Take A Peek Inside X-FILES Creator Chris Carter’s Art Exhibition

The art is out there. With a special appearance by Mr. Chuckleteeth.
Photos by Alyse Wax.

Last Updated on March 18, 2024 by Angel Melanson

As FANGORIAโ€™s crazy, obsessive The X-Files fan, when I was offered the chance to check out an art exhibit with X-Files creator Chris Carterโ€™s name attached to it, I didnโ€™t hesitate to accept. I had no idea what to expect.

When I walked into the art gallery in Downtown Los Angeles, it definitely wasnโ€™t X-Filesy. The first piece I noticed was a pink Hello Kitty screen print with โ€œMy Crowning Achievementโ€ written in gold leaf and hovering about the little cats. Carter refused to explain what it meant, saying he didnโ€™t think art should be explained. โ€œI think art should be personal, it should reflect the artist.โ€

One thing that he was willing to give me a little bit of insight on were his pieces โ€œManicโ€ and โ€œXanax,โ€ enormous photo collages of a tree. On the โ€œManicโ€ side, the pictures are done in a host of loud, anxiety-inducing colors; on the โ€œXanaxโ€ side, the colors are normal, calm, peaceful. โ€œThat was a view I had for many years. And that was the only tree that obstructed an otherwise perfect view,โ€ he tells me ruefully.

Chris Carter art

โ€œThat this show is actually being seen by the public is completely unexpected to me. I did all of this work for me. It existed in my office for over a decade,โ€ Carter says. Life-long friend Jim Carter (no relation) wanted to display his work in his gallery, Legacy West Media, and Chris agreed.

Carter says his artwork is for sale, โ€œbut they are all extremely personal to me. Thatโ€™s a weird thing for me: Iโ€™m selling a piece of my personal history. Itโ€™s interesting to me that people will have something of me that theyโ€™ll wonder about.โ€ His history is displayed throughout the exhibit, from his โ€œHate Plates,โ€ potted dishes with angry words written on them (representing his time as a production potter in college), to surfboards with messages lacquered onto them (representing his time working at Surfer Magazine and his lifelong passion for surfing).

Chris Carter Hate Plates

Of course, I had to bring up The X-Files. There are a couple of X-Files-related pieces in the collection. โ€œI didnโ€™t really want to do X-Files-related things necessarily, but a few things just came out and those things were a surprise to me. But there are only a couple.โ€ One of the strangest pieces is a framed photo of Ronald Reagan that is signed โ€œTo Chris Carter, the truth is out there.โ€ โ€œI didnโ€™t even vote for him!โ€ Carter says with a laugh.

Chris Carter Reagan

A small collection of X-Files props from Chris Carterโ€™s personal collection (that he didnโ€™t donate to The X-Files Preservation Collection) almost seems to be there to entice X-Files fans into checking out the collection. An alien mask, a Mr. Chuckleteeth maquette, and a couple of magazine covers are included.

Chris Carter X-Files Props

The most intriguing piece is a note from the casting sessions of various actors for the roles of Mulder and Scully. Next to David Duchovnyโ€™s name, there is simply a โ€œYes.โ€ Next to Gillian Anderson, it says โ€œTest.โ€ They are the only two actors with such definitive notes next to their names. The paper is signed by Gillian Anderson, with the message โ€œChrisโ€”9 years laterโ€ฆ youโ€™re my hero.โ€

Besides the art, Carter admits he is working on two other projects but refuses to go into details about them. โ€œEveryone wanted another X-Files, and I didnโ€™t want to do that. Between The X-Files and Millennium, I have done 300 episodes of sci-fi. Iโ€™m choosing to do other stuff. And surfing.โ€

Chris Carter surfboards

The exhibit runs February 27 through March 10 at Legacy West Media Gallery in Los Angeles. For more information, visit the official LWM website.