Palm Springs, California—the town that Sonny Bono
built—looks to be a fine place for desert road cycling, not that I’ve done much
of that in my four days here. This holiday has been about hiking, and the place
to do that in these parts is Joshua Tree National Park, about an hour’s drive
north of the Coachella Valley, in what the locals call “high desert.”
And high, it truly is, in more ways than one. It’s uphill
all the way from Palm Springs, and the temperature up at Joshua is generally
between 12-15 degrees cooler. But the vibe up at Joshua Tree is totally chill
too. The little town by the park’s main entrance feels like a different planet
from Palm Springs. It’s a combination of tourist traps, artist studios, hippy
retro shops, espresso joints run by long-bearded hipsters, and an assortment of sun-baked Burning Man-types.
It was up at Joshua that I took this photo of one of Noah
Purifoy’s art assemblages. Prior to a couple of days ago, I’d never heard of
Noah Purifoy. But a mysterious woman in a hot tub urged us to visit the Outdoor
Desert Art Museum of Assemblage and Sculpture (ODAMAS) just north of Joshua
Tree. And I now know why. The ODAMAS is a bizarre place—freaky, really—but fascinating
and pure high desert.
Purifoy was born in Alabama in 1917 and worked as an
industrial arts teacher and social worker, served in the war, and took several
university degrees before devoting himself full-time to his art in the late
1950s. He is credited with redefining African American artistic consciousness,
most famously through his assemblage sculpture exhibit “66 Signs of Neon,”
inspired by the Watts Rebellion in LA in 1965. In 1989, he moved to Joshua
Tree, where, until his death in 2004, he worked away at filling a 10-acre expanse
of desert with his assemblages.
Walking around the ODAMAS is a creepy/fun experience. Although the place is now run by a
foundation, there’s no-one actually on site; visitors just drop a donation in a
box and freely wander the site. It feels like a combination of abandoned art
installation, archeological site, ghost town, and mad genius’s open-air
laboratory. The day we went we were the only humans there, but the place felt
strangely inhabited by something.
Certain objects and themes keep popping up in the various
assemblages—lots of toilets (stacked, smashed, piled); mannequins, often
decapitated and/or dissolving from sun/wind; and ghoulish parodies of cozy
domestic spaces that often have the feel of bricolage
torture chambers. Some of the pieces are weirdly funny; others are just messed
up. You get the sense that Purifoy was gifted and disturbed; witty and angry;
prophetic and tormented.
Given Purifoy’s penchant for using every day material stuff in his art,
it’s not surprising that bicycles and bicycle parts figure prominently in some
of the assemblages. This piece that caught my eye features a kind of
post-apocalyptic choo-choo train of bike buggies—think Who-ville contraption
meets Mad Max.
Just as the desert moonscape of Joshua Tree park can feel
like an alien landscape, as if giants used it as a playground, plopping jumbo
rocks here and mega-piles of small rocks there, so too can Purifoy’s pieces
evoke an otherworldliness. These bike assemblages feel like Twilight Zone playthings
for extra-terrestrial children. Their mix of foreignness and innocence matches the vibe of Joshua Tree itself. No wonder Purifoy felt at home in the high desert.
You've really nailed the way that ODAMAS evokes both creepy and curious. 10-acres of pure arty weird and wonderful.
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