|       |       |       | LAND (Los Angeles Nomadic Division) |  |  |        |       |       |         | John Baldessari, Love and  Work, 2014. Billboard, The Manifest Destiny Billboard  Project. Courtesy of the artist. |  |  |  |        |       | The Manifest Destiny  Billboard Project: John Baldessari
 |    |  |        |       | Panel:  September 26 with René Paul Barilleaux, Zoe Crosher,  and Shamim M. Momin at 6:30pm
 Reception until  8:30pm
 
 McNay Art Museum
 6000 North New  Braunfels
 San Antonio, TX 78209
 
 
 LAND  (Los Angeles Nomadic Division) presents the fifth chapter of billboards  as part of The Manifest Destiny Billboard Project featuring  the work of John Baldessari in San Antonio from  September 26 to through October. A panel will be held at the  McNay Art Museum (6000 North New Braunfels Avenue, San Antonio, TX  78209) at 6:30pm followed by a reception until 8:30pm on Friday,  September 26.
 
 The Manifest Destiny Billboard  Project is a series of artist-produced billboards and  activations that will unfold along Interstate 10 Freeway from  Florida to California through spring 2015. The project was conceived  by artist Zoe Crosher and is co-curated by the artist and LAND's  Director and Curator, Shamim M. Momin. Using the concept of  Manifest Destiny—America's territorial expansion across North  America—the artists will explore this problematic and layered  history.
 
 Using approximately 100 billboards total, 10  artists will create "chapter" groupings along I-10, each a unique  interpretive link to the exhibition's thematic. The billboards will move  through and punctuate the landscape by tracing territorial expansion from  east to west, along one of the country's busiest freeways, concluding in  Los Angeles. The billboards will be activated through various events,  programs, and social media outlets for dialogue and interaction with local  communities.
 
 The project launched on October 20, 2013 in  Jacksonville, Florida with billboards by Los Angeles-based artist Shana  Lutker titled Onward and Upward. Participating  artists include John Baldessari, Sanford Biggers, Matthew Brannon,  Zoe Crosher, Eve Fowler, Shana Lutker, Jeremy Shaw, Daniel R. Small, Bobbi  Woods, and Mario Ybarra Jr.
 
 John  Baldessari's chapter of The Manifest Destiny Billboard  Project, titled Love and Work, employs the  traditional advertising trope of repetition, as all ten of the billboards  display the same image, scattered throughout the San Antonio area. Using  this tactic, the image will engrain in the minds of commuters, drawing  connections between the disparate locations of the billboards.
 
 Baldessari's diptych image conveys the ultimate dichotomy of  Manifest Destiny and the American Dream, further clarified in the series  title: Love and Work. A large gear mechanism dominates the  right half of the composition, depicted in grainy black and white and  somewhat blurred, as if in motion. This heavy machinery alludes to the  industrialism that was the foundation of American capitalist development,  and the physical labor underlying the (often unattainable) goals of the  historical American Dream. The gear similarly implies being a part of a  larger machine—that we are each a cog in the wheel, so to speak. The  artist juxtaposes the gear with an image of pure, domestic relaxation: a  male figure reclines, arms akimbo, on a hammock. The vibrant yellow and  purple hues superimposed like a light filter over this underlying  black-and-white image suggest a bygone era, and highlight the ultimate  goals of our labors: happiness and love. The reclining figure and gear  maintain the same angled position, drawing a visual parallel between man  and machine, leisure and industriousness—the precarious balancing act  that is both America's ambition and the source of many of its most salient  problems.
 
 This project is made possible with an award from the  National Endowment for the Arts. Art Works and with support from Clear  Channel Outdoor, San Antonio. Special thanks to the McNay Art Museum  and the McNay Contemporary Collectors Forum (MCCF).
 
 About LAND:
 LAND (Los Angeles Nomadic Division) is a  non-profit public art organization committed to curating site- and  situation-specific contemporary art projects in Los Angeles and beyond.  LAND believes that everyone deserves the opportunity to experience  innovative contemporary art in their day-to-day lives. In turn, artists  deserve the opportunity to realize projects, otherwise unsupported, at  unique sites in the public realm.
 
 
 
 
  
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