Choose your words carefully. Street Artist vs Graffiti Writer by Lush.
Detroit bus services…
A note from Stephen Hargreaves after our conversation last night about the bus system in Detroit and possibilities for cross-border transportation… the image above is of a different Detroit map just to give some reference. On the map Stephen mentions, the routes go far beyond Detroit’s city limits.
Check out the “System Map”, where the stylized “s” appears is the Rosa Parks
Terminal. The Transit Windsor bus delivers you to that terminal and from
there… Detroit is your oyster.
Happy New Year. More Ahead!
Half a year’s worth of papers that haven’t yet been filed makes me excited to think about everything we did this year and what we’ll do over the next twelve months.
Also, we need to figure out when we can meet in the new year. Are Friday nights still any good for anyone?
Happy New Year!
Rivane Neuenschwander: I Wish Your Wish
From the Artforum review of Rivane Neuenschwander’s mid-career survey, including Eu desejo o seu desejo (I Wish Your Wish) by Michael Wilson:
I WISH LIFE WAS EASY; I WISH FOR INNER PEACE; I WISH FOR A HOLIDAY ON THE BEACH. The last of these pleas–all samplings from Rivane Neuenschwander’s participatory installation Eu desejo o seu desejo (I Wish Your Wish)–seemed not only the most achievable ambition but also the most timely, as guests arriving late to the Brazilian artist’s Tuesday night opening at the New Museum looked distinctly soggy after a summer storm. The mottos were printed on ribbons arranged around the walls of the lobby, and viewers were invited to take and wear one in exchange for suggestions of their own.
From an interview on ArtBlog with New Museum’s Curatorial Associate Benjamin Godsill, “Ribbons printed with wishes from visitors at previous exhibitions hang on the wall. You take the ribbon, tie it on your wrist, and then replace it with a wish of your own. The wish comes true when the ribbon wears off your wrist. So by participating in this you are helping someone else’s wish to come true.” From the NYTimes review, “It’s modeled on a tradition from the Church of Nosso Senhor do Bonfim in Bahia, Brazil: worshipers tie brightly colored silk ribbons to their wrists and wear them until they fall off, at which point their wishes are granted.”
Vaguely reminds me of the I Wish This Was project that Josh talked about a little while ago, though I enjoy that these wishes expand beyond the immediacy of the space (but it would be interesting to see this installed somewhere on an exterior wall). I saw the coverage for this show over the summer and really wished I had been able to see it… conceptualism, reciprocal art, participatory exchange, etc. A simple idea with an explosion of scale, it’s something we might keep in mind.
Temporary Allegiance
A 25 foot flag pole was installed on the UIC campus at 1240 W Harrison St. in front of Gallery 400 in May 2005. In October 2008, Philip von Zweck resumed the project on the UIC campus at 400 S. Peoria St. in front of the College of Architecture and the Arts building.
This space is open to anyone in the greater-Chicago area to use for one week.
With this project von Zweck seeks to provide the community with a democratized space that fosters expression free of the veil of anonymity.
Contact information for the author of every weekly flag encourages dialogue between the author of the flag and its visitors.
temporary allegiance by Philip von Zweck for Gallery 400, University of Illinois at Chicago
A Homage to Detroit
Just thinking about HFBC, wondering how we might start capturing our view of these cities…
Jessica Care Moore’s poetry interpreted by filmmaker Stephen McGee for Ted X Detroit.
Via AshleyEN
Underground by AURELIEN ARBET & JEREMIE EGRY
Reminds me something Josh might do…
OmniCorpDetroit
Maybe worth checking these folks out in the new year as part of HFBC?
OmniCorpDetroit is an intense group of designers, artists, engineers, musicians, thinkers, do-ers and makers that get together to build new things as well as share and collaborate within the Detroit community.
In general, we’re making, breaking, reshaping and hacking all sorts of things!
via About.
Urban Farming Sao Paulo | zachary aders
Some interesting renderings and thinking through drawing on Aders’ site. Worth spending some time with … it got me thinking about how to represent border-type stuff.
And of course, the subject matter of his work itself is great — urban farming in small Brazilian neighbourhoods.
Claire Fontaine at Helena Papadopoulos (Contemporary Art Daily)
Big text made out of matches plugged into the walls. Really like the effect, aside from this gallery installation making me feel something I’m walking into 2001.
Claire Fontaine at Helena Papadopoulos (Contemporary Art Daily).