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WAYS TO DIE
JOHN HANSON, CAROL HO, JENNY LU,
LEE MAELZER, RICHARD MCRAE, RICHARD PAUL
Fri 28 Feb - Sun 23 March 2003
Page 23, Your Guide To Our Funeral Services,
Dignity - Caring Funeral Services:
"If a now or existing headstone is to be used, the engraving
can be done
relatively quickly. However, it may take up to six months before
the
headstone may be placed on the grave, as the ground needs to settle."
These are the practical considerations to be taken into account
when someone dies. But in terms of becoming dead, can it be dealt
with in a similarly pragmatic way?
Ways to Die takes such a direct approach presenting: instructions
for suicide; pop-culture suicide; a house on fire; causes of death
on generations of an extended family tree; children committing suicide;
a memorial to those who die of natural causes.

Jenny Lu
Jenny Lu's video " 7 basic ways to
commit suicide" confronts death in the most direct way. In
a style reminiscent of an airhostess presenting a safety demonstration,
Jenny Lu delineates foolproof methods to take your own life. Lu's
video ultimately questions whether the artist should take responsibility
for their own work and the influence it may have on others.

Carol Ho
Carol Ho's sculptures of children are based
on the Columbine High School massacre in 1998, and a series of copycat
episodes that happened later in the US. These reminded her of the
thin line between reality and fantasy; the gruesome and ambiguous
messages behind the killings shook the conventional positive perceptions
of children and childhood. Ho's sculptures mix violent imagery with
a playful and aesthetic use of material - bright red plooms of polystyrene
forming exit wounds from cartoon-like mdf figures shooting themselves.

John Hanson
John Hanson is showing an office ceiling
panel with a peg-letter memo for 'all those who die of natural causes.'
The panel and letters merge in the mushroom-magnolia spectrum of
decaying white plastic and paint.
"I've noticed that I often say 'Thank you' twice... but I'm
not sure I'm doubly grateful... Tautology. Clarification. Procrastination...
I guess I'm after some kind of confirmation - confirmation of what
is supposed to be obvious."

Lee Maelzer
Lee Maelzer's painting of a house on fire
both dramatises and faithfully records the event, as in a news photograph.
The perfect composition and low horizon serve to highten the viewer's
helplessness (or voyeurism). We are aware that if someone is in
this fire, they are not coming out.

Richard McRae
Richard McRae has produced a slide show
of text on four Mac Classic computers and a printed family tree.
Each slide show uses a different transition time between pages of
the text so that what is seen between all four screens is a random
collection of statements. The texts are a combination of the names
of his ancestors; descriptions of their personalities; and details
of how they loved, lived and died. When seen together the four screens
never stop generating myths.
The family tree charts the death for each ancestor. Many were lucky
and died of old age. Others were not. Some died young; some in horrible
ways. One or two died in the most ridiculous of ways. One was crushed
by bread, some died in a toilet and a few others were killed by
an insect of one sort or another.
Richard Paul
Richard Paul and
Lee Maelzer
Richard Paul's sign "Way to go, John Belushi" lists the
probable ingredients of Belushi's fatal overdose, on a perspex board
reminiscent of cinemas and motels. The actor becomes the subject
of tabloid prurience - he lives and dies excessively so we don't
have to.
'Ways To Die' is curated by John Hanson and Richard Paul
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