Riding modern art in public places

raphael zarka, riding modern art. via DesignBoom

raphael zarka, "riding modern art. via DesignBoom

It comes as no surprise that skaters and others use public art in many different ways. Just as public art itself can be a more and less  genteel territorialization of space. The suite of photographs, “Riding Modern Art,” by Raphael Zarka at designboom based on an upcoming exhibition at the French Cultural Center in Milan, however, is particularly enjoyable for “decisive moment-ness,” which is at once frozen and viscerally vertiginous.

Zarka writes about his subjects –

“What strikes me, is that skaters prioritize a relationship with the work rather than a mechanical relationship aesthetic. for them, all the interest of a sculpture is the variety of movements that it recommends.”

Camille Utterback, Abundance, 2007, San Jose City Hall Rotunda. Commissioned by ZER01.

Camille Utterback, "Abundance," 2007, San Jose City Hall Rotunda. Commissioned by ZER01.

When the skaters and bikers showed up in the San Jose City Hall Plaza, as they often do in the early morning hours when some of the “Do Not” signage is hard to read, perhaps, it was precisely an example of the kind of relationship that artist Camille Utterback had envisioned with her interactive projection, Abundance

“By providing a way for participants to temporarily inscribe their movements on the facade of City Hall, Abundance personalizes the site, altering participants’ sense of ownership and belonging to a place that is already theirs as a public civic space.”

Shaun Gladwell Storm Sequence 2000 digital video edition of 4 Videoraphy: Techa Noble Original Soundtrack: Kazumuchi Grime Courtesy the artist and Sherman Galleries, Sydney. via Experimenta.

Shaun Gladwell Storm Sequence 2000 digital video edition of 4 Videoraphy: Techa Noble Original Soundtrack: Kazumuchi Grime Courtesy the artist and Sherman Galleries, Sydney. via Experimenta.

Australian artist Shaun Gladwell often features his own skateboarding, such as his 2000 video Storm Sequence, shot on Bondi Beach near Sydney, about which critic Penny Craswell suggests yet another level of interaction based on Gladwell’s personal philosophy of the “isolated figure moving and struggling through the panoramas of nature (urban and ‘real’) in a possible engagement with the sublime”


Forecast Public Art Annual Grant Program – Deadline February 6th

Forecast’s  annual grant program supports emerging, visual artists and interdisciplinary teams led by visual artists residing in the state of Minnesota.
These grants provide artists the chance to develop and create projects for a public audience anywhere in the state, receive increased recognition, and advance their artistic careers.A limited amount of consulting and/or facilitation time is provided by Forecast Public Art staff.

New in 2010, Forecast is excited to announce new funding opportunities
with three of Minnesota’s Regional Arts Councils!

As a result of these partnerships we have added three additional granting opportunities for residents living in the counties associated with the East Central Regional Arts Council, the Central MN Arts Board, and the Southwest MN Arts and Humanities Council.

These new opportunities join our already established Public Project grants and our Research and Development grants (both of which are open to applicants statewide as well).

For more information please visit the grants page of our website
and attend one of these upcoming workshops either in the Twin Cities or in your region!

• Wednesday, January 6 – 6:30-8:30pm – at Bedlam Theater in Minneapolis
• Thursday, January 7 – 6:30-8:30pm – Location TBA
• Saturday, January 9 – 1:00-3:00pm – at Homewood Studios in North Mpls
• Tuesday, January 12 – 6:30-8:30pm – at Springboard for the Arts in St. Paul
• Wednesday January 13 – 6:30-8:30pm – at the Paramount in St. Cloud
• Wednesday January 13 – 6:30-8:30pm – at SMAHC office in Marshall

Please RSVP to melinda@forecastpublicart.org if you plan to attend a workshop and we will reserve a spot for you as well as keep you updated on workshop locations, parking information, and last minute changes.

The deadline for all grants is February 6th!

Please feel free to contact melinda@forecastpublicart.org if you have specific questions about these funding opportunities!


Links for 2009-12-19 [del.icio.us]


Minnnnnnesoooowta…

via ___like I give a damn.

I know that Andy Samberg is the only white boy who can really do dork rap, but you gotta love that Minnesota state of mind after enduring years of the following conversation openers:

“I’ve been to the Minneapolis airport.”

“Where’s Fargo in Minneosta?”

“Is that near the Mall of America.”

“Have you been to Lake Woebegone?”

“What’s Milwaukee like?”

“It gets cold there, right?”

“I saw a t-shirt that said the state bird is the mosquito.”

“I’ve never actually been to the Walker”

“Prince!”

