Update: the
online incarnation of the Shape of Luck was mounted on the Artengine website on
June 10, 2010: http://www.artengine.ca/shapeofluck/shapeofluck.php
Introduction
Luck is a nebulous concept.
But as intangible as it may be, we have all had the sense of having been lucky
at one time or another. Having once felt the rush of being lucky, one can't
help but be drawn towards it.
The Shape of Luck Series began
while I was in residency at the Caribbean Centre for Contemporary Arts in Port
of Spain, Trinidad in 2007. The national lottery had grown to $11 million and
the island was in the grips of lotto fever. As a way taking part in the frenzy,
I plotted the six-number sequences from each week's lottery draw on radar
graphs and then transferred the resulting shapes to my studio wall. Visitors
soon noticed the similarities amongst the shapes and serious speculation began
as to whether the winning lottery number could be predicted.
Somewhere between my
pseudo-scientific method and the suggestion that these shapes did in fact
reflect good fortune, the series became a sounding board for some deeply-seated
beliefs about luck. I will conjecture that viewers attempt to resolve the 2D
line drawing with the 3D shape it depicts and the resulting flux in perception
is attributed to something just beyond comprehension – luck.
Following the original
installation in Trinidad, The Shape of Luck was presented in the
Weinmeisterstrasse U-Bahn Station in Berlin as part of Glück gehabt, a
theme-based exhibition mounted by NGBK, and at the Shanghai Restaurant in
Ottawa as part of Chinatown-Remixed.
This series of
vinyl appliqué drawings was created while I was in residence at the Caribbean
Contemporary Art Centre, Port of Spain, Trinidad in the summer of 2007.
Trinis love their
lotteries. With the Lotto Plus jackpot reaching a frenzied 11,000,000 TT in
July, 2007 and the addictive qualities of Play-Whe again causing political
concern, I thought an artistic exploration of the lotteries might reveal
something of the Trinidadian sense of luck. In the Shape of Luck series
of wall drawings, winning lottery numbers are graphed on a radial axis. The
resulting shapes are curious. Resembling star constellations and with
similarities evident amongst them, one tends to look to them as if they portend
some mute secret of fortune and success. Any sense that they do foretell is, of
course, brought to the drawings by the viewer. Still, even knowing this, one
can’t help but look.

Shape of Luck: Lotto Plus
The Lotto Plus results from for July and August, 2007

Shape of Luck: Play-Whe, 2007
The Play-Whe lottery has its origins in a local lottery in which players chose
amongst Chinese characters and symbols.
In the official version of the lottery, the characters are still used, but are
assigned numbers. Graphed here are the most
and least winning numbers, red and black, respectively.
Shape of Luck,
Berlin, 2008
Shape of Luck (Die Gestalt des Glücks): Lotto Berlin,
2008, 252 x 356cm
For an exhibition entitled Glück gehabt, NGBK of Berlin invited artist to submit designs for artworks on the theme of luck.
The images were mounted in the Berlin subway system on advertising panels. Like the Trinidadian series, I used winning
results from a local lottery, in this case Lotto Berlin, to derive the shape. The piece is mounted in the Weinmeisterstrasse
subway station and will remain there until mid-2009.

Shape of Luck: Shanghai, Ottawa, 2009
For Chinatown-Remixed, an arts festival in Ottawa’s
Chinatown, I graphed lottery numbers found in fortune cookies that
resulted in big lottery wins around the world. The resulting six-sided shapes
were overlain to suggest the folded
shape of a fortune cookie.
