Author: Diane

  • herman de vries

    From the Dutch pavilion at the venice art biennale, 2014.

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    “de vries has documented his residency in venice and the lagoon in a travelogue. the collection of framed curiosities is a visual and material report of what he has perceived in the venetian habitat, comprising both small groupings shown in an orderly or chaotic fashion and photographs that chart the natural world in snapshots. his eye is caught not only by nature, but also by the traces of human interaction – how people change the environment and how it, in turn, appropriates culture.” From http://www.designboom.com/art/herman-de-vries-dutch-pavilion-venice-art-biennale-05-13-2015/gallery/image/dutch-pavilion-venice-biennale-herman-de-vries-designboom-62/

  • Museum of Jurassic Technology and Cultures of Display

    The Museum of Jurassic Technology in Los Angeles holds many splendid,
    unique, and puzzling treasures. It’s a carnival of delights and ideas, weaving
    art and science, fiction and data, all together into something enchanting and
    joyful. In this first of two segments on the museum, curator David Wilson (and artist)
    describes the origins of the project. He says, “I wanted to know, I was
    compelled to know, what would happen if a person put everything they had, all of their emotional, financial, spiritual resources behind a single project.” From https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DC1nSF9v3RA

    Together in class we’ll watch Inhaling the Spore: A Journey Through the Museum of Jurassic Technology.

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    Inhaling the breath of a duck, according to the exhibit, was once used to cure children of thrush and other disorders of the mouth and throat. (Ann Summa)
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    From a display in the museum, Mice on toast are presented as historic  cure for bedwetting.
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    From a museum display of animal and “human horns.”

     

    See Mark Dion’s installations of natural and cultural artifacts.

    See Kelly Jazvac’s Plastiglomerates. 

    See Herman DeVries’s works using scientific systems of organization and display

     

  • Looking at Nature Tourism

    For your reading response use references from the Alexander Wilson reading Introduction and View from the Road from The Culture of Nature to discuss two of the following tourism ads. Also be prepare to discuss two of the ads in class.

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  • Carmen Papalia

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    “Papalia’s work, which takes the form of participatory public projects, explores the topic of access as it relates to public space, the Art institution, and visual culture—as the artist’s own access is defined by a visual impairment. Papalia invites the participant to explore the possibilities for learning and knowing that become available through the non-visual senses, and to trust in the revelatory practice that is non-visual interpretation. Through exercises in trust and blind orienteering, participants discover new geographic contours from which to develop a sense of place. They begin to consider looking as one of the many ways to engage with and interpret their surroundings.”

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    Artist’s Statement:

    You are closing your eyes. You have just entered the vast and vibrant dimension that is non-visual space. You put your hand on the shoulder of the person in front of you, and you lend your support to anyone who might want to join in this experience. You notice the pace of your breathing, you notice some sweat on your palms. As your focus shifts away from what is visual, the acoustic environment crashes around you. It consumes you like a tidal wave. With each event your sense of spatial scale shifts, and shifts again. A tight corridor, a field, of color. A wave of traffic. Your footsteps. You focus on the sound. You feel secure in knowing that you can rely on the person in front of you, and you begin to relax. You ease into your gait. You notice the pace of your breathing. You begin to trust in this practice.

    <p><a href=”https://vimeo.com/78862660″>The Blind Field Shuttle Walking Tour by Carmen Papalia</a> from <a href=”https://vimeo.com/cueart”>CUE Art Foundation</a> on <a href=”https://vimeo.com”>Vimeo</a>.</p>

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    —Reflection upon experiencing the Blind Field Shuttle, 2013

     “I design experiences that allow those involved to expand their perceptual mobility and claim access to public and institutional spaces. Often requiring trust and closeness, these engagements disorient the participant while introducing new modes of orientation that allow for perceptual and sensorial discovery. Each walking tour, workshop, collaborative performance, public intervention, museum project and art object that I produce is a temporary system of access—a gesture that contributes to a productive understanding of accessibility. As an open-sourcing of my own access, my work makes visible the opportunities for learning and knowing that become available through the non-visual senses. It is a chance to unlearn looking and to take ones first few steps into a non-visual world.”

