Young Chang Marjetica Potrc takes a style...
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Young Chang
Marjetica Potrc takes a style of living most of us don’t think
about, much less know about, and celebrates how resourceful and
brilliant people can be when put to the test.
Her aptly titled exhibit at the Orange County Museum of Art,
“Extreme Conditions and Noble Designs,” centers around a large
structure, two objects and a series of urban images made into prints.
The show deals with themes of poverty, desperate shelter situations
and displacement.
The first object she has out is the Hippo Water Roller. It’s a big
blue barrel with two long beams on either side that stem upwards, so
you can hold the ends. You push it like you would a shopping cart.
Women in South Africa who live without running water use this to
sidestep the chore of having to carry liters of water on their heads.
The product, made and sold in South Africa, can carry up to 90
liters.
“It’s so amazingly simple,” exhibit curator Irene Hofmann said.
“But it improves the quality of life.”
And though the roller wasn’t intended to serve as protection
against land mines, it’s been shown to absorb and contain the shock
of an explosion, a discovery found after the device was accidentally
rolled over South Africa’s mine fields.
“I like to show objects that combine low and high tech ideas,”
said Potrc, who hails from Slovenia. “The co-habitation of local
solutions and high technology Self sufficiency, multiple use and
recycled materials -- I think that’s what’s relevant today.”
But the architecturally trained artist does more than just show
other people’s inventions. Along with her manipulated prints of what
we might typically assume are nuisance animals (bears in trash cans,
coyotes in office buildings), Potrc “re-interprets” buildings from
around the world and exhibits her work as art.
The piece at the museum reworks Mason’s Bend Community Center,
designed by architect Samuel Mockbee. The real center is in a
sprawling rural part of Alabama. It has been hailed for using
materials like car windows and wood instead of just standard building
elements. The many windows on the building make solar power a
possibility. For the community in which it sits, the center serves as
everything from a chapel to a stopping point for mobile businesses
including Meals-on-Wheels type programs, medical services and
educational programs.
“I thought this was fantastic,” the 49-year-old Potrc said of the
building’s varied uses. “I think individual initiative on private
space is something that’s happening today. So I’m just, in my work
through the language of architecture, showing what I think is
relevant for living in contemporary cities.”
The artist’s reinterpretation of the structure is a
floor-to-ceiling wooden piece with 24 car windows that are arranged
like roof shingles in angled layers.
“It’s in these things that she finds the creativity and the
initiative so beautiful and inspiring,” Hofmann said.
One of Potrc’s pieces, which was exhibited at the Guggenheim
Museum two years ago but is not part of the Orange County show,
showed what are called service core units. They are forms of
subsidiary housing provided by the South African government and
include just the basics: a slab of floor, a toilet and running water.
“It’s up to the people to improvise,” Hofmann said.
Potrc’s work, by its beauty, quietly comments on how high-rise
public housing and modern, more extravagant structures start to
marginalize people.
Among the artist’s prints is “24-Hour Ordinance,” which shows a
structure from Turkey built in 24 hours to comply with an ordinance
that states if you can build it in 24 hours and put a roof over the
whole thing in a day, the structure is legal.
“As a way of celebrating this, she built a structure in a gallery
in 24 hours,” Hofmann said. “She looks at those situations that can
be quite difficult.”
The second object in Potrc’s Orange County exhibit is the
Clockwork Mobile Telephone made by Motorola. It’s a Walkman-sized
gadget with what resembles a window handle on it. You plug it into
your cell phone and start cranking the thing up to begin charging.
Whether you’re stuck in the middle of urban California or in the most
remote part of the world, the device does just fine without
electricity.
“I was attracted to all these components of her work,” Hofmann
said. “Compelling issues that are global.”
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