Entries in installations (5)
OIL: a new town in a resource extraction region
Monday, January 31, 2011 at 6:54AM
Just a reminder of On Site's exhibition / competition / call for entries for a new town in a resource extraction area.
We are looking for ideas, ideas, ideas. There are resource links on the call for entries page for general starting point information, however, you are being asked to figure out what the strategy should be, in 2011, for starting up a new town.
On the Strand over the weekend there was a piece on video artist Diana Thater's installation on Chernobyl, which was effectively a new city built in the 1970s, something I hadn't realised when it was abandoned just 20 years later. It is now inhabited by animals, wild horses walk the streets, swans nest on the tailings ponds. Thater says it is a necessity of nature to persist. She also talks about what a post-human world looks like, where political systems that built such installations were abandoned along with the site.
We usually think of designing or planning a new town from point zero, or near to it, that builds into a community with shape and form. One might also think of the new town when it becomes a discarded post-nuclear installation: what will it say about what we were?
geology,
installations,
oil,
rural urbanism,
urbanism Didier Faustino: don't trust architects
Friday, January 28, 2011 at 9:10AM
Didier Faustino. Flatland. Fundaçào Calouste Gulbenkian, Lisbon. In Flatland, a spectator becomes an actor by projecting himself into the backside of a movie screen using a swing. The other spectators seated in the theater can see the surface of the screen frontside distorted by the swing of the body, as an empirical three-dimensional effect. Flatland questions what is reality and what is fiction, offering the possibility to a spectator to become the main character of his imaginary.Didier Faustino, such an architect despite the title of his exhibition: lots of brilliant talk while other little bods run around making the piece. Click on the image above to take you to a short video of the setting up of this project.
From the press release: '"Don't Trust Architects" by Didier Faustino at the Calouste Gulbekian Foundation. Didier Faustino is presenting a series of new pieces at the Calouste Gulbekian Foundation (Lisbon) from 14th January to 3rd April 2011. Five new installations produced for the exhibition will immerse visitors in the permanent confrontation of the body with architecture and architecture with movement, via visual and sound tools implemented by Faustino.'
architecture,
art,
installations,
videos Philip Beesley
Thursday, February 18, 2010 at 8:08AM
programming Hylozoic Soil: Méduse Field, 2010. studio d’Essai of the Coopérative Méduse
Philip Beesley's Hylozoic Ground is at studio d’Essai of the Coopérative Méduse in Québec City as part of Mois Multi, a multidisciplinary and electronic arts festival that runs until February 28.
Hylozoic Soil: Méduse Field, a biomimetic installation, includes a first generation of protocell chemistry systems developed with the University of Southern Denmark and integrated sound and light devices developed with Quebec’s Productions Recto-Verso. Dense arrays of sensors, mechanisms and digitally fabricated elements shiver when someone walks by and then generates movement of geo-textile structures which withdraw, release and open up again.
This project has been developed by Philip Beesley Architect with Waterloo's School of Architecture. It was chosen for the 2010 Venice Biennale next fall, and then it will tour around after. The Canada Council and the RAIC are collaborating in the presentation of Hylozoic Soil in Venice as, they say in their press release, 'part of a larger project to investigate developing support for the advancement of the presentation and appreciation of contemporary Canadian architectural excellence in Canada and abroad.'
architecture,
installations,
technology Nicole Dextras
Tuesday, November 24, 2009 at 8:42AM
Nicole Dextras. Yucca Prom Dress.
Nicole Dextras is a Vancouver artist who works with ephemeral materials: plants, water, ice, names, myths, clothing destined to last and yet never to be worn again. It is her work, Toronto Island 2007, on the cover of On Site 20: museums and archives. It shows a delicate organza skirt and a black velvet jacket caught, frozen in the ice, all the immanent life in clothing pinned the way that iridescent beetles are pinned in natural history museum specimen trays.
Dextras has contributed several articles to On Site, beginning with 'Belonging. Sous le pont', an extended series of installations under Burrard Bridge that crossed First Nations narratives with blackberry vines, willow branches, Mountain Ash berries woven and tied into fragile, but flexible structures (On Site 18: culture).
On Site 21: weather showed work she'd done in Dawson City in the Yukon, constructing moulds for large free-standing ice letters. What does one write with 10'-high letters in ice? Dextras wrote L E G A C Y . She wrote names: Cléophase, Elphese, Gédéon – noms a coucher dehors. The past is the subject, the medium is the weather, the tools are un-constructed materials at hand.
If Dextras' winter material at hand is ice, her summer material is plants. Still ephemeral, still delineating the structures of other, past lives. I just find this work so beautiful, the antithesis of the world of war On Site has been engaged with now for months and months. War does grind one down. Nicole Dextras's work does lift one up.
Nicole Dextras. Sunday Bestwww.nicoledextras.com
art,
garments,
installations,
landscape,
photography 



























