Mauricio Miranda: Plusvalía

Mauricio Miranda_PlusvaliaLast month at VoltaNY, one of the most unique (and possibly disturbing) exhibits was that of Costa Rican artist Mauricio Miranda. The exhibit, Plusvalía (which means “added value”) consisted of: a video showing the artist’s back being tattooed with a grid of ten boxes; a photo of the final tattooed back; and ten, empty plexiglass boxes. In the part-performance-part-conceptual piece, Miranda sells fragments of his skin (10 pieces total) to collectors who wish to acquire them. As a buyer, one receives an empty box along with a contract between the artist and buyer, which stipulates that the fragments will not be released to the purchaser until the time of Miranda’s death. This being a statement about the art market over the past years and the lack of resources for emerging artists.

Miranda, writing about the artwork, includes the following: “The piece arises from an insistence on being able to generate resources to produce my work. I see my work as a gesture of participation in an informal economy. In this piece I sell fragments of myself as an action of speculation about the acquisition of works of art…. The container will ultimately house the fragment of my body. The project becomes a process of waiting for what I may be worth.”

Represented by: Galería Bickar. Top and bottom photos: Allan Sprecher

Festival of Ideas for the New City

The Festival of Ideas for the New CityWe previously posted about the upcoming Festival of Ideas for the New City, here in NYC, from May 4-8, 2011, but now there seems to be much more information. The Festival is a “major new collaborative intitiative in New York involving scores of Downtown organizations, from universities to arts institutions and community groups, working together to effect change… It will harness the power of the creative community to imagine the future city and explore the ideas destined to shape it. It will take place in multiple venues Downtown and is organized around three central programs: a conference of symposia; an innovative StreetFest along the Bowery; and over one hundred independent projects and public events.” A small sampling of events and projects are pictured above (click image to see larger.)

Visit the Festival site for complete information on the conference, projects and street festival as well as for tickets.

via TheScout

The Many Brains of Jan Fabre: Chimères

Jan Fabre: ChimeresJan Fabre, an artist from Antwerp, has done everything from stage direction and choreography to creating drawings, sculptures and major installations. The main themes developed in his work are metamorphosis and the artist as warrior in the cause of beauty.

Presently, he has an exhibit at the Galerie Daniel Templon in Paris titled Chimères: painted silicone sculptures of brains showcased in glass boxes.

From top to bottom, and left to right:
Brain of Van Gogh, 2011

The Brain of a Messenger of Death, 2011
Angel Brain, 2011
Braintree with Golden Fruits, 2011

For those of us not visiting Paris before May 20, 2011, there are more images at the gallery’s site.

Open House 2011: Droog

Open House 2011_DroogDespite the heavy downpour of rain yesterday morning, upon my arrival at the Open House symposium I was greeted by a full house of black and gray-clad architects and designers. Open House is a concept/experiment/art installation by Droog and led by Diller Scofidio + Renfro to encourage suburban homeowners to transform a portion of their homes into service-providing, collaboratively-minded, income-generating establishments.

The morning talks were very interesting and critical to understanding the afternoon’s Levittown tour of installations. Highlights of the symposium included: Renny Ramakers (co-founder of Droog) who laid out the concept and how it came to be; Charles Renfro (partner at Diller Scofidio + Renfro) with a humorous (yet serious) presentation on finding one’s inner service provider; and Roo Rodgers (serial entrepreneur and director of Redscout Ventures) spoke about the rise of collaborative consumption and its success in models such as Zipcar, all tying into the Open House theme.

Two large buses took us out to Levittown, NY, where we met up with four minivans that circulated between the eight Open Houses. All the installations had interesting aspects and were cleverly executed, but the one I was most impressed by (design-wise) was Open House #2: Block Pantry by Janette Kim and Erik Carver with Gabriel Fries-Briggs; CNC cut in Brooklyn by Kontraptioneering. A large foam contraption, through which trays of mac ‘n’ cheese and meatloaf were served, had been attached to the exterior of the house around the kitchen window on a track that permitted the entire construction to be wheeled across the front of the house out to the lawn for an outdoor or self service option. Incredibly clever.

Open House #1: House Dress by L.E.FT (Makram El Kadi & Ziad Jamaleddine) inspired by the 1950s house dress made an impact as well, circling the perimeter of its house.

All of the houses and their services were fun to see, and though I’m not sure this notion will catch on right away, it does get the wheels turning.