… Ok, Andy Samberg and Stephen Colbert

The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Alicia Keys – Empire State of Mind (Part II) Broken Down
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full Episodes Political Humor Economy


Street Garden of Babylon

“Urban intervention idealized by Felipe Morozini, directed by Jeorge Simas around Elevado Costa e Silva in São Paulo City, to make a little bit less rough. One dweller and 21 friends painting one of the most crowded avenue in the biggest city in South America.”

Runner Up in the Street Art Award category of the Metropolis Art Prize 2009.

via Inspire Collective


AOV2 fellows selected!

Art(ists) On the Verge (AOV2)  is an intensive, mentor-based fellowship program for 5 Minnesota-based, emerging artists or artist groups working experimentally at the intersection of art, technology, and digital culture with a focus on network-based practices that are interactive and/or participatory.

For 2010, 5  fellows and their proposed projects have been selected:

More information about the AOV2 program guidelines is  here.

Congratulations to each of the artists and thanks to the AOV2 jurors, Darsie Alexander, Chief Curator, Walker Art Center, and Kathleen Forde, Curator for Time-Based Arts at the Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC) in Troy, NY.

AOV2 is generously supported by the Jerome Foundation.

Edit this entry.


Franconia Sculpture Park call for proposals

Franconia Sculpture Park is now accepting sculpture/installation proposals for 2010.

http://www.residencyunlimited.org/kiosk/opportunites/2009/12/franconia-sculpture-park-deadline-february-13/

Franconia Sculpture Park is an innovative arts organization that provides living and work space to emerging and established artists. A lively schedule of programs and events for art lovers of all ages includes Kids Make Sculpture, Hot Metal Pour, artist-led tours and the Fall Arts Festival. The 20-acre park, with a rotating collection of over 75 contemporary sculptures, reflects the creative talents of local, national, and international artists and is free and open to the public 365 days a year. Franconia Sculpture Park is located 45 minutes northeast of the Twin Cities at the intersection of I-8 & I-95

Franconia Sculpture Park is an innovative arts organization that provides living and work space to emerging and established artists. A lively schedule of programs and events for art lovers of all ages includes Kids Make Sculpture, Hot Metal Pour, artist-led tours and the Fall Arts Festival. The 20-acre park, with a rotating collection of over 75 contemporary sculptures, reflects the creative talents of local, national, and international artists and is free and open to the public 365 days a year. Franconia Sculpture Park is located 45 minutes northeast of the Twin Cities at the intersection of I-8 & I-95


I would visit this … and this

Diller Scofidio & Renfro, A plan for the Hirshhorn calls for an inflatable structure that pokes through the buildings top and side, on the National Mall. via NYT

Diller Scofidio & Renfro, A plan for the Hirshhorn calls for an inflatable structure that pokes through the building's top and side, on the National Mall. via NYT

via NYT via Archinect.

While I’m quite fond of the Hirshhorn building, there is a great line in Nicolai Ourossoff’s NYT article, writing that Diller Scofidio & Renfro‘s addition “would transform one of the most somber buildings on the mall into a luminous pop landmark.”

Apparently,

“The architects imagine the installation process as a performance piece in itself, something like watching event organizers blow up the balloons for the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. Two refrigerator-size air pumps would be used to inflate the baby-blue structure, which would fill the entire four-story courtyard and bulge out of the top. A smaller, globulelike form would swell out of the bottom of the building to create a public lounge overlooking the mall.”

Now that I can no longer legitimately take my son to the nearby merry go round, I would definitely substitute the Hirshhorn inflation on the itinerary.

Keel, merry go round on the Mall

Keel, merry go round on the Mall

And then, of course, I’d have to visit the “new” courtyard at my old stomping grounds, the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

Foster & Partners courtyard at the Smithsonian American Art Museum and National Portrait Gallery.

Foster & Partners courtyard at the Smithsonian American Art Museum and National Portrait Gallery.


Yas hotel

The Yas Hotel by Asymptote Architecture with lighting design by Arup. via Inhabitat

The Yas Hotel by Asymptote Architecture with lighting design by Arup. via Inhabitat

According to Inhabitat,

“created by Asymptote Architecture with lighting design by Arup, The Yas Hotel is a wrapped with a sparkling shell composed of more than 5,300 diamond-shaped panels bristling with over 5,000 LED fixtures. The curvilinear field of lights is capable of running color-changing light sequences and can even display low-res three-dimensional videos.”

So far the images of the Yas Hotel seem like a pretty small official set. Here are some others from a quick scan of flickr.

