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Ben
Smit May 5 - September 17, 1999 Artist
Statement The desire to construct a spacecraft stems from my enthusiasm for the common place. My earlier work has dealt with recreating everyday objects in unexpected materials in an attempt to create a new way of looking at things. By locating the saucer in a park, in a metropolis, I intend to reinvest this everyday idea with new meaning merely by its being there. I hope that to chance upon this craft, newly arrived in the world, will confirm for a brief instant our childhood belief that, hey, it's just like the spaceship I remembered. Of course, upon second glance, it will be noticed that this crude construct, limited in technological sophistication, is a cartoon (of an idea), a child's concept of a flying saucer, a functional cipher. The idea realized is at once unreal. It could never be what it pretends to be, could never have been airborne, let alone have traveled through time and space but perhaps for that nanosecond of first glimpse, that hyper drive-by sighting, it is possible and will always be possible within the inner space of the imagination. Ben
Smit, Craft, 1999; 20' x 7'; aluminum, wood, neon.
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