Mangrove Mud Womp Artist Residency

“Mangrove Mud Womp”
Artist Residency, Performance, Workshop, & Exhibition
[PDF Press Release here.]
Oct., Nov., Dec., 2011-12
(scheduled attendance on various weekends announced on Facebook)
(photo credits: Onajide Shabaka)

“Mangrove Mud Womp”

Combining art and the ecological environment the artist-in-residence will be drawing, painting, and making sculptures of natural and found objects, while investigating the rich mangrove forest’s flora and fauna. This project will be implemented with the input and collaboration of the on-site naturalist at Anne Kolb Nature Center.

The artist, along with kids and adults, will create art works that reflects the ecologically sensitive mangrove forest that is between Hollywood and Dania known as West Lake. This project is to create a learning experience about the natural habitat of the estuary through art.

In addition there will be a panel discussion on urban planning & design, while looking at pushing the envelope of social space, and even technology, to actualize itself in harmony with the urban and natural environment. Art practices that exist outside of the confines of the gallery have a long history that include genres such as land art, eco-art, public art, and social practice art.

img20120102_001v2

“Black Mangroves (video still)”

Walking The River Making Art

“Walking The River Making Art”

[Postponed due to infrastructure damage at Jack Island Preserve.]

Despite its ubiquity in the everyday walking is an activity obscured by its own practical functionality. It is employed literally and understood metaphorically as a slow, inefficient, and increasingly anachronistic means to a predetermined end. Rarely is walking considered as a distinct mode of acting, knowing, and making. As its necessity diminishes and its applications rarefy, the potential of walking as critical, creative, and subversive tool appears only to grow. Conceived of as a conversation between the body and the world, walking becomes a reciprocal and simultaneous act of both interpretation and manipulation; an embodied and active way of shaping and being shaped that operates on a scale and at a pace embedded in something seemingly more authentic and real.

Using the walk as a guiding metaphor “Walking The River Making Art” is a multifaceted effort that seeks to nurture both a theoretical and applied approach to knowing and interpreting place as we experience and construct it through walking.

A Guided tour of the Savannas, the Indian River Lagoon, and other “land art” significant landmarks, will be organized between July and August, 2011. (Travel date will be finalized by 15 July, 2011.) Arrangements will be for a maximum of four (4) persons per tour. Tours are one day, arriving on site by 9:00 a.m., and returning by sundown. Contact me via the comment form below, or the contact page for costs and additional questions.

**NOTE: Jack Island Preserve is closed pending construction of a replacement bridge to the island. Information current as of 5/31/2011. For latest news, see the Fort Pierce Inlet State Park website.

Savannas Preserve State Park
St. Lucie County, Florida
(in the red rectangular area on the map below)

Indian River Lagoon
N. Hutchinson Island
St. Lucie County, Florida

(photo credits: Onajide Shabaka)

Rául Perdomo

drawing on mylar

Of course, we love Raúl Perdomo’s work. Just this past weekend I watched a video on the LHC that was really fun to watch. What is some very remote field research may come some interesting information about the origins of the galaxy. Maybe it won’t, but finding out the certainty we are incapable of finding out the answer is, certainty of a kind.

Anyway, we are certain that Raúl’s work is some of the finest in Miami. We can provide you with a nice selection of his work for purchase.

Ex-Gehry Architects Devise Eco-Powered Vision for Inglewood, CA

We just put out a call-to-artists for something on these lines. A look at a more livable environment and ways the creative professionals can have a positive impact and influence on the urban landscape.

Urban Public Art & Design – Beyond the Gallery

Ex-Gehry Architects Devise Eco-Powered Vision for Inglewood, CA:

“Inglewood, California: Finally up to some good? A couple of Gehry-office expats have concocted an ambitious master plan to turn a broad swath of this depressed California city of 112,000 into a foliage-covered, wind-powered, mass-transit, natural spring water-spewing eco oasis. As the Architect’s Newspaper reports, Inglewood-based architects (fer) Studio want to create a full-blown ‘system of urban agriculture’ — a lofty goal in any city, but especially in a part of the world where ‘green’ means something very different from ‘environmentally minded.’ The craziest part: They might actually make it happen.

