2111 Mission Street
Suite 401
San Francisco 94110
415.861.3144
info@mission17.org

Current

 

The Land Of A Million Cereals

A Mixed-Media Installation by Ryan Alexiev
June 6-August 2, 2008

 

Opening Reception: Friday, June 6, 2008, 6-9pm

Artist Talk with Ryan Alexiev: Thursday, June 26, 2008, 7pm.

Please join us for conversation, wine, and Bulgarian peasant food! This event is free and open to the public. RSVP to info@mission17.org

If we are what we eat, a significant degree of who we are, at least in this country, is cereal. In America, cereal is the most popular breakfast food and the third most popular product in the supermarket altogether-after only soda and cereal's constant counterpart, milk. In his show at MISSION 17, Ryan Alexiev explores this centrality of cereal to our constitution. But cereal, for Alexiev, functions as more than merely foodstuff. His engagement with cereal is informed by his appreciation of its history and continuing importance as a paradigmatic consumer product. Since the advent of cereal in the early twentieth century, the four basic grains-wheat, corn, rice, and oats-have consistently been packaged and promoted in a seemingly endless variety of products. Currently, there are 400 different kinds of cereals on the market, which ultimately are distinguished by little more than their ad campaigns. The substance of cereal is, in this light, ideology. And, when we consume it, we ingest more than merely calories. We literally incorporate a sense of who we are-not only through our identification with an image on the face of a cardboard box, but furthermore, for Alexiev, as rational subjects who imagine ourselves as free to choose.

Alexiev examines this ideology of free choice in American consumer culture, so vividly manifested in cereal, by presenting it from the vantage of a Bulgarian peasant. Drawing upon the history of his own family, he tells the story of a rustic who flees Communist oppression and comes to America: The Land of a Million Cereals. As if viewed through the eyes of this Second-World son of the soil, the works in the show exaggerate the aesthetics of cereal and its packaging. Everything is ecstatic: promising total, immediate, gratification in a pallet of fluorescent pinks, yellows, and blues, and-perhaps most importantly-an endless variety of what ultimately amounts to nothing but more of the same thing.

The show includes prints, sculpture, and video. And Alexiev, in the role of the peasant, does battle with Frankenberry, who wields the powerful "golden spoon," - free in every box!

-  Clark Buckner

Ryan Alexiev was born in Los Angeles and raised in Alaska by Bulgarian immigrants. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in History from the University of California at Berkeley in 1994 and an MFA from the California College of the Arts in 2007. Prior to receiving his MFA, Ryan was a designer and art director, and guest lectured at several institutions including Berkeley and Colombia Universities on the field of Instructional Design. His first solo show as an artist in 2003 was at the Orchidea Gallery of the Sofia Cultural Center in Bulgaria, his parent's native country. Subsequently, he has exhibited at galleries across the country including the The Moore Space in Miami, Wadsworth Atheneum, The University of Arkansas, and the Nathan Cummings Foundation. Ryan was recently commissioned along with the ©ause Collective to create a video installation for the Oakland International Airport, which was also selected for inclusion into the 2008 Sundance Film Festival. Currently, Ryan works and resides in San Francisco.

This exhibition has been sponsored by a generous grant from The Phyllis C. Wattis Foundation.

 The M17 Video Archive

Attention Video Artists!!!!  Submit your work to The M17 Video Archive, a curated collection of single-channel video art, which will be available for public viewing "on-demand," beginning in January, 2009.

(Click above for further details!)


SUPPORT MISSION 17!

MISSION 17 is sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, a not-for-profit arts service organization.  Fractured Atlas will receive donations on behalf of MISSION 17, provide oversight to ensure that donations are used appropriately.Fractured Atlas, 248 W. 35th Street, Suite 1202, New York, NY 10001.

To contribute to MISSION 17

         - On-line: Go to Fractured Atlas and contribute "on behalf of MISSION 17"

         - Send a check along with this completed Donation Form PDF (alt-click) to:

Alexandra Gray, Director of Development, Fractured Atlas, 248 W. 35th Street, Suite 1202, New York, NY 10001.

Please note: Fractured Atlas is a 501(c)(3) public charity; all donations are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.


 

                                

gallery hours:
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