Assorted entries from the Harbin Snow Sculpture Art Fair, China.
More. Related: Gianni Schiumarini’s sand sculptures. (h/t, Coudal)
Assorted entries from the Harbin Snow Sculpture Art Fair, China.
More. Related: Gianni Schiumarini’s sand sculptures. (h/t, Coudal)
Readers may recall our last encounter with Extensions: the Online Journal of Embodiment & Technology. Contributors to this publication include that mistress of mangled language, Professor Caroline Guertin, and Headlong Dance Theatre, whose Thrash: Physical Responses to the Bush Administration is forever seared into our memories. Another, no less daunting, contributor is Bettina Camilla Vestergaard, a Danish artist whose work “explores how collective identity and personal narrative engage one another using a variety of mediums.” Vestergaard’s artistic approach is described, by herself, as
Conceptual and research based. She works with photo, video, sound, drawing and installation. Her latest projects concern identity and gender with a focus on how this is constituted in public space.
The Online Journal of Embodiment & Technology is no doubt honoured to host a Vestergaard original titled Free Speech on Wheels, Let Your Opinion Roll, and which takes the form of
Intervention in public space, writings on car, photos and video.
I can tell you’re intrigued. Vestergaard obliges us with an account of how this “intervention in public space” came to pass:
I had been awarded a stipend from the Swedish government that enabled me to live and work in L.A. for 6 months.
But of course. And why not? Artists do endure hardship for the betterment of all mankind.
I had high expectations of the city’s complex cultural diversity, so it was quite frustrating that my first three months primarily consisted of passing time in quite residential Hollywood, sitting alone in my car, shopping and getting fuel for yet another round.
As I said, hardship.
I had a feeling of involuntarily being trapped in a fixed pattern that repeated itself: like Bill Murray in Groundhog Day, my life had begun to revolve around itself, slowly but surely reducing my mental activity to a purposeless series of meaningless events. I conceived Free Speech on Wheels as a means of short-circuiting this experience.
For the betterment of mankind.
The basic idea was to muddle the barrier between public and private, by creating a space where the many and varied identities of L.A.’s communities could be expressed. I began by parking my car where a large group of people were wandering about and proceeded to put up a sign with the following text: “Free Speech on Wheels – Let your opinion roll.”
Of course some artistic interventions need a little nudge:
In order to kick-start the process, I asked the first volunteers the question: “What does being an American mean to you?” I received a lot of different responses depending where I had parked. For example, there was intense writing activity during a downtown student demonstration and at Earth Day, while it was absolutely zero at the Santa Monica Beach promenade.
Fortunately, things soon picked up dramatically.
I have no idea what, if anything, this piece of CG art by Zeitguised is meant to convey. The obligatory written guff is mercifully short, but guff nonetheless, with references to “six imaginations of disoriented systems” and “the installation of an irreversible axis on a dynamic timeline.” Pseudo-explanations aside, the film itself is worth a squint. It doesn’t seem particularly organised or finished, but some of the animation is dreamlike and oddly suggestive, as though the rendered objects don’t quite fit in the usual three dimensions.
Peripetics by ZEITGUISED from NotForPaper on Vimeo
A high resolution version can be downloaded here and there’s also a “making of” in which very little is explained. (Via Shape + Colour)
Jason Hackenwerth’s balloon sculptures are playful, dramatic and slightly indecent. Some of them can be worn; some of them fire unspeakable things. Ideal for adding a whiff of trauma to a child’s birthday party.
A few weeks ago, in one of the ephemera roundups, I posted a link to some tilt-shift photography. The technique is a kind of reverse Supermarionation, whereby life-size objects are made to look like scale model miniatures. Keith Loutit combines tilt-shift photography with stop-motion filming. The results are quite striking. Watch those teeny tiny people move.
Beached from Keith Loutit on Vimeo
Bathtub III from Keith Loutit on Vimeo
More tilt-shift imagery links.
Via Viewmanoid Films, meet the boyband of the future.
Introducing Shakerboys … from viewmanoid on Vimeo
Dig it, baby.
Recent Comments