Dec. 15, 2009, by Rory Steele

Dec. 15, 2009, by Rory Steele

Dec. 15, 2009, Rory Steele

manuela.martin, Yas Hotel (II), Dec. 5, 2009

manuela.martin, Yas Hotel (II), Dec. 5, 2009

manuela.martin, Yas Hotel (II), Dec. 5, 2009

Brawnfan, Yas Hotel Yas Marina Circuit, October 30, 2009

Brawnfan, Yas Hotel Yas Marina Circuit, October 30, 2009

Brawnfan, Yas Hotel Yas Marina Circuit, October 30, 2009

The Gorn, Yas Hotel, November 6, 2009

The Gorn, Yas Hotel, November 6, 2009

The Gorn, Yas Hotel, November 6, 2009


If pigs could fly


Tokujin Yoshioka

via SEGD10

Tokujin Yoshioka has designed a window installation for Maison Hermès. Maison Hermès Window Display
duration: Nov 19, 2009 ~ Jan 19, 2010
location: Maison Hermès (ginza5-4-1, chuo-ku, tokyo)

‘air du temps 90x90 installation, silk scarves tirred by a light breeze maison hermès / forum in ginza, tokyo, 2004 photographer: nacasa & partners inc.

‘air du temps 90x90' installation, silk scarves tirred by a light breeze maison hermès / forum in ginza, tokyo, 2004 photographer: nacasa & partners inc.

via DesignBoom

Pane Chair Tokujin Yoshioka (Japanese, born 1967)  2003. Polyester fiber, 29 1/2 x 29 1/2 x 31 (74.9 x 74.9 x 78.7 cm). Gift of The Contemporary Arts Council of The Museum of Modern Art. © 2009 Tokujin Yoshioka

Pane Chair Tokujin Yoshioka (Japanese, born 1967) 2003. Polyester fiber, 29 1/2 x 29 1/2 x 31" (74.9 x 74.9 x 78.7 cm). Gift of The Contemporary Arts Council of The Museum of Modern Art. © 2009 Tokujin Yoshioka

via MOMA

Crystal Furniture Grown by Tokujin Yoshioka.

Crystal Furniture Grown by Tokujin Yoshioka.

“As part of his “Second Nature” exhibition visitors were able to watch the crystalline chairs grow in large aquariums filled with a mineral solution. Although the shape of the fiber initially guides the crystals into chair-like objects, Yoshioka adds another dimension by allowing the chairs to choose their own form.” – via Inhabitat


Links for 2009-12-11 [del.icio.us]


Joseph Beuys, Capri Battery

Joseph Beuys, Capri Battery, 1985. via On Light InSight, ICC Gallery. Courtesy: The National Museum of Art, Osaka Photo: FUKUNAGA Kazuo

Joseph Beuys, "Capri Battery," 1985. via "On Light InSight," ICC Gallery. Courtesy: The National Museum of Art, Osaka Photo: FUKUNAGA Kazuo

“The lemon’s acidity generates a weak electrical current, causing it to function as a battery, and illuminate the bulb.” via ICC Online


C02 Cube

Christophe Cornubert, The CO2 Cube in Copenhagen. Credit: Joshua Brott. via Culture Monster

Christophe Cornubert, The CO2 Cube in Copenhagen. Credit: Joshua Brott. via Culture Monster

“In Copenhagen, where the United Nations’ summit on global warming is currently underway, artists  unveiled on Monday what they are calling ‘The CO2 Cube,’ a three-story site-specific artwork that was designed by L.A.-based architect Christophe Cornubert.” — David Ng via Culture Monster

CO2 CUBE, Saint Jørgens Lake in front of Tycho Brahe Planetarium, Copenhagen Artistic concept by Alfio Bonanno  Architecture by Christophe Cornubert, PUSH  Digital imagery by Obscura Digital. Photo Joshusa Bell

CO2 CUBE, Saint Jørgen's Lake in front of Tycho Brahe Planetarium, Copenhagen Artistic concept by Alfio Bonanno Architecture by Christophe Cornubert, PUSH Digital imagery by Obscura Digital. Photo Joshusa Brott

via Millennium ART

Who knew the CO2 Cube is created out of shipping containers?

C02 Cube. Image via Obscura Digital via Curbed.

C02 Cube. Image via Obscura Digital via Curbed LA.

“Is there anything shipping containers can’t do? Here they are arranged on a barge in St. Jørgens Lake in Copenhagen to visually represent one metric ton of carbon dioxide stored at standard atmospheric pressure. An average person in an industrialized country puts that amount out monthly.

“[Architect Chrisophe] Cornubert says the message of the shipping containers is deliberate–it calls to mind Copenhagen’s local shipping industry, consumption, and reuse all at once. Two sides of the big cube are covered in a mesh fabric and act as video screens, showing art, news, data visualizations, and other content. Besides all the transportation and construction, the CO2 Cube uses two 20,000 lumen projectors, an audio system, and LED lights.”

via Curbed LA


Doug Aitken, “Frontier”