November 21, 2023
October 30, 2023 – December 8, 2023
Fall 2023 HOURS
Monday: 11 am - 7 pm
Tuesday: 11 am - 7 pm
Wednesday: 11 am - 4 pm
Thursday: 11 am - 4 pm
Friday: 11 am - 4 pm
Saturday: Closed
Sunday: Closed
VISIT
Admission and events are free and open to the public.
Daily Parking is available for $3.00 in Lot 10 in the student white stalls only (use the QR Code on the parking signs).
Please see https://www.cerritos.edu/covid-19/ for information related to current COVID requirements.
The Cerritos College Art Gallery is thrilled to present ATOMIC INDEX, a solo exhibition featuring a range of distinct, but interconnected, bodies of work by Southern California-based artist elin o’Hara slavick. In the Main Gallery, the artist presents an overwhelmingly immersive installation of 528 photo-chemical drawings, each resembling atomic mushroom clouds, one for every known atmospheric, above-ground nuclear test conducted globally to date. These powerful and provocative images were produced using a decidedly innovative process of drawing with a combination of developer and fixer on fogged and expired silver gelatin photo-paper. During slavick’s 2022 artist residency at Caltech, she tasked herself with renovating the long-defunct Sky Atlas darkroom, initially with the plan of producing silver gelatin prints from the college’s archival negatives and transparencies. To her delight, she found boxes upon boxes of unused photographic paper in the darkroom, including many that were fogged from expiration or accidental exposure. Experimenting with these found materials by using chemicals normally reserved for developing and fixing photographs as a primary medium unto itself, slavick created semi-representational abstractions of nuclear tests (or trees, brains, Rorschach tests, fetuses, skulls...) Standard camera-based photography carries with it an inherently indexical association, due to the process of exposure in which some ‘thing’ is recorded by the trip of the camera’s shutter and the emulsion of the film capturing light as it reflects off an external subject. The gestural mark-making of an artist’s hand produces a completely different kind of indexical image, an expression as much as a trace. Transforming found materials into experimental drawings of nuclear explosions was a natural extension of the simultaneous research slavick was conducting in the Caltech archives, which revealed that the detonators for Little Boy and Fat Man (the two atomic bombs dropped by the US over Hiroshima and Nagasaki) were, in part, designed at Caltech and many influential Caltech scientists, including Oppenheimer himself, worked on the Manhattan Project. According to the artist, these drawings were largely a result of her feelings of impatience, frustration, and a sense of “helplessness in the face of impending possible annihilation and the knowledge that we are all living in a contaminated world.” At the same time that she was producing her chemical drawings in the darkroom, she also discovered numerous glass plate negatives of the sky made at the Palomar Observatory, as well as many stunning contact prints of those glass plates, printed in the Sky Atlas darkroom – the exact one in which she was then working. On top of these, she layered archival prints of found photographs ranging from a grinning Albert Einstein holding his own marionette doppelgänger to a macroshot of an irradiated insect’s mutated wings. The resulting series of collages (28 of 200 included in the exhibition) are appropriately titled The Blur of Science (Sky Atlas). Also displayed in the exhibition are vitrines of historical printed matter related to nuclear testing and bombing (including books and other objects from Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and Fukushima - such as leaves and bark from A-bombed trees in Hiroshima, chestnuts from the exclusion zone in Fukushima, paper peace cranes from Nagasaki, a red shoe found on the beach in Fukushima, and two 3D-printed replicas of an A-bombed bottle from the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum Archive that was printed at Caltech as prototypes for a proposed life-size titanium version to be installed on the Caltech campus). Outside, in the Window Gallery, the artist presents two photogram cyanotypes of A-bombed artifacts from the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum archive, as well as a selection of drawings from an earlier project, Bomb After Bomb: A Violent Cartography, mapping various locations the US has bombed using nuclear weapons, including Hiroshima and Nagasaki, but also Alamogordo in New Mexico, Proving Ground in Nevada, and the Bikini Atoll. ABOUT THE ARTIST elin o’Hara slavick is an artist, curator, critic, and activist. Her work has been widely exhibited internationally. She is the author of Bomb After Bomb: A Violent Cartography (with a foreword by Howard Zinn), After Hiroshima (with an essay by James Elkins), Cameramouth (a chapbook of surrealist poetry), and Holding History in Our Hand (commemorating the 75th anniversary of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings). She received her BA from Sarah Lawrence College and her MFA in Photography from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Prior to moving to Southern California, she held the position of Professor of Art at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for over 25 years. She is currently an Artist-in-Residence at the UC Irvine College of Health Sciences, having previously served as a visiting Artist-Fellow at Caltech during Spring of 2022.