Players:

The Products: Dozens of consumer goods, colorful, new, shiny with unmarred plastic wrap, taut with unbroken seals, cluster on the gallery floor. They make a free-form sculpture of sorts in their constellation there on the ground, centered roughly on a laminate fiberboard box, the scanning station, and look almost like offerings surrounding an altar. One consumer picks up a video or some breath mints and moves toward the scanner; another sets down a six-pack at the far edge of the grouping. The products drift. The arrangement is a graph of the evening's aggregate consumer whim.

The Consumer: Her eyes and cerebrum are hyped up. She is going in for some art, going in for some rigorous spectatorship, booster-packs strapped on her attention span, high-level interested engagement about to be unleashed. Thing is, she finds in All day and All night an experience that is much easier and more fun than that, something tactile, something erotic, effortless. The disjuncture is the opening onto her question.

The Projections: To summon them, the consumer scans the barcode of a product at the scanning station. Scanning triggers the projection of that product's commercial onto the blank wall behind the products. A slick, sixty-second soundtrack blares, causing consumers to turn and watch until the show's over. Two LCD screens glow, each imbedded in a fiber-board "monolith," the same slick, fake-wood surface as the scanning station, with a trapezoid of dingy gold, vintage speaker fabric in the lower half. On the right monolith, earphones hang provocatively next to the product's small and brilliant image. The left LCD screen displays close-ups from the commercials – bizarre, enlarged, slow motion, dense as jewels.

Gun: It's on the other side of the gallery, playing as the agent of some excess, some inefficiency in the system, a surplus that can't be recycled back into the nearly liturgical balance of the main gallery setting. Surrounded by sheet plastic. Black, dense, bolted to its mount. A glaring addendum.

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Empty Products ©Julie Orlemanski, 2003.