the hand of the finder, the keeper, the dreamer, whoever or whatever happens upon them.

Everybody needs a little light.

 

 

 

 

* A previous version of this essay formerly appeared on the Hyperallergic blog.

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