Hey everyone! Anyone aware of Detroit Soup? It’s a micro-grant project, and it’s happening tonight. For 5$ you get delicious food, a vote, and a chance to meet awesome new people. It’s just a 5 minute drive from the bridge. Be there!
Part 2 of the Timeline of Leftist Social and Political Art
“In its early years, the art of the Situationist International advocates the use of any medium not as art, but to reproduce a reality that doesn’t participate in capitalism.”
Quoted from G. Roger Denson in Part 2 of the Timeline of Leftist Social and Political Art on the Huffington Post.
pg 228, the Nightmare of Participation
“Don’t wait to be invited. Otherwise things will never happen.”
There’s No Place Like Home – A Report and Musings from the CBC Windsor Town Hall Meeting
Last Tuesday I had the pleasure of attending the first CBC Town Hall Meeting at the Capitol.
The meeting was really interesting. The event was about an hour long and included a panel and video interviews. The panel itself was quite impressive, consisting of Mayor Eddie Francis, Coun. Al Maghnieh, marketing professor Vincent Georgie, Michael Lomonaco of Grand Rapids, and University of Windsor Assistant Provost David Bussiere.
During the discussion, you had the option of tweeting or Facebook messaging @CBCWindsor questions or comments and some of them got displayed on the big screen. You can check out what went up here.
I think if this meeting had a theme song, it would be called “This is a Great Place for Young Entrepreneurs” as that’s what I kept hearing again and again throughout the night. The meeting’s focus was mostly about jobs; there were videos from “millenials” (aka those from Generation Y, born from the 70s to the early 2000s) who had started up their own businesses, particularly the Priced Green stores and a massage clinic on Ottawa street. There was a lot of talk about how Windsor is a safe haven for young entrepreneurs as cost of living is low and therefore risk in investments are also low. The presenter from Grand Rapids, Michael Lomonaco echoed this sentiment when he talked about how successful his business, a technology firm, has become and how Windsor can emulate this success. Another theme of the night was white collar jobs. Windsor apparently doesn’t have enough of them, especially in the downtown core, and steps are being taken to fix that.
There was some talk about the public transportation system. Someone asked via Twitter why exactly the streetcar system had been abandoned in Windsor, and there was no good answer. Someone mentioned that if we did bring the streetcar system back, it would be mostly for tourists. I disagree. I believe it was either Greg Layson (who was responsible for tweeting the event) or Al Maghnieh who said that there are talks in the works between Transit Windsor and the city for transit reform. I really hope this happens as it would be amazing to see transit reform, especially with all these talks of revitalizing the downtown core. However, discussion of transit was sort of out of context for this meeting. Transit in Windsor really deserves a meeting itself, and it wasn’t fair to try to address the issue on Tuesday.
The amalgamation of the library and art gallery was discussed, mostly by Mayor Eddie Francis. He mentioned that bringing the arena downtown was a strategic move and was responsible for the expansion of the casino and Windsor Water World. The aquatic centre was hailed as a new way to bring tourism downtown.
And finally, discussion of arts. In short, there wasn’t much. A few people pointed out that there wasn’t much to do in Windsor in way of concerts. It was mentioned that there weren’t a lot of arts driven events happening in Windsor. Another point was made that there isn’t communication about city reform happening in the city. Tom Lucier tweeted ” there already ARE dialogue driven events…this is the plague of our city…cluelessness about what already happens!” He’s right. But besides that, all I heard was that “Windsor is a great place for artists because it’s cheap to live here.” Sure, it’s cheap to live here, but it’s really difficult to live as an artist because there are no studios and there is no funding. It’s great that it’s cheap here but if there is not access to a vibrant artist community with materials and funds and means to sell, artists are not going to come here.
I have to say I was disappointed with how the night ended. There was no discussion of any of the presentation. The panellists presented and that was it; there was no question period for any of the presenters. Although there were video cameras that interviewed some of the audience at the end of the night, it wasn’t enough.
Here’s the thing: about 200 people attended this town hall event. People like Shane Potvin (Spotvin), Tom Lucier, Rino Bortolin, a bunch of university students, and many more people who are making a difference in Windsor that I didn’t see or don’t know the names of. And a majority of the people attending the event were young. I know what the city is doing for Windsor, but does the city know what we’re doing for Windsor? The tweets weren’t enough. The town hall meeting had 200 voices that weren’t heard, who surely had great ideas or were at least interested in getting involved because they came to the Capitol on a dreary night with half the streets in Windsor flooded. I’m sure the audience at least had interesting questions, but there was no dialogue. That’s a complete shame.
