Security Blanket
Curated by Mike Blockstein
In Security Blanket, moments that once were politically-charged now seem innocent; anthems are turned on their heads; and the past is used to comment on an uncomfortable present. From the moment the program begins with Jeroen Offerman's wry spin on the Led Zeppelin classic Stairway from Heaven, one senses that something is askew. Blending a fine line between satire, social commentary and sentimentality, the works in Security Blanket take the viewer on a tour of the not-so-good ol' days concentrating on the Watergate era to the present. Moving back and forth between politics, pop culture and presidential populism, ideals clash with the reality of the moment, through historicized reinterpretations, recollections, cut-and-paste commentary or pure unabashed nostalgia. The works use a soft, subtle touch to reflect on often-heavy topics.

Offerman's anthem wryly takes us backward, setting the tone for much of the program. Stairway at St. Paul's spins us back to the days of long hair, AOR and the fear of encrypted Satanic messages on backward-played records. Hopping back to the present era, Aaron Valdez's States of the Union: Clinton interjects a lesson in demographic, poll-driven politics. What does it amount to? Who are we accountable to? David Barker's 7 Days gives us a dog's-eye insight into the Nixon White House. Has time washed a golden hue over this era? Would the same scene play out in the Bush White House? Contrast the political climate and activism in Bryan Konefsky's You are Here with the present. Would he be considered a domestic terrorist? Melancolia by James Elaine & William Basinski stands in the middle of the program as a reminder of the ideals of pre-WWII America. Erika Yeoman's amusing mid-life crisis piece Chubby Buddy asks deeper questions about the loss of creative desire and our sometimes sad and misguided attempts to replace it. Like Stairway at St. Paul's, Kayo Nakamura's hilarious Cafeteria unabashedly simultaneously revels and pokes fun at pop culture and pop music. The question is though, is this simple uninhibited joy, wallowing in nostalgia, or a form of hiding in the past? This question looms over much of the program.

Security Blanket reaches its apex and returns to the present with Carola Dertnig's haunting pre-9/11 A Room with a View of the Financial District and Aaron Valdez's States of the Union: Bush. The images seem to tell us all that we need to know. Have we wrapped ourselves in a veil of secrecy under the cloak of security? Is the present too daunting, too fresh or so glaring that we must explore it through the past? Is this a more subtle and effective means of sociopolitical commentary? Have our voices been silenced? In the age of heightened security, the works in Security Blanket pose the difficult questions of where our collective comfort zone lies.

Stairway at St. Paul's by Jeroen Offerman (8:00)
States of the Union: Clinton by Aaron Valdez (4:00)
7 Days by David Barker (10:00)
You are Here by Bryan Konefsky (7:00)
Melancolia by James Elaine & William Basinski (3:30)
Chubby Buddy by Erika Yeomans (13:00)
Cafeteria by Kayo Nakamura (4:30)
A Room with a View of the Financial District by Carola Dertnig (5:30)
States of the Union: Bush by Aaron Valdez (4:00)
(Running time: 59.5 min.)
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