BY KATIE CAREY
Daily Arts Writer
Published September 17, 2008
"Edibles" Exhibition
Sept. 8 through Oct. 3
Work : Ann Arbor
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Parents around Ann Arbor may think twice about telling their kids to stop playing with their food after seeing the “Edibles” exhibit at State Street’s Work Gallery.
But the exhibit is much more than mashed potato castles with gravy moats or smiley-face toast. The curators confessed to making quite a few dinner-art masterpieces when they were young, and it wouldn’t be a surprise if a ’tato volcano made it into the show had an artist had submitted one.
“Edibles” is a commentary on the way we see, use and consume food in our society and perhaps a bit about how we see, use and consume art as well.
In the gallery, two rows of “Fla-Vor-Ice" freeze pop panels hang loosely on the wall. The highly saturated, artificial colors jump off the white background, demanding the attention of a casual wanderer. The piece “Don’t Like the Rest,” by Eryn Campbell, displays all the vibrant “Fla-Vor-Ice” pops, save for the pink ones. Where the pink flavor would appear in the sequence, the wall shows through. After the initial smile that comes from admiration of the artist’s cleverness, the viewer is pushed into thinking about what we consider food and what we consider art.
It’s the whole “when you put it in a gallery, it becomes art” debate that Marcel Duchamp fathered with his readymades almost a century ago. The freezer pops take on a different meaning within the walls of Work: They hold space for contemplation. They take something that is seen every day in supermarket aisles out of their standard context and into an artistic display, thus exploring the ideas surrounding consumption.
This idea of the everyday is exactly what the curators, a group of School of Art and Design students, had in mind when they put “Edibles” into action.
“Food is an everyday part of our lives, why not make a show out of it?" Co-curator Jenna Lyn Utte said. "Food is a concept that everyone can stand behind; everyone loves food."
If the public’s response could in any way measure the truth in these words, the opening night for the exhibit proved people in Ann Arbor are absolutely enamored with food.
“Food in the framework of an art gallery challenges the idea of food and gives us the opportunity to closely examine and define something that is so widespread,” co-curator Erica Fink said.
Last Friday, gallery-goers spilled out onto the State Street sidewalk because the small display room was unable to hold everyone.
Art openings often attract a very specific hipster, chain-smoking crowd, but “Edibles” reversed this stereotype. The show flips the notion that art has to be understood only by a few people to be considered credible. By using a topic that everyone understands, and presumably everyone shapes experiences around, “Edibles” is able to make art and food a catalyst for thinking critically about and understanding our own culture and consumption.
“We wanted to make people that normally don’t come to art exhibitions, those people outside of Art and Design, those people in different clubs, in sororities and fraternities, and in high school and even elementary school, we wanted them to come and share in the experience,” said Fink, who arranged for the opening to have a potluck, musicians and an interactive station where guests could — and still can — make a short stop-motion video using Swedish fish, baby pineapples, cow salt shakers and other assorted candies, fruits and kitchen items.
“This is not just a cheery and whimsical exhibition, but it’s by no means a downer show. I mean, there are jelly beans in the window,” Utter said.
The exhibit is undoubtedly fun, but it also has a serious edge. A row of plates done by artist Cam DeCaussin stands in as a relic from his past performances on world hunger. The plates were originally used in a performance where DeCaussin invited a group to eat a meal with him off the plates.



























