Alia Malley: Projection for Two Stations: Public Art Commission

17 - 24 August 2016
Overview
Projection for Two Stations reinvents the classic Southern California drive-in experience for cars and train passengers. So often in contemporary urban life—especially while commuting on mass transit—we are self-sequestered in our own worlds, focused on the tiny screens of our handheld devices. Malley’s work disrupts this expectation, even if momentarily, as the train passes through Bergamot Station, groups of passengers will be drawn to look up and experience the unexpected, together.

Multi-media artist, Alia Malley, presents a week-long, large-scale, nightly video installation made possible with an Our Town Grant from the National Endowment for the Arts in cooperation with the City of Santa Monica Cultural Affairs Department. The artist will project her short video, Christmas Eve in Panorama City onto the D Building in the central parking lot of Bergamot Station, transforming the art complex into a classic Southern California drive-in and unifying the experience between the thriving arts community and rail passengers of the new Expo Line.



The featured short film loop, Christmas Eve in Panorama City, creates a sense of place and displacement within the framework of California landscapes and the historical context of film and media. Following a helicopter as it circles in silhouette endlessly against a glossy, hyperreal sunset with its color cues taken from the poster of Bruce Brown’s classic 1966 surf documentary, The Endless Summer, the piece questions our expectations of—and relationship to— filmed representations of Southern California, including iconic beach communities like Santa Monica.

ALIA MALLEY received her BA in Critical Studies from USC School of Cinematic Arts in 1994, and her MFA in Visual Arts from University of California Riverside. Her work has been exhibited in solo and group exhibitions throughout the US, including the Indianapolis Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Riverside Art Museum, California. Malley’s work is included in the permanent collection of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the UCLA Library Special Collections. She is the recipient of numerous awards and artist residencies. This is the artist's first grant from the National Endowment for the Arts.

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