In Sondra's Words...

My practice interrogates technology’s role in shaping how the world perceives me and, by extension, how I come to perceive myself. It’s as if each technological layer adds its own ideological “filter,” superimposing beliefs and biases onto material reality—like strata in a geological formation or layers of frosting on a cake. These images and ideas crystallize into the structures we navigate daily, structures so pervasive they feel almost tangible.

I use AI as a metaphysical filter to see what cannot be seen, to bridge (badly) what I’m searching for—a complete picture. But this technology, too, is caught up in corporate capture. The slipperiness between AI presenting itself as a tool for transcendence and as a corporate machine is precisely the point. It’s a new, postmodern god: one of accumulation, image reincarnation, theft, and capture through the act of asking, receiving, and taking. But I know there are no gods. This cycle has its environmental consequences too, as the technologies we worship often destroy the very world they’re built on. And yet, despite these realities, I am drawn to the parallels AI offers in how it generates images I, as a human, cannot create on my own. I am limited in my ability, but, in using this technology, I find myself moved—touched by something larger than myself despite all the contradictions it embodies.

Sondra Perry: phantom. menace.
Soundtrack: Artist edit of the house mix (composed by Todd Terry) of Meli'sa Morgan cover of Still In Love, originally by Al Green; Images were made using DALLE E. with several prompts, the main one being: "Two African American men, one in his 50s and one in his late 20s, stand in the middle of a crowded barber shop and shake hands."

My sculptures offer a stark contrast to this ethereal digital creation. They are objects of material reality, touched and shaped repeatedly through physical labor. The barbershop chair sculptures are made with aluminum foil, incense, mushrooms—materials commonly found in the conspiracy theory, homesteader, hotep, self-reliance crowd. People searching for answers but unable to live with the contradictions of their own world-making. I empathize with their search, though I move away to avoid getting caught up in the fantasy. There’s clarity in how these objects are made. They are loud, slow-moving, and sometimes creak. You can see the control boxes, the computer brains of these objects. Though you may not know exactly how they were programmed, you can still see what they are doing—there’s no ambiguity about their materiality. At this moment in my life, I’m torn between holding onto a bit of magical thinking, a kind of delusion, while also needing to stay grounded in what is real. It’s a balancing act: resisting the pull of technological fantasy while maintaining a firm grip on the physical world.

GLITTER AND THE LION'S MANE
black vinyl cover is sparkling with mix of glitter and iron dust and slashed to host Lion's Mane mushroom spores that burst from the seat, arm rests and back support. Here, Perry employs the mycelium for its use in helping to protect against dementia.

 

Untitled exhibition at Bridget Donahue Gallery September 5-24, 2023
a presentation of five new works, the bones of which were seen before in a 2022 exhibition Lineage for a Phantom Zone at Fondation Beyeler. Everything has been deconstructed and rebuilt.
couch and fern
Recounts a recurring dream and failed family journey to find Perry's grandmother's home in North Carolina. Scored with a transcribed conversation between Perry and a psychoanalyst
OPEN ROADS
one of three barbershop chairs retrofitted with motorized hydraulic lifts and hand-built with materials used by spiritualist for protection and energetic flow. clay cones with sticks of Dragon's Blood incense
FOIL MANE: HANDSHAKES AND HEARTBREAKS
an absent figure form hand-built of aluminum foil, a symbolic material intended to protect and produce an energetic flow.