(Fer) Studio has been lobbying the local city council (though the Architect’s Newspaper describes it as ‘a fairly conservative’ body) and recently submitted their proposal to the Living City Competition, a contest for envisioning a city that adheres to crazy-strict environmental standards. The winner scoops up $125,000 and tons of media coverage. Obviously, it’ll take more than that to turn Inglewood into the sparkling green redoubt (fer) Studio dreams of, but it could be an important stepping stone and precisely what’s needed to start proving Dre wrong.

[Images courtesy of (fer) Studio; hat tip to Architect’s Newspaper]”

(Via Co.Design.)

Carrie Sieh

“Consuming Passion”

Wynwood Art Walk Night: Saturday 7 pm–10:30 pm, 14 August

Consuming Passion, exhibition by Carrie Sieh
Exhibition Dates: 30 July – 21 August, 2010

Carrie Sieh - “Consuming Passion”


You are invited to “Three-by-Six (3×6),” our summer media arts event in Miami, Florida; a cross between an art show and a film festival. Our events will feature six curated short video, film, performance, sound, or other time-based combination works. We will provide a forum for, and build a community of participation, review, and response for both audience and practitioner.

 

Studio Visit: Tawnie Silva

[banner made of felt]

[“Road Trip” photographic series]

Studio Visit: Tawnie Silva

What does Tawnie Silva do, he’s got sewing machine, piles of felt and fabric, notions (as one uses in sewing), styrofoam, and all kinds of things made of all those materials. In his studio, Silva is juggling two different things: things he’s already made and paintings on illustration board, similar to Flash cards. His art is full of play yet has a serious pull as well.

He’s already had an exhibition of his circus sideshow banners emblazoned with altruistic or sometimes confounding phrases at the Art and Culture Center of Hollywood. The banners made with heated press-on cutouts so that it looks like a stencil. Silva however, makes his own patterns, selects his own colors, writes his own text and assembles the entire piece himself.

He has studied commercial figurative illustration, but not clothing construction where flat pieces of material are transformed into three-dimensional objects. With his new direction, he’s taking three-dimensional objects and making them into flat, two-dimensional pieces. This reverse kind of piece is still in process but it can be seen in the banners how such a reverse transformation could take place easily in his hands.

The banners show through color relationships a layered means of created the illusion of depth. Even though the material he uses is felt, a dense, heavy fabric, his handling of the materials is light and deft.

Another interesting process Silva has used is drawing with a single black thread using tweezers to attach the thread to velcro. Creating both figures and text across a narrow panel, Silva has created a tenuous piece of art with a tenuous message about suicide. His handling of materials and text are considered and playful.

“I don’t want to sound cynical; I don’t want to be a pessimist, I want to be an optimist and, hopefully, one day be very altruistic. Reality, well, you’ve got to fight it all the time,” Silva insisted.

Silva has also created three-dimensional blowup figures made from plastic bags like the kind you get from the grocery store. He has expanded those works a bit by creating an oversized rabbit head that he used for a series of photographic image, but they are also pointing toward a new series of photos in which Silva has become his own model. He’s trying to be playful yet kinky and anti-societal… transgressive is what I would say is the goal. Playful yet transgressive… that ain’t easy to do. A lot of the images do achieve that, however.

While Silva’s studio practice is full of non-traditional art making, it is full of interesting ideas and processes. Play is literally mixed with work when you walk through his door.

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Studio Visit: Tonietta Walters

I Alone

XhyraGraf

latex embedded with steel shavings
plaster tiles
XhyraGraf - "in her Second Life studio"
sand on studio floor

Studio Visit: Tonietta Walters

by Onajide Shabaka

Like many artists, Tonietta Walters struggles with her practice. She is challenged by her practice. And, she is enveloped by her practice in ways that many of us can relate to. It grabs her, shakes her around, asks her tough questions that she cannot always answer. This is the place where we find ourselves, about to enter her studio, the threshold of a place that is uncomfortable but, it’s where she creates and brings into being including, all the things we have just tried to explain.

Miamiartexchange.com: We exhibited your work on Miamiartexchange.com Gallery back in January, 2004 and there is still a similarity in the work we see in your studio today. What attracts you to this material and what is it? How do you work with it?

Tonietta Walters: The material is latex but I also use fiberglass resin. I use it because of its texture and its tactile qualities. I started using these as an undergrad because I like the way it takes on the memory of a surface or form. I like the natural color of latex when it dries. I like the way it allows me to work through my art making process. I’m very much a process oriented person and find I work best if I am in a process heavy, creative mode.

