Susan Schuppli
555 Hamilton St
For the past few years, Vancouver artist Susan Schuppli has developed projects that have addressed our relationship with public space. She has been at the forefront of artists, many of whom work in Vancouver who are interested in examining and reclaiming the public sphere as a space for women to occupy and traverse. She has carried out her ideas both as gallery projects and street interventions in Vancouver, Seattle, San Francisco, and San Diego.
Slow Pressure marks a shift in Schuppli's work that was first evident in her exhibition of photographs, Domocile, presented at Artspeak Gallery in 1996. In Domocile she examined relationships between an idyllic public face through images of domestic exteriors and the more subjective activity that takes place in the interior of the home. With Slow Pressure it is the confines of the interior domestic space that is the focus. Schuppli's objective is to create an experience suggesting the familiarity of a dwelling, while questioning it as safe territory for women to inhabit. Rather than opting to “reproduce” a room, the various images, objects and sounds function as signs of domesticity that are distorted through scale, placement and architecture. Although the installation projects a sense of pleasure through her use of materials, it conveys tension through a transformation of the familiar and the benign into a psychological environment.
This exhibition has been funded by the Pro Helvetia Arts Council of Switzerland, with generous support from the Consulate General of Switzerland.