/home/karlrees/public_html/gallery2/bla
/home/karlrees/public_html/gallery2/bla
/home/karlrees/public_html/gallery2/bla In the Big Box | Wayne and Rebecca Madsen

In the Big Box

wayne's picture
In the Big Box

I collaborated on this installation at the beginning of 2005 with Mike Evans and Marlene Dayley. Our artist statement follows:

The American currency system has developed a new feature of the western market--Big-Box corporate stores. A big-box corporate store is the mega-market store, where the corporation supplies thousands of different brands of goods underneath one single roof, usually in the form of an enormous warehouse. These mega-stores dot the American landscape, often more recognizable and familiar than a local store or a regional chain. More often than not, the term Big-Box directly correlates with the concept of a chain of stores, linked together, marketing to sizable groups and mass populations unheard of before. As citizens of this nation, we participate in Big-Box living. We grow up knowing specific store brands much better than others. We can spot them and wherever we go, we know we won't be far away from one of those trustable locations: trustable in what we'll find inside them. We used three objects that address different aspects of Big Box economics. The candle and flowers represent individuals and the receipts represent our individual experience. In a western economy, we make exchanges in currency. These receipts mark our experience within this currency economy. As artists, we have spent the past months saving these receipts and asking others to participate in collecting receipts of their purchases. Many of these purchases are necessity based: food stuffs, travel allotments and occasional "pleasure" transactions. But each of us has become wiser in knowing what our lives are like in Big-Box corporate America.