In addition to this, the dialogue seemed to be all about people who are just graduating university. I don’t think that’s where we should be convincing people to stay in Windsor. Half of my friends in high school hated Windsor because “there was nothing to do” (whether or not this is the case, however, is another essay). Selling Windsor as a haven for young entrepreneurs is not going to fix that.
However, I certainly had an idea in my head of what the meeting would be. There was nothing that told me that there would be critical discussion, or and discussion at all during the meeting. So in part, my disappointment is my fault and not the meeting’s.
All in all I think the event was great. I think we need to have more, but I think if the audience is just told what is happening, nothing is going to get done. I could have gone online and seen what the city of Windsor is doing with the aquatic centre or the library. We need input from a variety of community members to make this city a better place.
Smiley Face Visualizations from Mood Data of a City
Project Stimmungsgasometer, by Richard Wilhelmer, Julius von Bismarck and Benjamin Maus, is a giant smiley face that changes based on the mood of Berlin citizens. When they are collectively “happy” the light is a smile, and when they are not, it is a sad face. Input comes from facial recognition software (contributed by the Fraunhofer Institut) that takes in video from a strategically placed camera. The obtained mood data are then stored on a server and processed by the smiley on the screen to visualize the emotions in real-time.
Kind of hilarious, a bit weird, and somehow already feeling like its showing its age (though as I understand it, it was a temporary installation back in 2008). Data-driven artwork is already boring — that is, taking dataset x and applying it to artwork parameter y. Somehow I feel like Cory Arcangel had something to do with wrecking this for everyone, in the best way possible.
Thinking about ways to animate the intangibility of the city still seems like a good idea though.
via an email from Kim seen on Flowing Data & [Stimmungsgasometer via infosthetics]
The Arts Supports You
The Arts Supports You is a project thought up by some fellow students and I at the University of Windsor. The project aims to occupy certain spaces for a period of time in which we hold an oversized QR scanning code for passers by (or people situated in the space) to scan. One of the places in which this was done was in the seating at a Windsor women’s hockey game, and the other (not pictured), being in front the University of Windsor School of Music building, facing the intersection of Sunset Avenue, and Wyandotte.
The set up was rather simple: We projected the QR onto some foam core, and taped off the white areas, painting over all the exposed parts. We created our own personalized handles on the backsides, and attached each panel with velcro so that the whole 8 pieces cold fold into one, and unfold into a large piece.
The QR code takes you to a link that has a nice little image depicting the message, and a link to a facebook page that explains the project in more detail.
International Day Without Art
December 1 is World AIDS Day and International Day Without Art
A Declaration of loss:
Today we stand together.
Today we stand in silence.
Today we mourn the loss of painters, photographers, dancers, printers, actors, film makers, singers, choreographers, poets, sculptors, musicians, designers… all the artists who have died of AIDS.
Today we collectively grieve the loss of future work from recognized artists, as well as the absence of countless artists yet to be. Today we declare our loss.
December 1 is a Day without Art, an international day of observance which focuses attention on the profound impact AIDS has had on artists and the world arts community.
Since 1990, each year an increasing number of galleries, theatres, artist groups and individuals have participated in a vast array of commemorative events.
Day without Art celebrates the lives of colleagues and friends while mourning their loss in our creative communities.
Dec 1, 2011 DWA activities/commemorations include: gallery closings; shroudings of art; special art exhibitions; distribution of commemorative pins and handbills;
announcements on CJAM 99.1 fm; information campaigns; charitable contributions; and a joint World AIDS Day / Day Without Art public candlelight vigil at 7:00 pm at the Art Gallery of Windsor. The 2011 Windsor Day Without Art Collective are:
AIDS Committee of Windsor
Arts Council Windsor & Region
Artcite Inc.
