Category: Art

Random Acts of Culture:  Coming to a City Near You

Random Acts of Culture: Coming to a City Near You

You are shopping at Macy’s.  You hear the song Amazing Grace being sung – and realize it is not on the overhead system when you see a woman who is singing and walking.  It is a flashmob singing event?  A performance piece?

This event done in 2010, at Summit Mall in in Akron, OH is part of a series of events called Random Acts of Culture.  Funded by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, 8 cities in the U.S. will be having classical artists performing in the streets, stores, and everyday locations.  Examples of these events include Mozart being performed at the food court at the mall, a tango dance at the airport, or singing in a department store or Walmart.

1,000 Random Acts of Culture have been performed from 2010-12 in eight cities: Akron, OH; Charlotte, NC; Detroit, MI; Macon, GA; Miami, FL; Philadelphia, PA; San Jose, CA and St. Paul, MN.  The project is meant to bring the performing arts to new audiences, and to create shared experiences of art and culture.

In 2012, 60 Random Acts of Culture will be happening in Akron, OH and other cities.  So if you see dancers, hear singing, or a violin in Walmart or at the Mall,  it might just be a Random Act of Culture.

Image Source:
Video of Random Act of Culture – in Macy’s

Links:

Video of Random Act of Culture – in Macy’s

www.RandomActsofCulture.org

 

 

Kbaumlier – “DIWO” Talk this Friday at CIA LOF Event

Kbaumlier – “DIWO” Talk this Friday at CIA LOF Event

This Friday March 9th at  12:15pm I will be talking about my current projects and the idea of  “DIWO”—“Do-It-With-Others” at the Lunch On Friday event in Ohio Bell Auditorium at the Cleveland Institute of Art Gund Building.

I will be kicking the talk off with a theme song -so make sure you are on time to hear it and also to grab some of the free pizza.  I also am bringing out my  live feed kerosene camera, and inviting the audience to participate in some Powerformance live interactions.

As always, free pizza and soda (or pop if you are from Ohio) and BIG ideas.

Image Source:
http://www.cia.edu

Links:

http://www.cia.edu

https://kristenbaumlier.com

Materiality:  People as Material – Ben Kinsley and Sarah Paul

Materiality: People as Material – Ben Kinsley and Sarah Paul

Today I was able to stop by and see an our of the Ben Kinsley + Sarah Paul : Acting Out event at MOCA Cleveland, where Ben and Sarah were part of a dialogue about using people as material in art.

I was a few minutes late to the talk, and I missed an opening performance by Ben and Sarah – which from what I heard later, sounded like a live music experience. When I got there the audience was  being asked to give words for how the performance made them feel.  The words intimate, in love, vulnerable, and connected were given.  (This made me really wonder what I missed!)

The talk is part of a series of talks at MOCA Cleveland called “The Materialists” where artists reflect on process and medium, focusing on how artists dedicate their practices to a special material, process, or method.

Ben and Sarah both talked about using people as material. Sarah talked about how with her public Little Miss Cleveland piece, that she goes to the Indian baseball games as a self-crowned celebrity and interacts with people at the stadium.  These interactions blue art and life, since once the vendors at the stadium began to recognize her – the fans got interested and see her as a local celebrity.

Ben talked about the difference of being a director and an actor, and that he is really a participant in his pieces helping to make it happen.  His work is not about performing, but about setting up situations.  In his past work, Street with a View, which was captured and lives on in Google Map, he had the role of organizing the event, and the day of the event he was a modern day Paul Revere on a bike – going around alerting everyone that the Google car was coming.

Currently Ben is part of the 8501 to 11300 (On Moving) Show.  For his performance in the show, an actor performs at both MOCA’s current and future sites each Sunday for an hour with a sandwich board and a megaphone, with either the message The End is Nigh or A New Beginning is Imminent: on them.  One of the actors was at the talk, and he shared some lively stories about his experiences about interacting with the audience on the street, which varies from surprise, to a police officer telling him to leave, to cars honking at him, to a religious group giving him pamphlets.

The idea of mythology was discussed at the talk, and Sarah talked about how how myths are meant to explain mysterious things and how her work is a mysterious fragmented narrative that might live on as oral history, if people see her or interact with her as Little Miss Cleveland.  Ben similarly talked about the power of stories, and how with the challenge of documenting his work – it often lives on as stories that are passed on.

I had to leave after an hour of the talk – so I missed the end of the talk before the Q and A – but it was interesting dialogue about live performative art and the potential and challenges of working with others (or people) as material.

 

Image Source:

8501 to 11400 (On Moving) Show at MOCA Cleveland and Little Miss Cleveland Website

 

Links:

8501 to 11400 (On Moving) Show at MOCA Cleveland

Ben Kinsley’s website

Little Miss Cleveland Website

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Generative Leaf Botanical Art: Allison Kudla’s Growth Pattern Project

Generative Leaf Botanical Art: Allison Kudla’s Growth Pattern Project

Artist Allison Kudla works with digital media in order to create time-based botanical works. Some of her past works have included data generated real-time video/audio renderings, working with hybrid bio-mechanical systems, and using CNC technologies and plant tissue culturing.

In her project called Growth Pattern, Kudla explored how a living natural system can take on the form of a manufactured pattern.

To make the piece, tobacco leaves are die-cut into a symmetrical pattern and suspended in tiling square petri dishes that have the nutrients necessary to promote new leaf growth.  The leaves are provided with the hormones that cause the cells to produce new leaf tissue, and the new leaves that grow extend the form of the traditional inspired botanical design.

When on display, the leaves change and change over time.   Each tile is a self-contained ecosystem, and through they were decontaminated and sterilized, some contamination still occurs. In some tiles,  the tissue dies.  In others, parasites might grow faster in the leaves.  In other tiles, new shoots begin to sprout from the original pattern.

The piece has shown in Spain and Belgium in recent years.  Kudla has other interesting projects that explore working with nature and technology which can be seen on her website allisonx.com.

Image Source:
allisonx.com/
Links:
Allison Kudla’s Website – allisonx.com/

Construction and Destruction:  Marjan Teeuwen’s Abandoned Building Art

Construction and Destruction: Marjan Teeuwen’s Abandoned Building Art

Dutch Artist Marjan Teeuwen changes abandoned buildings into art by working with debris and upcycled building materials.  Her technique involves layering fragments of debris, then taking photographs and films of the final constructions.

Her project Destroyed House done in 2008, was created in a house that had an adjoining ice cream parlor.  The work was done in close cooperation with a contractor in order to remove ceilings and floors, move walls, and to create viewing holes in the structure.  She calls the works architectural sculptural installations.   Many of the materials used in Destroyed House were from the house itself .

In writing about her work, Teeuwen writes, “The literal breaking away of parts of floors, walls and ceilings signals a further accentuation of the polarity between destruction and construction. There is a balance between order and chaos, balance and imbalance, aesthetics and anti-aesthetics, refinement and crudeness.

The photographs of her work emphasize the careful layered materials in contrast to the frame of the buildings, which appear to be on the verge of collapsing.  The effect is an image of order and disorder and the relationship of construction to destruction.

Images of her projects can be seen on her website at  http://www.kw14.nl/

Image Source:
Marjan Teeuwen Website

Links:

Marjan Teeuwen Website – http://www.kw14.nl/