Monday, February 22, 2016

Arizona Gene

      The autobiographical videos of Jokerlately's 2009-2011 based Youtube account mark a turbulent time in American politics, when Barack Obama, the long-legged mac daddy emperor-in-chief, was rolling out the threat of a three state boycott of Arizona to let racist, drug-related Mexicans get over the border tax-free in order to rob and rape us. This was before the discovery that Obama was a socialist dictator funded by terrorists and actually the same person as Osama Bin Laden, all of which Jokerlately (A.K.A. Arizona Gene) correctly foretold back in 2008, along with the clairvoyant prediction that America's rich would flee to Belize in tax panic. A sharp-tongued satirist and partisan, Gene uses his videos to contrast his life's simple homespun joys with the constant, lurking fear that informs his devastating political paranoia.
      We are given a lucid experience of Gene's cartoon and cowboy hobby art with sets of semi-linear explorations where computer screensaver technology blends with physically drawn paintings and cartoons, propped in a corner of a dull room, or perhaps held in the shaky hand of the artist, who narrates, often passing over written dialogue and a partially visible script he does not follow. Further perspective dissonance is added by the facts that most of these videos are verbally addressed to President Obama, who Arizona Gene angrily reprimands in defense of Arizona and her gentle people. Gene is comfortable in the role of accuser, confronting many objects as as his enemies, from jibing a pair of Egyptian mummies he believes are the Obamas to insisting the mountain he paints every day is hiding terrorists.
      This clash of natural wild country with the conquering hegemony of modernity is a constant theme in Gene's work revisited repeatedly, from his constant portrayal of the wild west to his painting of Columbus exploring the New World. Gene seems to have some awareness of his idealization of the wild frontier, keeping a pet leopard statue in his back yard, praying to the Great Spirit, and remarking at one point that he disguises himself as a cowboy.
      As you may have guessed by now, Gene is not necessarily a reliable narrator. Playing off his believable and gentle manner, Gene's work actually contains many false clues and messages, such as his claims that a video is short, about to end, that it's going to get more interesting soon, that he has a pet duck, or a wife. Arizona Gene is constantly exploring the role of spectator in his art, introducing his audience to a new, confusing world which binds Gene's life and art together in an indistinct juxtaposition, forcing his audience to consider questions of the truth of identity and reality. We see life through Gene's eyes, but not through his mind, as he publicly confronts strangers, animals and inanimate things with his camera and trembling, grandfatherly voice. The images we see are sunny and peaceful, people smiling back and Arizona looking as beautiful and serene as the folksy hobby art Gene paints with a friendly, conservative hand, but the darkness of the mental landscape is looming and ever-present.

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