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Jun 18

Jaclyn Wright: High Visibility (Blaze Orange)

Jaclyn Wright: High Visibility (Blaze Orange)

Presented by Utah Museum of Contemporary Art at Utah Museum of Contemporary Art

In High Visibility (Blaze Orange), artist Jaclyn Wright uses debris collected from gun ranges on public lands to explore the intersections of photography, capitalism, and colonialism. Employing original images as well as archival photographs, maps, and diagrams from the University of Utah’s J. Willard Marriott Library Special Collections, Wright investigates the supporting role photography plays in the abstraction of nature, a process that reinforces the codification of land use based on gender, race, and class.

“The first time I visited the West Desert, I unknowingly stumbled upon an unofficial shooting range. The area echoed with gunfire and was littered with bullet holes, casings, large non-biodegradable objects that serve as improvised targets, such as plastic containers, dishwashers, washing machines, and commercially produced targets known as clay pigeons,’ says Wright. These clay pigeons and their highly saturated “blaze orange” color are the most conspicuous types of debris she finds. The contrast between the synthetic orange and the azure blue sky helps the target to stand out, enabling shooters to track the unnatural target more easily against the natural milieu. Wright uses the visual contrast of the orange and blue as symbolic of larger tensions at play in the work and on the land “the natural/anthropogenic, visible/invisible, material/bureaucratic, prudent/reckless, and sustainable/nihilistic,” said Wright.

As an artist, she is interested in how these dualities are made visible in the recreational shooting ranges scattered throughout the West Desert, the ancestral homeland of the Shoshone, Paiute, Goshute, and Ute people, and manifest themselves in behaviors informed by attitudes such as “rugged individualism, and American exceptionalism, that perpetuate colonial ideologies and undermine the goals of egalitarianism and environmentalism.”

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$8 Suggested Donation

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  • June 18, 2022 at 11:00 am (Sat)

Location Info

Utah Museum of Contemporary Art
20 South West Temple
Salt Lake City, UT 84101

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