Movers and Shakers: The 40 Most Exciting Soulful Artists of 2003
Arts Extra Special
Various Utne magazine
THE 40 CREATORS FEATURED HERE?most of whom are not celebrated
stars?offer a thoughtful sense of where the arts are headed.
They?re innovative, edgy, and of the moment?but they?re not mere
flavors-of-the-month. They?ve all got a depth, resonance, and
soulfulness that make them good companions on the journey toward a
better world. And their work is full of ideas and insights that
challenge us to live more fully, see more clearly, and have more
fun.
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?The Editors
Tom Waits
Black Rider/Blue Valentine
Remember when you first heard a Tom Waits song? You were having a
clumsy affair with a blackjack dealer from Reno who swigged
peppermint schnapps and lived in a rooming house with a jukebox in
the hall . . .
And if you weren?t, you should have been. That?s the way it is with
Waits; he?s a storyteller, and he turns you into one, too. And he
keeps you guessing. From Small Change and Blue Valentine to Black
Rider and Lost in the Stars: The Music of Kurt Weill, the
beatnik-flavored cult hero?s remarkable songwriting and
ever-changing musical directions have kept his devoted fans
delightfully off balance now for more than a quarter century. His
latest works, Blood Money and Alice, are both 10-year-old sound
tracks to theatrical works by avant-garde director Robert Wilson
that have found their way into album form. Why? Don?t ask Waits. ?I
could tell you anything,? he told The Onion in a recent interview.
??Helen Keller made an appearance in the last tune, and it?s sung
by her mother.? . . . Your mind will make sense of anything.? Blood
Money and Alice (both Epitaph)
?CRAIG COX
Mariko Mori Digital Diva
Mariko Mori can see the future, and it is digital, spiritual, and
wearing a miniskirt. This 35-year-old Japanese performance and
media artist creates installation pieces and computer-altered
self-portraits that have a lot of fun exploring serious themes. A
former model and student of fashion design, Mori has a perky,
insouciant, yet somehow oddly reverent way of treating religious
images. Viewers of her 1997 video Nirvana wear 3-D glasses and
watch as a ball of flame, and then the image of Mori herself,
dressed as a Japanese deity, descend from the screen and out into
the gallery space. Floating overhead, Mori chants a tuneless song
while a gaggle of animated characters accompany her on assorted
musical instruments. Simultaneously gorgeous and silly, Nirvana
finds weight and meaning in its echoes of religious ritual and its
reference to the art of Japan?s Heian period (794?1185 CE).
Another work, Birth of a Star, finds Mori gussied up in a plastic
miniskirt and giant, techno-blasting headphones that seem to be
fused to her head. As she bops along, her vacant smile and glazed
eyes reveal a whole new creature, unique to the 21st century; she
becomes, as British art critic Richard Dorment puts it, ?a human
being . . . whose perception of reality has been permanently
altered by machines.? Mori?s comment here is on the inner life of
humans in a high-tech age. Is a synthetic inner reality, achieved
through the pulsing noise of techno music, really all that
different from a state of bliss brought on by rhythmic chants of
?om??
Ambiguities like these make Mori?s work compelling. Hers is a
strange new world of high fashion, soul searching, bodhisattvas,
and levitating, bongo-playing animals. Going there with her is both
delightful and disquieting.
www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/mori_mariko.html
?LAINE BERGESON
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