NABAT: Looking back
This ever-so-slowly changing video is a record of a woman creating salt. Salt accumulates on the surface of her skin as she sits over a period of 16 minutes. Ultimately she is completely covered in rock salt. Salt is electrolyte used in the sweat batteries that power the Alchemy & Meditations piece. The video is projected into a physical frame on the wall.
Nabat was part of a larger exhibitions called "Olivia Robinson: 1899-1902". This exhibit was made up of four works: Alchemy & Meditations, Nabat: Looking Back, S.W.Eat’s Salted Products Wagon, and Context Posters.
This exhibition examines a period of time now known as the “Technological Revolution.” Also known as the “Second Industrial Revolution,” this time period brought forth the internal combustion engine, new materials and substances (including alloys and chemicals), new communication technologies such as the telegraph and radio, and major advances in the use of electricity. The socioeconomic effects of these innovations would result in a radical shifting of social power structures that had been in place for centuries.
The work presented here spans a variety of media – painting, sculpture, photography, video, and electronic textiles. In the windows of the Stamp Gallery a series of 192 paintings deconstruct the language of the 19th century, grouping together words according to their most common coexistence in printed materials. A fully functional sales cart for peddling human sweat sits opposite a video of a woman demonstrating an unusual capacity for producing salt. A pew invites viewers to look upon a dramatic polyptych of thirteen electronic textile pieces. In all of these works, the time period of the Technological Revolution is used as a framework to explore issues of power, both scientific and social, and to reflect on how those issues continue to exist and evolve today.