A few years ago I painted on latex that was stretched on a frame like a regular painting but, for the most part, I prefer to use it more organically or freely and have used it in sculptural forms. The one thing about latex is that it degrades over time just as memory does. An example of this deterioration can be found in the two flat pieces I have with steel shavings embedded into them.. One of them  is deteriorating faster than the other. (image above)

M: Those two types of works, the latex stretched on the frame and the flat pieces with steel shavings, are very different. The ones that are stretched tell the regular viewer this is a finished, completed work. It’s final. Yet it’s not when thinking about how the material is going to change rapidly over time. The flat pieces are much more conceptual and one would have the expectation that there is some fluidity in them, especially when you’re so heavily invested in process. It seems that you have something to work through there however, I know a major part of the concern is the audience, your audience as you’ve found them. You used the word “honesty” in talking about your relationship with your audience and maybe there is a something disingenuous in your approach.

T: There’s also in the work the concept of a “framing” or memory capture of the more visceral aspects of experience: some of the pieces have that and some don’t. If I had my choice, I’d do installations. I did an installation at the Broward Main Library, 6th Floor gallery, that included paintings, sculptures surrounded by sand and the tiles you see here, made from plaster onto which I inscribed the various languages, cuneiform, greek, binary code, etc, I will reuse the tiles in other installation work. I’m currently working on a similar installation with sand (see image above) and although I have some initial ideas about what I want, I work until the piece is finished in my mind. I don’t direct myself in that way, it’s about “flow.”

M: There seems to be a certain expectation, true or not, that the visual art audience from the Caribbean basin have preconceived notions as to what art is or what art should be. The dichotomies in your work express that. If we compare the latex pieces for instance, stretched on a frame and flat without a frame, points to that. What I’m getting at is, how do you break free from somebody else’s expectations? You know, the “average” art audience knows, Picasso, Warhol, Dali, and Pollack for the most part, so how do you do something different than that (thinking about the poured flat latex pieces) and still have this audience here in Lauderhill specifically accept and embrace lots of difference, including conceptual work?

T: Yes, well, that is kind of our mission here at our Center. We want to give our gallery and the resident artists the opportunity to be more freeform and open to different things.

You haven’t said anything about the digital pieces you’re doing, could you tell me about them?

T: Well, they come from Second Life, you do know what that is, right?

M: Not really. I’ve heard of Second Life but I don’t know what it is.

T: Okay, Second Life is a multiple online role-playing game where you can create a character, an avatar, and the environment for that character. So, what I did was set up a studio in Second Life with a gallery and a loft living space. I took it as an opportunity to learn how to build in 3-D. So, I go around and take pictures of myself and other people. I’m like a photographer. It is the same kind of thing as a memory capture of another version of me, but I admit to sometimes using the game as a substitute for working with 3-D sculpture proper. I have, however, created a couple of maquettes in Second Life that I used with a couple of proposals. So, that has been helpful.

So these pieces (see image above) are photos of my avatar that I have photographed in the game and printed out and applied to canvas including some painting. Her name is XhyraGraf. Even though most of my recent work has been in Second Life, my sculptural practice has remained important and that is where I’m currently refocusing my energies.

M: Well, thank you Tonietta for allowing me into your studio for this little visit and interview.

T: You’re most welcome.

[Afterword by Ms. Walters: Actually, the work itself is not at all a place of discomfort or struggle and is also a place for the finding of answers. The discomfort is balancing the time to do the work with obligations and making sure I don’t bring baggage to the process.

But, this is about your (the interviewer, Onajide Shabaka’s) interpretation.

I am  probably at a place of discomfort now but it has nothing to do with the artwork — more with reconciling with the fact that I am  a bit disconnected from  the work and allowing myself to claim  my time as my own so I can reconnect with the work.

Sometimes it is challenging, yes [in the way familiar to most artists] but the kind of challenge that my art practice provides is the only place I am  comfortable. I use the word ‘practice’ much as a doctor or psychiatrist would open up private practice. It in no way means I am  unsure of what my skills are or what I am  doing or the kind of results I am  hoping to achieve.]

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Rául Perdomo

Rául Perdomo

drawing on mylar

This work on mylar was exhibited at the Hollywood Art and Culture Center in 2009. Mr. Perdomo recently spoke about the difficulty of working on mylar, although this piece is very beautifully crated.