    Text excerpts from the CUE Art Foundation

    Short documentary film by Mickey Fisher on a social practice art project at Grand Central Art Center in Santa Ana, CA. Artist Carmen Papalia began using a white cane when his vision became impaired nearly ten years ago. For one day, he replaces his cane with a marching band.

  • Francis Alys

    Francis Alÿs is a Mexico-based artist who’s work encompasses a variety of media, often performances that are documented by video, photography, writing, painting, and animation. His work is described as poetic and political, as he often examines the social, cultural, and political conditions of the land.

    The Green Line (Jerusalem, 2004)

    SOMETIMES DOING SOMETHING POETIC CAN BECOME POLITICAL

    and

    SOMETIMES DOING SOMETHING POLITICAL CAN BECOME POETIC

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    Another politically charged walk is “The Green Line“, where Francis Alÿs walks the Armistice border in Jerusalem carrying a leaking can of green paint that trails a line behind him as he walks. The title of the work, and the green line itself, are references to the historic Green Line that was agreed upon in 1949 as the boundary between Israeli and Palestinian land at the end of the 1948 Arab-Israeli war. After the war had resulted in a clear win for Israel, the Israeli state was established and a green line was literally drawn out on a map to demarcate its borders with Egypt, Palestine, Syria and Lebanon during the Armistice Agreements.

    Sometimes Making Something Leads to Nothing (Mexico City 1997)

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    His walks are often location based and can be simply about the city. In a well known piece titled “Sometimes Making Something Leads to Nothing“, Alÿs pushes a large block of ice around Mexico City for over 9 hours until it melts away. The piece transforms into a way of getting to know the city from a different perspective.

    Samples II (London, 2004)

    Similarly, inn “Samples II”, Alÿs walks around London, England with a drum stick in his hand, playing the sounds of metal fences beside him.

    These two walks also reference another theme of his work. Francis Alÿs has a series of works that explore the kinds of games that children play where they live. In another video, he documents the same action for the fencing around Fitzroy Square specifically.

    Children’s Games (Worldwide, 1999-present)

    His series, “Children’s Games” contains video documentation of the games children play all around the world including Mexico, Afghanistan, France, Belgium, Venezuela, and Morocco. The games are usually ones involving a group of children outside with, playing with bought toys or found items such as kites, marbles, water bottles, sticks, coins, old bike tires, and even broken pieces of mirror.

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    Francis Alÿs references this interest in children’s games in different bodies of work. A theme that often comes up in his work is the task of doing, undoing, and not doing.

    Reel/Unreel (Kabul, Afghanistan 2011)

    An example of this “doing and undoing” is Francis Alÿs’ video Reel/Unreel, where “the action takes place along the bare cityscape of Kabul, Afghanistan. The cameras follow a reel of film as it unrolls through the old part of town—pushed by two children, uphill and downhill, like a hoop, inspiring an improvised narrative”

    “On the 5th of September 2001, the Taliban confiscated thousands of reels of film for the Afghan Film Archive and burned them on the outskirts of kabul. People say the fire lasted 15 days. But the Taliban didn’t know they were mostly given film print copies which can be replaced and not the original negatives, which cannot.”

    When Faith Moves Mountains (Lima, Peru 2002)

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    In “When Faith Moves Mountains“, Francis Alÿs congregates 500 volunteers to shovel a large dune on the outskirts of Lima, Peru to be moved 10 cm from its original location. Over the course of a day, the volunteers move the surface of the dune over, accomplishing an overall un-recognizable event. The principle for the action was “maximum effort, minimal result”, but the social aspect of requiring many people provides a great sense of achievement.

    Re-enactments (2001)

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    On November 4, 2000, Francis Alÿs illegally purchased a gun from a shop in downtown Mexico City. He then left the shop, loaded gun in hand, and walked through the streets of the city. Twelve and a half minutes later, Alÿs was pursued by the police – he was quickly apprehended, pinned against the police car, searched, and taken away for his arrest. This event constituted the first part of Alÿs’s Re-enactments (2001) – a work in which the artist sought to execute a performance and then carefully recreate it based on the documentation of the performance.