Ryoji Ikeda: The Transfinite

Ryoji Ikeda_The Transfinite_Park Ave ArmoryRyoji Ikeda, a Japanese sound and visual artist who lives and works in Paris, will soon unveil The Transfinite; “an immersive sonic and visual environment that subsumes visitors within abstract expressions of digital information and binary code. Breathtakingly provocative black and white projections keyed to a tightly synchronized musical composition explore how data defines the world we live in. Known for large-scale installations and public artworks around the world that push the limits of digital technology, Ikeda creates his most ambitious installation to date with The Transfinite.”

“In choreographing vast amounts of digital information, Ikeda conjures up a transformative environment in which visitors confront data on a scale that defies comprehension, experiencing the infinite. This installation includes strobe effects and high volume.”

The Transfinite opens May 20th and runs through June 11th 2011,  here in NYC at the Park Avenue ArmoryTickets here.

Looking forward to checking it out!

UPDATE: See our follow-up post here.

The Weird Girls Project

The Weird Girls ProjectGranted, my exposure to Icelandic culture is limited to, well, Björk, but based on that and now The Weird Girls Project, it certainly seems like a creative, and zany, place to be. Artist Kitty Von-Sometime (a British expat) started the Weird Girls over four years ago noticing her female friends’ social self-consciousness and lack of creative outlets. It has grown to almost 60 Weird Girls and 12 episodes that include spandex, bunny masks, and glow-in-the-dark effects. There’s a Busby Berkely-meets-Björk element to some of them.

The Weird Girls Project is an ongoing art experiment created and produced by concept artist Kitty Von-Sometime. It evolves ‘Episode’ by ‘Episode’ and the participants mix between those involved from the beginning and new members increasing with every event. Each Episode is planned for approximately three months with the participants knowing as little as is possible about the event excluding the date, this includes the concept, location and costumes. The experience is one of empowerment, overcoming self-consciousness and body image, comradery, as well as (for lack of a better term) girl power.

Filmmaker Adrienne Grierson, after a two-year wait, became a Weird Girl and, along with Martina Moor, is documenting the whole experience and the 13th Episode in her upcoming documentary “I Want to Be Weird in Iceland.” Here’s her kickstarter trailer, well worth watching:


You can follow Adrienne’s progress here. And you can watch The Weird Girls Project Episodes here.

Q Kyu Seop Lee: Pizza Box Side Table

Q Kyu Seop Lee_Pizza Box Table_Pratt“Pratt Industrial Design senior Q Kyu Seop Lee combines the work of Isamu Noguchi with a familiar object most students appreciate and love, a pizza box. The result embodies the iconic simplicity of Noguchi’s coffee tables and maintains the accessibility and youthful quality associated with the pizza box. Q’s side table is perfectly crafted to provide easy assemblage without any tools, and comes apart to fit inside the box of the top.” Part of the Pratt Show 2011.

One Day for Design: April 13th

One Day for DesignOn April 13, 2011,
 add your voice to an open, digital dialogue on design. One Day For Design brings together a global community of designers and design enthusiasts to exchange ideas, challenge viewpoints and push boundaries—collaborating in real time on the future of our profession and the organizations behind it. Spread the word. Join the conversation at onedayfordesign.org or via Twitter.

Moderators include: Alex Bogusky, Doug Bowman, Liz Danzico, Debbie Millman, Erik Spiekermann, Armin Vit, Alissa Walker and Katherine Walker.

Begins tonight at 12 midnight EST

Festival of Ideas

The Festival of Ideas for the New City, May 4-8, 2011, is a major new collaborative initiative in New York involving scores of Downtown organizations, from universities to arts institutions and community groups, working together to affect change. A first for New York, the Festival will harness the power of the creative community to imagine the future city and explore the ideas destined to shape it. It will take place in multiple venues Downtown and is organized around three central programs: a three-day slate of symposia; an innovative StreetFest along the Bowery; and over eighty independent projects and public events. The Festival will serve as a platform for artists, writers, architects, engineers, designers, urban farmers, planners, and thought leaders to exchange ideas, propose solutions, and invite the public to participate.”

Worth checking out, I think. More information here.

Open House: Droog

Open House_Droog Event LogoSounds interesting. I’m in.

Open house is a project by Droog led by Diller Scofidio + Renfro. Open house will be presented in a one-day event on Saturday, April 23rd, 2011. The event will be kicked-off with a symposium at Studio-X New York introduced and moderated by Mark Wasiuta of Columbia University, followed by a bus trip to Levittown, where visitors can view and participate in several house installations in the neighborhood, designed and executed by architects, designers and artists in collaboration with the homeowners. One of the installations will showcase concepts for future open houses, with proposals for new housing configurations and regulatory modifications.”

The event is free but there is an optional transportation fee from Studio-X to Levittown.

UPDATE: POST-VISIT FOLLOW UP HERE.