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The current exhibit is Step Right Up!, a David Seiler single-artist feature. This puts Seiler among a select group of artists who have been given major solos at Aiello, with the only others I can recall being Doris Laughton and Virginia Maitland. Ordinarily, group shows are presented there because the place is so enormous.
Born in 1960 in Grand Rapids, Michigan, Seiler moved to Colorado in 1984. "Believe it or not," he says, "I came for the skiing. I was so tired of skiing on Michigan mush."
After working for years as a chef, Seiler had an epiphany when his younger brother died. Realizing that life is short, he was determined to follow his passions and become an artist. He studied art at Metropolitan State College of Denver, graduating in 1995. The following year, Seiler and a group of Metro artists founded the gone-but-not-forgotten ILK co-op.
Seiler does all kinds of work, including drawing, sculpture (both inert and interactive) and even music. In Step Right Up! he choreographs all of it, using a carnival analogy to explicate greed. The show is divided into two distinct parts. In the Front Bay is a show of Seiler's drawings and sculpture, but the Middle Bay features something very unusual: The room has been converted into the interior of a big circus tent, which Seiler filled with sideshow-type attractions.
The drawings in the front include three large portraits of carnies, with one of them, "Ride Boy," having a particularly unnerving quality. Also on view are crude schematic drawings that explain how some of the mechanical pieces in the second part of the show were put together.
"Circus Barker," a sculpture with audio, draws viewers out of the Front Bay and into the tent installation -- just as a real barker would. This is a great piece. Seiler has fabricated two flat outlines of the head and torso of the barker, using them to make a box-like configuration resembling an outdoor sign. He has painted the boxy figure to represent the barker dressed in a black jacket with a white shirt and red tie. A metal horn amplifies the recorded loop of the barker's call to come on in. Seiler has antiqued or weathered the sculpture so that it looks like it dates from the early twentieth century, the hypothetical time frame of his "Circus of More." In fact, one compelling aspect of the installation is how accurately Seiler conveys the look of agedness: Everything in the show appears to be an antique, even the tent itself.
The tent is made of muslin sheets that Seiler dyed yellow and red, then pieced together to form alternating stripes. The striped muslin is draped from the ceiling to conceal the walls, which completely transforms the room into a somewhat creepy place. That feeling is enhanced by the dim lighting and the old-looking attractions placed around the edges.
Seiler acknowledges the eeriness and explains that it comes from the source material. "Circuses are sinister," he says. "Circuses are about mischief; they keep you slightly off balance." He instills some of those same attributes into "Circus of More."
The first thing viewers encounter when they enter "Circus of More" is the soundtrack, which was composed by Seiler and performed by the Perry Weissman 3. It has a manic minimalism that, in the "Circus of More" setting, comes off like edgy carnival tunes.