Backroom Artists’ Collectives
Broken City Lab
CJAM Radio 99.1 fm
Common Ground Gallery
Made in Windsor
Media City Festival
Nobel Peace Project
U of W School Of Dramatic Art
U of W School of Visual Arts
U of W Visual Arts Society
Windsor’s Community Museum
Windsor Endowment for the Arts
Windsor Pride
Windsor Printmakers Forum
Windsor Symphony Orchestra
Please join the AIDS Committee of Windsor, the Art Gallery of Windsor
and the Windsor Day Without Art Collective in celebrating the lives of our
beloved friends and colleagues at a joint World AIDS Day / Day Without Art
Candlelight Vigil at 7:00 pm on December 1 at the Art Gallery of Windsor, 401 Riverside Dr. West, Windsor, ON.
Refreshments will be served; admission to the the vigil is FREE and open to all.
All are welcome!
For more information, download the poster: DWA poster 2011
Tonight! CBC Windsor Hosting a Town Hall Meeting on Youth Retention
This might, or might not, actually answer a question attracting and retaining recent grads in Windsor, but either way, it should be interesting viewing. Given the people set to speak, it’s quite possible that there’s going to be a lot more of the same noise (well except for Vincent Georgie, there are a lot of good things coming from his efforts at Odette), but here’s hoping there’s a chance for the conversation to open to the floor where some more expansive ideas can start to be generated. My fingers are crossed that this doesn’t turn (exclusively) into a propaganda + complaint session, but instead actually becomes a productive forum for conversation.
CBC Windsor has been asking what it is the young, tech-savvy children of the Baby Boomers are looking for in a city – and whether Windsor has what it takes to attract and keep Generation Y.
On Tuesday, November 29, we’ll be bringing those young voices together for a special town hall hosted by CBC News Windsor at 6 anchor Susan Pedler and online host Greg Layson.
Joining in the conversation are Windsor Mayor Eddie Francis, City Councillor Al Maghnieh, Vincent Georgie from the Odette School of Business, Dave Bussière from Admissions and Recruitment at the University of Windsor and Michael Lomonaco from Open Systems Technology in Grand Rapids, MI.
Our audience will be encouraged to use their mobile devices during the event to chat with Greg, tweet (#cbcwdr), respond to others’ tweets, update their Facebook status or follow CBC at www.facebook.com/cbcwindsor.
The event will be a mix of taped stories, chat, and special guest panelists.
It all happens Tuesday, November 29th at 8:00 p.m. at the Capitol Theatre.
Good on CBC Windsor for pulling this together. I’d love to see this happen on a more regular occasion (well, this being a range of off-site and issue-driven programming). I’ve asked students from my class to go, and hopefully some other BCLers will join Sara (I think she said she was going). Unfortunately I won’t be able to make it, I’m giving a workshop on grant writing at the ACWR (tonight at 7pm).
Ephemeral Situations (fireworks & doves), Awarded
It’s always a bit strange to get so many random emails about great work, and so often there’s not enough time to really explore. Today, though, I’m glad I took a couple minutes to look this over.
The Szpilman Award is awarded to works that exist only for a moment or a short period of time. The purpose of the award is to promote such works whose forms consist of ephemeral situations.
Above, Péter Szabó lit fireworks and fired confetti-canons and smoke-machines for the workers who arrived early in the morning at factories and a bus-station in Romania and Hungary. As some of these factories were to be shut down soon, his labor of love towards the stressed and worried workers appears almost like an alien artistic ritual in the midst of a hopeless daily routine.
The winner of the award, Jaroslav Kyša uses doves as living barriers in the city of London by secretly scattering their favourite fodder in front of shops or across busy streets.
33 Questions Per Minute
In 2000, Rafael Lozano- Hemmer messed around with some computer programs, lcd screens and a dictionary and created ’33 Questions Per Minute’, an installation featuring 21 lcd screens set up in various places and positions that generate unique and absurd questions thirty-three times per minute. The text is sorted randomly together through a generator and appears on the screen just long enough for the viewer to read it, and a new one appears in time before anything can be pondered further. According to Hemmer’s website, the system would take up to 3,000 years for all randomized questions to be asked!
“This piece is loosely based on the long tradition of automatic poetry. It is full of anti-content. It attempts to underline our incapability to respond, faced with an electronic landscape made up of demands for attention. The piece provides useless and slightly frustrating machine irony. Tireless grammatical algorithms perform a romantic and futile attempt to pose questions that have never been asked.
The effect of the installation is destabilising due to its speed. The rhythm of questions excludes any rational answer. 33 questions a minute is the threshold of legibility : there is no time for reflection.”
As soon as I came across this, it reminded me of Justin’s work experimenting with arduinos a while back.