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STRIKE THREE, YOU'RE ARTBy Kathleen VanesianPublished on April 06, 1994Maybe I'm just getting old. Or maybe Art Detour is just getting too complicated. After spending seven straight hours boarding buses and pounding the pavement on Art Detour Sunday, I still didn't see half of the stops on the two separate art routes offered. And much of what I saw I could have lived without seeing. By 5 p.m. March 20, the official closing time for the sixth annual self-guided, downtown gallery and studio tour sponsored by Artlink, Inc., I never wanted to see another piece of art in my life. And I was seriously in need of chiropractic services. Thirteen new spaces were added to this year's overly packed tour, says A. Nannette Taylor-Varela, executive director of Artlink, who pronounced Art Detour 6 very successful, despite steady rain that Saturday. "The purpose of Art Detour is to acquaint people, whether first-time visitors or longtime residents, with Phoenix's downtown cultural life," says Taylor-Varela. "It's a positive, across-the-board look at our arts scene, with both ends of the art spectrum being represented. We have professional midcareer artists as well as beginning artists who participate." "It was a weird Art Detour," says the disappointed Hawk. "It was very down. Lots of spaces put time and money into it that they didn't get back. The weather didn't help." "Phoenix Forge used to be open, as well as Catherine's Rare Papers studio," Johnson told me in a lilting English accent. "Having several spaces open on the street gave more strength to this area." And Art Detour was a great way to entertain those pesky, out-of-town guests who constantly test your tour-guiding mettle. The biggest problem on the tour was being able to augur which stops offered potentially interesting art for my somewhat jaded aesthetic palate. I had to wade through a lot of objets d'barf to get to anything good. The wading included less-than-artful reproductions of pre-Columbian ceramic figures at Museo Chicano in the Mercado (this after walking up three flights of stairs) and booths selling swap-meet stuff around the Willow House, billed by the tour brochure as home to "the works of 150 local artists, whose work ranges from painting to jewelry to dreamcatchers to pottery." I'm essentially egalitarian when it comes to art, but a little judicious editing of participants may be the key to better public support for this event. For me, several installations ended up being the stars of Art Detour, including "Six right of 7 south" by Martina Shenal at deCompression. It was a haunting, multimedia environment created by the artist as a tribute to her grandmothers, Mary and Christina, who lost a father, brother and son in a 1968 Farmington, West Virginia, coal-mine disaster. Shenal's title refers to the location inside a mine where 78 men died after a series of gas explosions turned the mine into a tomb. But it was the collaborative, site-specific installation by Mexico City's X'TeReSa Alternative Art group members Humberto del Olmo and Juan Manuel Romero at the Icehouse on Jackson Street, home of CRASHarts, that knocked me on my proverbial butt. Del Olmo told me his portion of the installation, titled "Tlaloc," which is the name of the ancient Aztec rain deity, had taken him six months to create and perfect. Entering the womblike entrance to a cavernous, dimly lighted brick room with a 60-foot ceiling, the viewer first saw a massive, uterus-shaped, metal-mesh enclosure on the back wall into which chirping parakeets had been released; the floor of the room was covered with real sod, and in its center was a pool of water filled with upside-down clay pots. The pots were topped with circles through which infrared light beams were reflected by a series of small mirrors. Ruby-colored beams melded with occasional bursts of steam coming from the pool's edge, while recorded sounds of a bubbling caldron reverberated throughout the room and mingled with live bird music. I felt as if I had entered the moist, awesome center of the universe.
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