NYC Culture on the Cheap: Weekend 1/25

Culture on the Cheap, Free and Cheap things to do in NYC weekend 1/25/13, cultural events in NYCFree & Cheap NYC Events Weekend 1/25/13Free & Cheap NYC Events Weekend 1/25/13Free & Cheap Events in NYC weekend 1/25/13Free & Cheap Events in NYC weekend 1/25/13Free & Cheap Events in NYC weekend 1/25/13Free & Cheap Events in NYC weekend 1/25/13Free & Cheap Events in NYC weekend 1/25/13Les-Nuits-de-Montreal_Free-Cheap-NYC-events_weekend-1.25.13_collabcubedFree & Cheap Events in NYC weekend 1/25/13Free & Cheap Events in NYC weekend 1/25/1320at20Free-Cheap-NYC-events_weekend-1.25.13_collabcubedFree & Cheap Events in NYC weekend 1/25/13Free & Cheap Events in NYC weekend 1/25/13Free & Cheap Events in NYC weekend 1/25/13soho_new_developments-walk_Free-Cheap-NYC-events_weekend-1.25.13_collabcubedFree & Cheap Events in NYC weekend 1/25/13Free & Cheap Events in NYC weekend 1/25/13

Click on individual squares for official event page or use the corresponding numbered link below.

This weekend’s picks for Free & Cheap things to do in NYC (1/25 to 1/27) in art, music, theater, film, performance, dance, architecture and general fun.

1. ART/FILM: 1/25 & 1/26 and through 2/9 – Francis Alÿs: Reel-Unreel. 20-minute film and new paintings FREE
2. CLASS: 1/25 – Intro to the NYC Startup Community. 5:30 to 6:30pm. FREE
3. ART: All Weekend – Drawing Surrealism: 60 works on paper by such iconic artists as Salvador Dalí, Max Ernst, Leonora Carrington, and Joan Miró. Free Fri 7 to 9pm. Rest of times $15
4. DANCE: 1/25 and 1/26 – FlicFest of Dance $25
5. MUSIC: 1/25 – Ecstatic Music Festival Kick-off – Shara Worden & Brooklyn Youth Chorus 7pm $15
6. GOOFY FUN: 1/26 – Idiotarod 2013: Annual Shopping cart race 12pm FREE
7. MUSIC: 1/26 – Zammuto w/Miracles of Modern Science doors 6:30; show 7:30pm. $13 to $15
8. ARCHITECTURE/DESIGN: All Weekend & through 9/15 – Making Room: New Models for Housing New Yorkers $6 to $10
9. MUSIC: 1/26 – Les Nuits de Montreal showcasing musical talent from Montreal. 10pm $25
10. TALK/LECTURE: 1/27 – Paul Krugman speaks about his Economy Fixes. 8pm $29
11. ART/PHOTOGRAPHY:  All Weekend – Fire Escapes, Waterfronts & Rooftops as Urban Landscapes: Eugene Hyon Photography: 12 to 5pm FREE
12. THEATER: All weekend & through 2/10 – 20at20 $20 Off-Broadway Show tickets
13. ART/LIGHT: All Weekend – Light Cycles at World Financial Center light installation by artist Anne Militello of twinkling LED lights and mirrored discs in the Winter Garden FREE
14. THEATER/MUSIC: All weekend & through 2/2 – Can Themba’s The Suit directed by Peter Brook $25 and Up
15. FILM/PERFORMANCE: 1/27 – A Full Moon Afternoon: Bidoun Magazine’s afternoon of screenings & performance 4 to 6pm. $10.
16. WALKING TOUR: 1/27 – Walk: SoHo Then and Now: Recent Developments. 11am $20
17. ART INSTALLATION: All weekend Aude Moreau Sugar Carpet Installation through 2/24 FREE
18. PERFORMANCE/ART: 1/27 – Performance Heart: Mixed Potatoes Performance Art Show 7pm FREE

Check our previous Culture on the Cheap posts for ongoing events and check back over the weekend for possible updates. Enjoy!

