On View

Elizabeth Withstandley

You Can Not Be Replaced

You Can Not Be Replaced is a multi-channel video installation featuring images of all 82 current and former members of the Dallas choral symphonic rock band, The Polyphonic Spree.

Fifty square photographs are displayed in five rows of ten. Most of the photos depict people, but some depict instruments. All of the people are wearing white shirts, some of which have a red heart in the middle. The squares have a series of different backgrounds including a variety of shades of mauve, blue, purple, pink, green and yellow.
Elizabeth Withstandley. You Can Not Be Replaced, 2017. Video Still.
  • Screening Launch: Thursday, March 1

The video is accompanied by an audio track that combines ambient cosmic recordings, spoken word and partial renditions of The Polyphonic Spree song It’s the Sun performed by former band members Andrew Tinker and Corn Mo.

The band itself was formed in 2000 and over the years people have come in and out of the band, some calling it almost a rite of passage in the Dallas music scene. In the piece, the band members are represented in their signature stage-ware of a white robe, giving them a cult-like appearance. Although the musicians have each brought something unique to this band, the sheer number of them forces one to ask the question, who are they? Are they memorable? Unique? Individual? The series recognizes and questions the notion of one’s individual importance as it cycles through a soundtrack leaving one wondering whether they are replaceable.


About the Artist

Elizabeth Withstandley is from Cape Cod, Mass. She lives and works in Los Angeles, Calif. She is one of the co-founders of Locust Projects in Miami, Fla. Selected recent exhibitions include From Far Away Across The Universe, Torrance Art Museum, Torrance, Calif, The Accident, Winslow Garage, Los Angeles, Calif. She has also shown work at Dimensions Variable, the Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami, The Moore Space, Miami, Fredric Snitzer, Miami, The Ringling Museum of Art, Sarasota, The Tel Aviv Artists’ Studios, Israel, The Bass Museum, Miami, Cultural Center, Sao Paolo Brazil. Her work has been featured in Art Papers, The Miami Herald, and The New Times.