|   |       |                                        ARTS REVIEW           Do              ya feel lucky?     By Elaine Wolff     Arts Editor          Gordy Grundy might make your day with a cheeky paean to the joy and necessity    of membership.                Fortune is a difficult concept in a world in which so few control so much    wealth. As a causal agent, it's been used to explain away injustice for centuries,    but not everyone believes lighting candles to our ancestors will make a difference.    The Jesuits earned Rome's enmity for suggesting to their Latin American followers    that perhaps the meek wouldn't inherit the earth. And who in post-Depression    American can deny the power of positive thinking? If you can imagine yourself    the satisfied and satiated member of a fortunate class, a go-getter who (as    a David Mamet character once said) goes and gets it, you might very well    become one.                                                                          Artist                    Gordy Grundy will present his "Paragon of the Fine Arts" award                  to Linda Pace during Sala Diaz' First Friday open house, October                  7.   |                                              In              a society ruled simultaneously, but hardly peaceably, by the "freedom" of              contract and Maslow's hierarchy of needs, men and women have often              relied on membership to boost themselves through the ranks. Membership,              in short, is a way to make luck. In Fortuna, currently on view              at Sala Diaz, California artist Gordy Grundy raises the irony of              concepts such as membership, authority, and fortune in a purportedly              democratic society.                          The two-room installation consists of several framed prints, each bearing    a logo or more elaborate image from Grundy's inventive Fellowship of Fortuna,    which claims the organizing principle of "Chance." Like many of    his peers, Grundy is a conceptual artist who uses graphic design and marketing    slogans to articulate ideas (he also writes a humor column, "Genuflect," for    the art 'zine Coagula). The Fellowship's figurehead is the Viceroy of the    Western States, and in the well-executed watercolor etching, "The Viceroy    at Sea," ships looking suspiciously like the Niña, Pinta, and    Santa Maria sail below a Chevron-style "V." On the related website,    fortunanow.com, Grundy makes reference to European values, and falcon wings    spread behind the the Fortunates' crest (which also includes a crown worthy    of Westminster). The falcon is a traditional symbol of regal authority, and    the bold, looming wingspan is also suggestive of World War II-era fascism.                                                              Gordy                    Grundy: Fortuna                             By appointment         Through Oct 9         First Friday reception: 9pm Oct 7         Free         Sala Diaz         517 Stieren         389-3121 |                                         But                whimsical fun permeates the website and the Sala Diaz installation. "Hello                Friend!" is an encomium for the two-finger and thumbs-up                waves practiced by drivers on county roads everywhere. "Luxury" repurposes                a classic haute-couture logo design to promote "Awe and                Appreciation." "Our luxury accessorizes with any handbag," the                print declares. Joy and sincerity seem to radiate from the posters,                which makes one wonder how seriously to take the "Paragon                of the Fine Arts" award that the Viceroy will bestow on                Artpace founder Linda Pace in a special ceremony October 7. Pace                might be said to have had both good luck and tragically bad fortune,                but the good luck she has had, she has spread around, making                her the definition of a paragon: a model to follow. On the other                hand, obsequiousness, however cheeky, still almost rhymes with                queasiness.              In the corner of many of Grundy's prints, stamps from the Ministry of Feeling    Good, the Ministry of Fine Art, and the Fellowship, along with "Luxury," recall    a time when logos more commonly represented labor and service associations    than consumer brands, and promoted substantive values such as fair wages,    eight-hour days, and the five-day workweek. And, in a less egalitarian mode, "members    only."          "We all have luck. Some good. Some bad," announces the fortunanow.comwelcome page. But "luck" is just a more acceptable way of saying "fate," aproposition democracy, when it works, is bound to undermine, especially whilewe still have the freedom to associate. •                    By Elaine Wolff     Arts Editor                           |                   
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