Gail Wight, “Meaning of Miniscule,” 2006,
Plexiglas and electronics, software,
LCD screen, audio, 78 x 60 x 36”.

Tom LaDuke, “Untitled Self-
Portrait,” 2007,clay and epoxy.

Foreground:
Ax Head, late 1700s, Pounded metal ax head with
triangular opening where the handle would be
inserted. Courtesy of the Museum of the American
West, Autry National Center, Los Angeles.
Background:
Ben Jackel, “Down to the Bone,” 2008-09,
redwood and graphite, 120 x 90 x 16”.
Courtesy of L.A. Louver Gallery, Venice, CA
Photo credit: Steven A. Heller
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A common misconception is that only humans use tools. Actually, several other species--apes, sea otters, and various birds, among them--employ naturally occurring stones and sticks as tools. Indeed, some monkeys and even some birds (including a New Caledonian Crow named Betty [!]) go the step further to construct tools from multiple found objects. Perhaps the distinction lies in the fact that humans are the only ones who use tools to fabricate other tools.
Whether tools make us unique or not, they tell intriguing stories about our history. Artist/writer John O’Brien and curator Stephen Nowlin have assembled a provocative group of tools in an exhibition that generously displays functional and non-functional material culture. Contrasting objects created for purely utilitarian purposes with objects and images conceived aesthetically, they present a nostalgic perspective on the history of tools and those visual artists who are beguiled by that history.
Nowlin and O’Brien mined various California institutions to collect historic artifacts for the exhibition. Nearby the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) contributes three large graphite drawings by Russell W. Porter; the one from 1939 is a cut-away imagining of a 200-inch telescope. A large group of hand tools dated 1850 to 1945 was contributed by C.S. “Bud” Bolt, founder of Bolts Antique Tool Museum in Oroville, California. (Come on! Did you know such a museum existed?!) The Huntington Library gave them several pages from the Illustrated Catalogue of Machinery and Machinists’ Tools. Dated 1872, the pages recall the work of El Lissitzky and other avant-garde artists of the early twentieth century. The Autry National Center of the Museum of the American West donated both lo-tech and hi-tech devices: an antler-handle knife from 1857 and the telescope used from 1852 to 1892 by Pio Pico, the last Mexican governor of California. The knife can be compared to Tom LaDuke’s “Untitled Self-Portrait” (2007), a clay and epoxy knife with a skeletal head on its blade. And the telescope is brilliantly paired with Gail Wight’s “Meaning of Minuscule” (2007), a Plexiglas sculpture of a gigantic microscope. Its viewing platform is replaced by an LCD screen on which various scientific images are randomly displayed. |