    The script was simple: he was to buy the gun and move through the streets until something occurred to interrupt him. Alÿs’s initial performance, from his first grasp of the gun until his arrest, was filmed by his collaborator, artist Rafael Ortega, and this footage became the basis for the performance’s reproduction. Alÿs and Ortega replicated the initial performance the same day, a project only possible because Alÿs managed to evade punishment for his crime. Alÿs was able to both negotiate his release from police custody – ostensibly through bribery, a common practice in negotiating with the police in Mexico City – and persuade the officers to participate in the staging of the second performance. In the re-enactment of the performance, the policemen acted out their roles in the scene of Alÿs’s arrest. This time, however, Alÿs used a fake gun and Ortega took a significantly different approach to filming the performance. In the two-channel video, the footage of Alÿs’s performances are juxtaposed; labeled “Real” and “Re-enactment,” they play simultaneously, comparing the footage of the initial performance and its recreation. (http://ivc.lib.rochester.edu/performing-the-document-in-francis-alyss-re-enactments-2001/)

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    Magnetic Shoes, 1994
    Alÿs spent several days walking around Havana with magnetic shoes for the 1994 Biennial, collecting metallic refuse along the way, and in doing so, he actively brought the city into focus.

  • 2016 Arboretum Foray for Outdoor School

    It was a fruitful year for mushrooms in the Nature Reserve. At 9:30am on Saturday October 15th the FYS class and some guests found a diverse range of species.  Some of the species seen here include jelly fungi, cup fungi, polypores, puffballs, stinkhorns, slime moulds, and tooth fungi.

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    Among the poisonous specimens were deadly gallerina autumnalis, and lepiota (deadly dapperlings). Both of which are safe to handle, but if ingested could cause severe poisoning or death. Symptoms include crying, sweating, vomiting, diarrhea, and convulsions! Students are reminded never to eat wild mushrooms unless they have several years of experience in collection and identification. And books/the internet are not good enough to confirm a mushroom’s identity.

    Students below are checking out the soccer ball sized, young giant puffball, Calvatia gigantea.

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    We foraged in grassy areas, coniferous and deciduous woods.

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    Digging up some large fleshy mushrooms – possibly Lepista irina? Or Entaloma? Even a spore print came back inconclusive. We did find many large fairy rings of this pale fungus with pinkish gills and a bulbous base. Jessica suggested we stay out of the rings to as not to be taken away by fairies! Though fairy rings are caused by the underground organism – a network of delicate fibres called the mycelium – growing in a circle and fruiting on the periphery.

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    Below are some specimens of Ganaderma tsugae or Reishi – a polypore used in Chinese medicine. Also below is a blue stain fungus –  Chlorociboria aeruginascens – fruiting in this picture but showing the staining in wood.

    And the show-stopper: a skirted stinkhorn – Dictyophora duplicata. Which smelled so awful no one could bear to handle it, or stand within 5 metres of it. It attracted large black flies that quickly consumed its stinky spore laden slime.

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    The mushrooms and field guides on the hood of the car. Along with a cicada carapace, and a wild ginger plant.

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    Enjoying some bread, honey from Diane’s bees, and wild apples (from Andrea) after the foray.

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  • Aganetha Dyck

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    In North America, Europe and many other parts of the world, bee populations have plummeted 30-50% due tocolony collapse disorder, a fact not lost on artist Aganetha Dyck who for years has been working with the industrious insects to create delicate sculptures using porcelain figurines, shoes, sports equipment, and other objects left in specially designed apiaries. As the weeks and months pass the ordinary objects are slowly transformed with the bees’ wax honeycomb. It’s almost impossible to look at final pieces without smiling in wonder, imagining the unwitting bees toiling away on a piece of art. And yet it’s our own ignorance of humanity’s connection to bees and nature that Dyck calls into question, two completely different life forms whose fate is inextricably intertwined. (from www.thisiscolossal.com)

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    Born in Manitoba in 1937, the Canadian artist has long been interested in inter-species communication and her research has closely examined the the ramifications of honeybees disappearing from Earth. Working with the insects results in completely unexpected forms which can be surprising and even humorous. “They remind us that we and our constructions are temporary in relation to the lifespan of earth and the processes of nature,” comments curator Cathi Charles Wherry. “This raises ideas about our shared vulnerability, while at the same time elevating the ordinariness of our humanity.”(from www.thisiscolossal.com)