THE ARRIVAL:Rose Borchovski's new work 'The Arrival', at LEA 23, is a continuation of her Susa saga, in which these mischievous and sometimes malevolent childlike beings find themselves in another spiritual and philosophical quandary, brought on by the simple act of catching a fish.
Explanation 1:
The Susa Bubbles have caught a fish, and while they admire how big it is, the fish dies. They wonder if they are to blame.
Explanation 2:
I grew up in a small village on the edge of the sea. Once every few years a big fish (small whale) would strand itself on our beach. And that was an enormous happening event: the arrival, this giant big fish lying on the beach, its weight made it impossible to breath, longing for the water, overheated by its own fat, trapped in the sand, slippery and smelly. We would climb all over it, standing on top of its belly, poking it with sticks, jumping up and down for pictures, while the whale was slowly dying under our feet. The beach would turn into a fancy fair, good business for local kibbling (warm fish) and hot chocolate sellers.
When the fish was finally dead, there was a grand finale. Men with big boots, shiny yellow raincoats and sharp knives would chop the bubbling and the now very smelly fish up into pieces. Looking at it made our hair smell for weeks.
As a child this left a huge impression on me. Why were we not able to carry the fish back into the sea?
I wondered if we were to blame.
Explanation 3:The Susa story is multi-layered, and the Biblical themes and analogies are rather clear, if you look for them. I was struck by this the very first time I wrote about Rose's work, and it is why I still find visiting her installations so very exciting. While they are certainly understandable for a broad audience, art history nerds like me find a wealth of symbolic material and references to ponder. Some of them incredibly direct, as Rose states in her fourth explanation:
Christian explanation: do we need the fish to take over our sins?
Do we take more then we need, are we to blame?
Explanation 4:
Inspired by a painting: “Big Fish Eat Little Fish” by Pieter Brueghel the Elder.
Grandibus Exigui Sunt Pisces Piscibus Esca.
Explanation 5:'The Arrival' opens tomorrow (Saturday the 11th of January) at LEA 23. Go fish for your own story.
Your story and enjoyment to discover the Fish.
Note from Rose:
I thank you all for supporting and visiting my art in SL. After some initial hick ups I had a lot of fun making this installation. Of course it is not finished. I will keep tweaking it until it has to die. I'm grateful that the LEA committee granted me this sim to create this installation.
Thank you, Rose ❤
CREDITS:
Installation and concept by Rose Borchovski
Scripts: Caer Balogh
Song at the end: Susanne Sundfør
Don't miss Rose's other wonderful installations:
The Inevitability of Fate: http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Cariacou/194/78/172
Echoes in the Garden: http://maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Rosas/36/73/1801
nice writeup it's good to see LEA interacting with the art in this manner
ReplyDeleteLove it!
ReplyDeleteWonderful - your best yet. Thanks !
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