“Richard Chisolm and David Hess have found an engaging and enlightening way to plumb the mystery of America’s fascination with violent weapons.”
Dan Baum
Author,Gun Guys: A Road Trip
“A testament to the power of art to engender safe, rich, thoughtful conversations. Sometimes maintaining a neutral stance is the only way to create psychological safety, and to help people discover the values that unite them. It might just be possible to move forward from there.”
Elizabeth Gaufberg MD MPH
Director, Center for Professional and Academic Development, Cambridge Health Alliance
Associate Professor of Medicine and Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School
"David Hess's assault rifle facsimile sculptures challenge both American fetishization of guns and museums' prohibition against handling works of art. Gun Show follows Hess as he presents his creations to vastly different audiences and in contexts both inside and far removed from the art world, demonstrating the power of public art to spark dialogue in diverse audiences and across entrenched political and social divisions."
Annie Dell'Aria
Assistant Professor of Art History at Miami University
“After every new and senseless mass shooting, there is a flickering hope that common sense legislation will prevail, and then it does not. Enter Gun Show, a fresh-faced film that wields the achingly inventive art of David Hess, who has literally created ‘weapons of mass discussion!’ Richard Chisolm’s documentary trumpets a great human aspiration – the end of us-versus-them thinking – revealing a world where we see we are all in it together.”
Rebecca Hoffberger
Founder/Director, American Visionary Art Museum
“The fantasy ‘rifles’ sculptor David Hess creates invite us to reconsider our own views on firearms, whatever they may be. Gun Show encourages us to talk with instead of at each other about safer ways to live with our 300 million guns.”
Craig R. Whitney
Author, Living with Guns: A Liberal's Case for the Second Amendment
"Funny. Cool. Scary. Anti-gun. Pro-gun. All different responses to the same works of art: 'Guns' built from objects found around the home of sculptor David Hess. The documentary Gun Show follows Hess as he displays his collection in different communities, and the responses to it highlight how guns mean very different things in different American communities. These meanings are grounded in real, experiential differences with guns, and recognizing this is key to understanding — and possibly overcoming — the polarization of attitudes around guns in our society. The length and open-endedness of Gun Show makes it an ideal resource for those who want to engage in a difficult and polarizing issue."
David Yamane
Professor of Sociology at Wake Forest University
“Gun Show does a remarkable job showing how people from diverse perspectives view guns in radically different ways. For some, Hess’s ‘weapons’ are terrifying. For others, they are thrilling or amusing. This documentary illuminates the chasm we must cross to make headway in the American gun debate.”
Firmin Debrabander
Author, Do Guns Make Us Free? and Professor of Philosophy at the Maryland Institute College of Art
"Richard Chisholm's film Gun Show holds a disturbingly realistic mirror up to the reality of America's gun culture, skating across the borders between industry and art, between violence and pure aesthetics. U.S. gun culture -- like any culture -- includes notions of beauty, pragmatics, profit and play, and at its core the psychology of human desire. Gun Show puts them all on display and demonstrates that we still don't know how to account for that culture. Watching it and talking about it should help us structure our understanding."
Peter Isackson
Writer at Fair Observer
“Gun Show provides a provocative, and productively uncomfortable, look at art’s capacity to transform, and to breach the barriers that prevent us from connecting across our differences. Amidst our increasingly heated gun debates, art provides a means of recapturing a sense of shared humanity and common vulnerability.”
Caroline Light
Senior Lecturer and Director of Undergraduate Studies Program in Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Harvard University and author ofStand Your Ground: A History of America's Love Affair with Lethal Self-Defense
"Guns are tools, totems of pride and patriotism, cherished family heirlooms, sources of terror, symbols of power and resistance, and everything in between. Gun Show follows several exhibits staged by David Hess, whose work involves the crafting of guns out of ordinary household items, and explores the fascinating ways in which these objects exemplify our everyday experience of the material world, while remaining unique in their ability to inspire awe, fear, or devotion. In so doing, it also reveals how a shared artistic experience opens up conversations that transcend the typical divides marking the debates over gun violence and gun rights in the US."
Jonathan Obert
Assistant Professor of Political Science at Amherst College and author of The Six-Shooter State: Public and Private Violence in American Politics
“Gun Show is a powerful blend of art and politics with surprising cultural insights.”
Marshall Curry
Academy Award-winning filmmaker