Theres a reason for the question mark in the name of this show. The 17 artists in Clay? III are working with materialslike plastic, polystyrene, LED lights, woodthat definitely were not fired in a kiln. But thats the point of the show: To get you thinking about the ancient form, pottery, and how its lately evolved. Some creations, like Raymond W. Gonzalezs blinking, star-shaped dingbats, appear like satellites dropped from space. More elaborate, yet no less ingenious, is a low, porcelain train trestle set on wooden blocks by Rumi Koshino. Yet the most interesting work, up in the loft, is made of pixels and watera video installation by Arun Sharma. His (de)Composition places an unglazed clay bust in what appears to be a bubbling fish tank, then lets the figure gradually decay. Its like a pathos-free drowning man, an exercise in artistic self-erasure. However much work Sharma put into the bust, the water insidiously undoes. How long this process takes is open to question. Hours? Days? Weeks? The gallery card doesnt indicate a run-time for the video, so youre encouraged to cycle back among the other ceramics, returning periodically to see how much of the sculpture remains. Or you can just stare at it, like Warhols Empire, an oddly calming experience not unlike the fish tank at your dentists office. Eventually the crumbling figure will be reduced to a pile of sodden soil. Which, millennia ago, is precisely where pottery began. BRIAN MILLER
Mondays-Fridays, 11 a.m.-6 p.m.; Saturdays, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Starts: March 18. Continues through May 4, 2010
