THE DARK TOWER
curated by Cauleen Smith
May-June 2009
drawing by Louis Schmidt © 2009
Shane Anderson / Susy Bielak / Crystal Z. Campbell
Micha Cárdenas / Mauricio Chernovetsky / Lili Chin
Ted Chung / Leigh Cole / Micki Davis / Monica Duncan
Nico Herbst / Glenna Jennings / Merve Kayan
Anna Chiaretta Lavatelli / Dolissa Medina / Elle Mehrmand
Chuck Miller / Vincent Manganello / Jesse Mockrin
Zac Monday / Clare Parry / Brianna Rigg / Lesha Rodriquez
Louis Schmidt / The Community Insourcing Bureau
Julia Westerbeke / Suzanne Wright / Claire Zitzow
In fairy tales the dark tower imprisons. In poems it taunts and beckons, or shelters and protects. In sci-fi narratives, the dark tower is not so much a destination as a portal-mirror that negotiates slippages in space and time and reflects our latent desires back to us.
The Dark Tower exists.
It is within the tower that, like the works in this show, our bodies may stretch along a sliver of time, tumble within a quantum of space, and warm to the heat that travels to us as light from stars that guide our way. For the purposes of describing the artists that the show’s title seeks to bind, I looked to the imagery of two poems. (“Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came” (1855) by British poet Robert Browning and “From The Dark Tower” (1927) by black gay American poet Countee Cullen) Browning’s poem describes the arduous journey toward The Dark Tower, and Mr. Cullen’s poem leads us away. However, it is the short-lived but seminal American salon, named after Mr. Cullen’s poem, that this show most powerfully invokes.
In Browning’s poem, the Childe (untested knight) Roland, wanders lost in the wastelands that challenge and deceive him as he attempts to reach the dark tower. At one point in his journey, the young knight, must cross a river littered with the bodies of those who have come before him.
By contrast, Countee Cullen describes the artist as an attendant to precious germinations that might one day safely escape the dark tower to be embraced by the broad light of day. In 1928, on the one hundred and thirty-sixth west block of Harlem USA, heiress A’Lelia Walker, daughter of Madame CJ Walker – hair care magnate and first black American woman to become a millionaire, converted a floor of her glorious Brownstone into a salon and named it after Countee Cullens’ poem. She gathered together the raucous and brilliant stalwarts of the Harlem Renaissance, various international gadflies, and Greenwich Village aesthetes like Carl Van Vechten (who had been a constant fixture at Mabel Dodge’s salons in the lower east side). A’Lelia Walker’s Dark Tower was lit for only a year, after which Harlem’s salon lady died at the age of 46. When she passed, Langston Hughes declared that the glory days of Harlem died with her. Indeed, in 1931, the glory days of American industrial power were dying as well.
And so it goes that The Dark Tower with its ability to fold time, compress space, and re-animate the body [so much like the artists presented] finds us today in the flotsam of hedge funds and the wreckage of mortgage-backed securities. One can no longer assume that a Masters of Fine Arts from a reputable institution entitles one to leap form their cramped campus studio into a one-person show at a glistening New York gallery like a debutant in the order of myths. One may leap indeed, but like Browning’s Childe Roland, the landing, even if one arrives at one’s chosen destination, may not hold the promises that looked so tantalizing from afar. What happens, if like Browning’s Childe, we arrive at the tower and discover that it is the end, rather than the beginning? What then? Browning, Cullen, and certainly A’lelia Walker exemplar, all declared that it is the journey that matters- and the dream.
So here we are slipping through time. The year is two thousand and nine. The place is compactspace. The artists are twenty-seven MFA candidates at UCSD who welcomed me into their studios for conversation and shared this slice of their journey with me, one of the more recent additions to the faculty. This salon extends our conversations into the present moment so that we may look through this ephemeral window, lit just long enough for those seeking the tower to join us.







