From October 5 – November 15,
2017, the Boston Arts Academy will present Lost and Found, an exhibition by
Naoe Suzuki.
Suzuki will be presenting Lost and Found, the second installment
of a three-part project, completed during her tenure as artist
in residence at Broad
Institute of MIT and Harvard. Observations
made during her appointment inside this dynamic biomedical research institute led
Suzuki to investigate what has been lost in the history of science and medicine
while making progress — eventually leading her to the Edwin Smith Papyrus, the oldest medical textbook from 1,600 BC,
which includes prognosis for the first time in recorded history. On the verso,
magic spells were introduced as medical treatment in ancient Egypt.
Fascinated with this information, Suzuki created a
number of works incorporating the images of magic spells along with the current
scientific information including the paper on the Human Genome Project
published in 2001, and numerous writings she traced from the whiteboards around
the Broad Institute.
Suzuki explores the interconnectedness of meaning between knowledge and belief, bringing forth forgotten beliefs—the magic spells that were mostly written on the verso side of the papyrus—and asks us: What is legitimate? What might we have lost? What do we still believe? and What do we hope to find? These magic spells, which are undecipherable to untrained eye, operate as a visual form, in a similar way to technical scientific writings that are difficult to understand to a layperson.
Courtesy of the Broad Institute, Suzuki includes
decontaminated lab equipment in the exhibit. Suzuki also uses card catalog
cabinets, deaccessioned from the Harvard Fine Arts Library, to hold a
collection of petri dishes that contain laser cut pieces of magic spells.
At the Boston Arts Academy (BAA,) Suzuki will work
inside the gallery and spend nearly a month as the artist in residence, continuing
to explore the concept of “lost and found” with students. A manual typewriter
is set up on the 4th floor with a question on the wall, “What have
you lost that you want to find again?” The artist asks students to think about
this question and to respond by typing on a manual typewriter, which itself is
a lost device no longer commonly used.
The exhibit, Lost
and Found will open on Thursday, October 5th. An opening reception
will be held on Thursday, October 12th from 5-7 pm. The art gallery
is open to the public during school hours. The Artist-in-Residence program at
BAA was made possible through the Polly Thayer Starr Charitable Trust.
Lost and Found
Boston Arts Academy
174 Ipswich Street, Boston, MA. Tel: 617.635.6470
School hours:
Monday through Friday • 9am - 4pm (closed October 9
& November 10)
Boston Arts Academy (BAA) is Boston’s only public high school for the visual and performing
arts, serving 450 students who reflect the diversity of Boston’s
neighborhoods.
Related exhibitions:
Stories retold, the first installment of Suzuki’s project completed
during her appointment as the Broad Institute’s artist in residence, is installed in the institute’s main lobby through December 21, 2017.
Broad Institute of MIT and
Harvard
415 Main Street, Cambridge,
MA
Extended through December 21, 2017
Extended through December 21, 2017
Suzuki’s
third installment of her project from her Broad Institute residency will be
exhibited at the Cambridge School of Weston’s Red Wall Gallery.
Red
Wall Gallery
Weston, MA
October 30 - December 20, 2017
Opening Reception: Saturday, November 11 • 2-5pm
Gallery Talk: Saturday, November 18 • 1-2pm
Weston, MA
October 30 - December 20, 2017
Opening Reception: Saturday, November 11 • 2-5pm
Gallery Talk: Saturday, November 18 • 1-2pm