Author: Kbaumlier

Kristen Baumlier’s work spans the full spectrum of interdisciplinary media, including performance, interactive installation, video and audio works.
This Sunday – Petroleum In Me and On Me at the Drake Well Museum in Titusville, PA

This Sunday – Petroleum In Me and On Me at the Drake Well Museum in Titusville, PA

It has been my dream for many years to do one of my projects about petroleum at the site of the first commercial oil well, Drake Well, in Titusville, PA.  Well – it is coming true this Sunday.  I have not had much time to publicize the event, but it is Founders Day and the reopening of the museum so there could be anywhere from 500 to 1500 visitors.

I am going to be doing the My Petroleum (On Me and In Me) , an interactive live performance at the Drake Well site.  This piece explores how Petroleum is everywhere.

In a unique twist to the scavenger hunt, visitors are invited to check their clothes, bodies and purses to see what they have on them that originate from petroleum and to reflect on  the number of items that they may have used in the last 24 hours that come from petroleum.   People and their count of items are tracked  and every 30 minutes the person who used the most petroleum in a day gets a winning prize.

A visual list of the most used petroleum products is posted as a visual public pop-up graphic and also is available in printed, downloadable, and Google  map format. Participants will be encouraged to return with a larger item on the list  that they might have at home (like a cooler, pillow, or football) in return for a  souvenir/special prize.   The graphics and printed petroleum list has a design quality similar to graphics in the 1850s, the time period that the first oil boom occurred in Titusville, PA.

From the shoes that we wear, to the zippers on our  jackets, to the aspirin that we take for headaches. Lip balms, umbrellas, combs, dvds, eyeglasses, antihistamines, hair coloring, and many other objects are derived  from petroleum.  Oh, Petroleum!

I’m going to be busy this weekend – wearing two hats in a way.  A  Food Font activity in Cleveland on Saturday, and Petro In Me and On Me on Sunday, but it will be worth it!

 

Food Font at Shaker Square North Union Farmers Market

Food Font at Shaker Square North Union Farmers Market

The Food Font event at the Shaker Square North Union Farmers Market went well on Saturday.
Lots of people stopped by and we made a food alphabet out of tomatoes.

The tomatoes were from:
Rainbow Farms
Middle Ridge Garden
Wooli Farms
Hamper Homestead Farms
Ridge Bridge Farm

I met a lot of interesting people including quite a few teachers who took the Food Font  resource packet so they could do the Food Font activity in their classroom this Fall.

Thanks to everyone who stopped by!

All the pictures are on the Food Font Flickr site and also can be seen in the slideshows below.

Here are some pictures from the event:


Pictures of People

Pictures of the Tomato alphabet (note: these are not edited yet)

Going to “The Scrap” –  Materials for Upcycling and DIY in Durham, NC

Going to “The Scrap” – Materials for Upcycling and DIY in Durham, NC

Last week my friend Jim who is a local in Durham, NC took us to the mecca of DIY/Upcycle/Craft  in Durham called The Scrap Exchange.  The “Scrap” as it is called –is located in the back of the Cordoba Center for the Arts.  When you walk up to the door, you are greeted by a handmade sign, and when you walk through the front door – you know you have arrived.  There are rows and rows (and rows..) of bins and shelves with all kinds of sorted and organized materials and items that beg to be made into something else.  You can buy things by the piece, or by filling a bag.

We checked out the materials which included stacks of paper, bins of cassette tapes, parts of chairs, beakers, fabric, voting machines, wheels, wood, slide holders, plexiglass pieces, sticker paper that is used to make road signs, and thousand of other types of materials.  The price for the materials is affordable and cheap, and it reminded me of Creative Reuse, a similar type of place to buy art and craft materials in Berkeley, CA.

The Scrap exchange was founded in 1991 by a small group  who were seeking to establish a sustainable supply of high-quality, low-cost materials for artists, educators, parents, and other creative people.  One of the founders, Chris Rosenthal, had worked in Australia for an organization called The Reverse Garbage Truck, and The Scrap Exchange was modeled after that organization.

The Scrap Exchange is a Creative Reuse Center which has the mission is to promote creativity, environmental awareness, and community through reuse of materials.  The center collects materials from hundreds of individuals, businesses, industries, and municipal sources and sells the materials through the store as well as through workshops, parties, and outreach events across the Southeast.

There is a Events By the Truckload program which travels to large-scale community festivals and events where hands-on, creative arts activities are done on location.  Projects are also done in classroom workshops, after-school activities, and workshops and parties are also done on location at the Creative Reuse Center.

One highlight at the Scrap is the in-house art gallery that is dedicated to showcasing local artists who are using reclaimed materials in their work.  The shows are curated and organized by employees.  The current show featured pictures and photographs that are for sale at the Scrap.  The photos were organized in a few ways in the space.  In a large grid, clothespinned to some string, and also in some books.  When we visited, one of the employees was photographing the show and gave us some background about the pictures and the installation.

Another place that I thought was excited about is The Design Center at The Scrap Exchange. This space which is only a few monthes old is specifically for artists and crafters to use as working studio space.  The Design center is available to use for $5 an hour, or $75 a month as a member and you can use various tools that include 20 different sewing machines, a serger, an industrial sewing machine, a die-cut machine, a button-making machine, t-shirt hot press, and a reference library with a reference library with more than 300 books on art and craft topics.

I bought some cool sticker paper that is reflective and is used to make the green street signs, and a few plexiglass disks.  I have big plants for my finds —  reflective green waterbottles and to make cool round thingies.  (to be determined…)

Links:
http://www.scrapexchange.org/