Bridget Moser | A Malevolently Bad Map
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Southern Alberta Art Gallery 601 3 Avenue S, Lethbridge, Alberta T1J 0H4

Bridget Moser, “A Malevolently Bad Map,” 2024
video still (Courtesy of the artist)
Bridget Moser’s new solo exhibition A Malevolently Bad Map navigates the rocky terrain of self-knowledge. Through her unique combination of prop comedy, performance art, video, and sculptural installation, Moser’s humour and absurdity revel in the incongruous emotions of the Amazon age. In A Malevolently Bad Map, Moser takes a more personal tone, meandering through territories of identity formation, overcoming personal struggle, and the consumerization of self-expression.
For Moser, selfhood is not fixed or singular. It is a confusing mess of distractions, moments of acceptance, external pressures, and misdirected internal desires. Moser’s new video, also titled A Malevolently Bad Map is structured through a conversation between a person (played by Moser), a flesh-coloured, beaded towel of a Greek volute krater, and a pair of sentient pants. The person expresses familiar feelings of unfulfillment and that despite working out, keeping hydrated, staying on top of interior design trends, and living in a time and place of privilege, they still feel directionless.
Moser presents identity and self as a complicated texture of affirmations, irrational outbursts, and worries; a far cry from some unified whole. After all of the online purchases, bookmarked self-help articles, burnout, and ugly crying, maybe just trying to locate our fractured parts is enough. It’s like what the peachy volute krater says: “It’s not the fragments, but how they hang together.”
The title to the exhibition references X (formerly Twitter) user @oldbooksguy’s alt-right flirting chart of “15 (Pretty Big) Differences Between Good Art and Bad Art”. Apparently, one of the markers of “Bad Art” is recognizing it as “A Malevolently Bad Map”. The idea of intentionally following a bad map resonates with Moser’s questioning of identity formation. How much of the journey has been predetermined by our personal bad maps and how much of it is a result of just struggling to read the damn thing?
Bridget Moser’s performance, THE WORM THAT DESTROYS YOU will accompany the opening of the exhibition at 1:30 PM on January 27, 2023.
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