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  • Casino Culture
  • Jane Dickson (bio)

The globalization of casino culture looms terrifyingly ascendant—economically, environmentally, and politically. The twenty first century's diminishing resources and despoiled environment have triggered seismic global shifts that privilege the bare-knuckles strongman paradigm of the winner takes all created by a self-perpetuating elite caste of mega winners while transforming everyone else into an increasingly desperate sea of losers. How did the world turn upside down so quickly while we weren't paying much attention?

Truth has been systematically delinked from power, obscured by a shrill barrage of gossip, paranoia, and wishful thinking. It becomes increasingly urgent to examine how serious discussion of all aspects of this global crisis are being thwarted by this hailstorm of distraction. As a figurative painter, I work with the tools I have, observation and analysis distilled in paint.

As every aspect of accepted norms in American life has come under siege, [End Page 344]


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Figure 1.

Shoot the Stars, 2005. Oil stick on linen, 48 × 60 in. Courtesy of the artist

[End Page 345] it is urgent to really look at where we are, and what's actually going on behind the smoke and mirrors, so that we can find new paths out of the apocalyptic trajectory we are being swept along before it is too late. In painting casinos, I reflect on the psychological freight of the man-made world and its virtual web doppelganger, contemplating the social structuring of fear and desire in a world where the familiar has grown uncannily strange and frightening. My aim is to pull the unnoticed, the unquestioned background "room tone" of daily life, into the foreground, to provide space for reflection on the usually unquestioned substrates of our lives.

I am a child of immigrant outsiders. Growing up I studied Americanness to try to fit in. I have continued this cultural surveillance in paint, foraging through images of our shifting landscape to gather visual evidence, reframing the iconic into distilled images. My goal is to create a sorely needed contemplative space for examination of the web of embedded values and assumptions underpinning our apocalyptic present. I seek to capture undramatic pivot points in the mutating cultural parameters of our polyglot nation. As a literalist by nature, I aim to establish some baseline of recognizable shared facts, as I perceive them, in this increasingly unstable and untruthful world.

How do the physical and the conceptual constructs of our present shape the parameters of our lived experiences? I focus on the unremarkable ubiquitous structures designed and selected by small groups of mostly white men in private offices that form the backdrop to our lives,


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Figure 2.

Las Vegas 9 (Gameboy 2), 2010. Oil on canvas, 24 × 36 in. Courtesy of the artist

[End Page 346]


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Figure 3.

Big Peepland, 2016. Oil on linen, 70 × 44 in. Courtesy of the artist

[End Page 347]


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Figure 4.

Check You Speed 3 Balls, 2005. Oil stick on linen, 83 × 40 in. Courtesy of the artist

[End Page 348] virtually as well as IRL (in real life.). I zoom out to high vantage points to focus on overviews, where the tangled superstructures and infrastructures of city streets, throughways, fun parks, and casinos' labyrinths reveal the overlapping vortex of systems haphazardly intersecting, channeling our hunger for at least an illusion of transcendence. Then I zoom back in to focus on individuals struggling to hold a place in the unforgiving glare of urban sprawl.

The architecture of distraction camouflaging glossy rigged systems that now dominate our lives operated originally as brick-and-mortar entertainment zones with their attendant pickpockets, crackpots, and humbug salesmen. These now infest the digital labyrinth 24/7 with endless detours, robotic spam pop-ups, and unhinged tweet storms. We all get tangled up in the web's overload, too often coming to our senses at the keyboard struggling to recall what we sat down to research in the first place before we got sidetracked into watching cute cats, with no time to calm down from the...

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