Last Updated on March 18, 2024 by Angel Melanson
As FANGORIAโs crazy, obsessive The X-Files fan, when I was offered the chance to check out an art exhibit with X-Files creator Chris Carterโs name attached to it, I didnโt hesitate to accept. I had no idea what to expect.
When I walked into the art gallery in Downtown Los Angeles, it definitely wasnโt X-Filesy. The first piece I noticed was a pink Hello Kitty screen print with โMy Crowning Achievementโ written in gold leaf and hovering about the little cats. Carter refused to explain what it meant, saying he didnโt think art should be explained. โI 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 โManicโ and โXanax,โ enormous photo collages of a tree. On the โManicโ side, the pictures are done in a host of loud, anxiety-inducing colors; on the โXanaxโ side, the colors are normal, calm, peaceful. โThat 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.

โThat 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, โbut they are all extremely personal to me. Thatโs a weird thing for me: Iโm selling a piece of my personal history. Itโs interesting to me that people will have something of me that theyโll wonder about.โ His history is displayed throughout the exhibit, from his โHate 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).

Of course, I had to bring up The X-Files. There are a couple of X-Files-related pieces in the collection. โI didnโt 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 โTo Chris Carter, the truth is out there.โ โI didnโt even vote for him!โ Carter says with a laugh.

A small collection of X-Files props from Chris Carterโs personal collection (that he didnโt 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.

The most intriguing piece is a note from the casting sessions of various actors for the roles of Mulder and Scully. Next to David Duchovnyโs name, there is simply a โYes.โ Next to Gillian Anderson, it says โTest.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 โChrisโ9 years laterโฆ youโre my hero.โ
Besides the art, Carter admits he is working on two other projects but refuses to go into details about them. โEveryone wanted another X-Files, and I didnโt want to do that. Between The X-Files and Millennium, I have done 300 episodes of sci-fi. Iโm choosing to do other stuff. And surfing.โ

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

