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Tony Oursler
b. 1957 New York, NY; lives and works in New York, NY
Multi-media artist Tony Oursler’s Creature Features is an installation commissioned by the Boca Raton Museum of Art. It explores what the artist calls the “delicate balance between American creativity, mysticism, and scientific ingenuity.” It includes a feature-length film and several new works based on American folklore, legends, and hoaxes akin to today’s urban myths and conspiracy theories.
Imponderable is a cinematic experience made with the use of Pepper’s Ghost, a device invented in the 19th century and used by magicians to make “spirits” materialize on stage. The film’s narrative is based on Oursler’s real-life family story and includes his grandparents, Grace Perkins and Fulton Oursler, as well as Harry Houdini, debunkers of psychic phenomena, Arthur Conan Doyle, various mystics, magicians, and writers. The flow chart on the adjacent wall documents the fantastical yet historical cast and plot of the film and is taken from Oursler’s extensive archive on all things paranormal.
Oursler’s animated fairy based on the Cottingley Fairies is also featured. This was a hoax perpetrated by two young girls in 1917. Despite inventing the ultra-logical Sherlock Holmes, Arthur Conan Doyle, who was a firm believer in the paranormal, was convinced of the authenticity of the Fairies. In fact, the girls had cut out drawings from magazines, pasted them to cardboard, and photographed them in a garden. Conan Doyle sent copies to Fulton Oursler, who, in collaboration with Harry Houdini, proved to him that the Fairies, as well as mediums and spirit photographers that he believed in, were fake.
The 1869 Cardiff Giant is arguably the most notorious hoax of the 19th century. It was perpetrated by a science-minded skeptic soon after Charles Darwin presented his theory of evolution. His aim was to prove to Biblical literalists that the idea that there were “giants who walked the earth” was not scientifically credible. Advertised as a real archeological find, thousands lined up and paid to see it. Oursler’s translucent 3D rendering of this enormous, petrified giant is an antenna and transmitter for conspiratorial media and is shown in a theatrical setting like that in which it toured the country.
In another work, Oursler deals with the murky history of American UFO culture. He considers it a mirror reflecting societal shifts, as the utopian idea of alien life of the 1940s and 1950s devolved into the dark abduction scenarios of the 1980s and 1990s. The Flatwoods Monster was a tall extraterrestrial that supposedly appeared just after a bright object flashed through the night sky in Flatwoods, West Virginia, in 1952. The entity that Oursler has created is based on the descriptions and drawings taken from the Flatwoods witnesses as well as later accounts of alien encounters and abductees.
For Oursler, crystals represent the extremes of hard science and myth. The resonant quality of crystals allows for the synchronization of signals and is thus used in telecommunications and digital technology. In New Age lore, they have magical powers, especially when used during a full Moon. His Magic Elf installation is made from the seven fundamental crystals found in nature and constructed from shaped mirrors and dichotic refraction screens. Projected images of tiny figures combined with archival footage, created in part with Artificial Intelligence, poetically explore such concepts as the digital divine, four dimensions, 5-D technology, near-death experiences, and hallucinogenic states.
Kathleen Goncharov
Senior Curator