Aaron Storck's Wizard Luncheonat the University of Kansas Art and Design Gallery Sept 23 - Oct. 9, 2009 |

stills from "New Ministries" video loop, tlt: 12 min.
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2009, 60"x84" Triptych, Acrylic and inkjet print collage on canvas. "Exclusive/Wizard Picknickers."

2009, Installation view, Wizard Luncheon, Solo Show, the University of Kansas Art And Design Gallery.
WIZARD LUNCHEON:aaron storck, are you serious?Alaska Noyes Not a banquet or a feast, not a dinner or even a lunch but a Wizard Luncheon. What an absurd mental image, incongruous and anachronistic. I mean, wizards are from another time or realm, a far away place both magical and dangerous. A luncheon on the other hand - how more pedestrian and commonplace can you get? Banal but certainly not altogether benign, the luncheon always implies an agenda. This is not merely a social outing, oh no, there is work to be done. There will most certainly be a spiel or a pitch. Buying a time-share, joining a church, or being wrangled into some other commitment is the risk you willingly take for the promise of free food. So, who is this Wizard, why is he hosting a luncheon? What is the agenda? The Wizard is the protagonist at the heart of Aaron Storck's theatrical mise-en-scene. Exaggerated and over-the-top, he dons the most ostentatious of wizard garb, burns incense, mutters invocations, and eats Doritos. He is at once inane and intelligent, powerful and innocuous, entertaining and enlightening. He is an artist, a philosopher, a public access evangelist, he is a cultural theorist, a politician, and a scientist. He is a complex character used by Storck to examine and question a complex world. What happens when everything is nature and nature is always right? The Wizard loves such stupid products as Mountain Dews and Slim Jims. Artificially colored, sweetened and bereft of nutritional value, he positions them right along the most natural of natural foods. He embraces Walmart, chaos theory, and global warming, seeing no inherent flaw within humans' course of civilization and progress. We are nature, developed over thousands of years of genetic evolution and our social constructs, by extension, are also nature. In his book The Selfish Gene (1976), the evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins used the term meme to describe a unit of human cultural transmission analogous to the gene, arguing that replication also happens in cultural evolution. The Wizard does not think everything will be fine and dandy, he does not attempt to assuage any horrendous predictions of global warming. He simply believes that pain, suffering, and morally abject activities have always been part of human existence and have stood the test of time. Memetically speaking, our morally abject appetites are highly evolved traits and are here for a reason. Storck has the ability to push forth these ideas while keeping his distance. With the use of the Wizard questioning the validity of these thoughts as soon as they are posited. So what is the agenda to this Wizard luncheon? As I see it: To ask questions, to fearlessly offer answers, which must in turn be questioned in new compelling ways. To offer food for thought, a little entertainment. The Wizard and Aaron Stock are simply trying to make some semblance of this complex world and, of course, to engage in a little self-mythologizing while the self-mythologizing is good. Alaska Noyes is a freelance curator and writer Living in Kansas City, MO. He has been a contributing writer for Review Magazine and Juxtapoz.com and is currently a candidate for the Oklahoma Art Writing and Curatorial Fellowship.
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