Breakwater: Artectura & Eduardo Zamarro

Breakwater in Spain designed and painted by Artectura and Eduardo ZamarroBreakwater in Spain designed and painted by Artectura and Eduardo Zamarro street artBreakwater in Spain designed and painted by Artectura and Eduardo Zamarro street artBreakwater in Galicia by Eduardo Zamarro and Artectura, street art, SpainClick to enlarge

Madrid based architecture studio Artectura collaborated with painter Eduardo Zamarro on giving the A Guarda (southwest tip of Galicia) port a new look. The Breakwater was painted in such a way as to mirror the town in pixelated fashion, using a similar color palette and adding hues of blue for the sky and sea. They integrated silhouetted images read as real shadows at a distance. The result is a lively and inviting space to stroll on and around.

Photos by Santos-Díez and Eduardo Zamarro

via productplus

X-Times People Chair: Angie Hiesl

performance art, seniors sitting in chairs hanging from building facades, reading, knitting, sitting. x times people chair, angiel hiesl and roland kaiserperformance art, seniors sitting in chairs hanging from building facades, reading, knitting, sitting. x times people chair, angiel hiesl and roland kaiserperformance art, seniors sitting in chairs hanging from building facades, reading, knitting, sitting. x times people chair, angiel hiesl and roland kaiserClick to enlarge

German artist/director/choreographer Angie Hiesl has been presenting her performance art piece x-times people chair in various cities and festivals throughout Europe and South America since 1995. Senior citizens (both from the original ensemble and locals) are perched on white chairs bolted to the façades of buildings, 20 feet or so up from the ground. They perform uneventful tasks such as reading the paper, knitting, and folding laundry, unfazed by the surprised passers-by staring up at them. Most recently, x-times people chair was performed in Montreal as part of the Festival Transmeriques last May, where two fire trucks showed up at one of the fixed chair locations not aware of the performance and thinking the actor a little nuts. Very goofy and fun.

Photos by Roland Kaiser and bottom photo by Michal Selinger

via i-ref

lagaleriademagdalena: #EnCinta & more

la galeria de magdalena, lagaleriademagdalena, regalos urbanos, urban gifts, street art from spain, Reichel Congosto, Isa Arenas, participatory art, gallery on the streetsla galeria de magdalena, lagaleriademagdalena, regalos urbanos, urban gifts, street art from spain, Reichel Congosto, Isa Arenas, participatory art, gallery on the streetsla galeria de magdalena, lagaleriademagdalena, regalos urbanos, urban gifts, street art from spain, Reichel Congosto, Isa Arenas, participatory art, gallery on the streetsla galeria de magdalena, lagaleriademagdalena, regalos urbanos, urban gifts, street art from spain, Reichel Congosto, Isa Arenas, participatory art, gallery on the streetsClick to enlarge

I’ve been so impressed by lagaleriademagdalena’s events and projects ever since anA posted her exhibit last year on facebook. The two young Madrileñas behind this urban street gallery are architects Reichel Congosto and Isa Arenas who came up with this wonderfully innovative concept two years ago while wandering through la Calle de Magdalena in Madrid and coming across a building construction site with large rectangular test color swatches painted on a wall that reminded them of art displayed in a gallery. They quickly seized the opportunity to place artworks within the rectangles and thus began lagaleriademagdalena. The gallery’s (who says a gallery has to have four walls?) pop-up exhibits foment community and interactivity. Everything that is exhibited is there for the taking; they call them “regalos urbanos” (urban gifts) and one of the main motivations behind las magdalenas’ efforts is to give the public the gift of happiness. Plus, the exhibits are smart, creative, and fun. Some created by Reichel and Isa themselves, while others are collaborations. All involve recycling of objects, some involve social activism, and all bring a smile to those who pass as well as pique their curiosity. The ephemeral exhibits usually occur on metal shutters or walls in construction sites, attaching the works magnetically, avoiding harm to the walls and allowing for easy removal and replacement by passers-by which also makes the interventions vandalism-free, allowing them to occur in the light of day, unlike most street artists. One of their exhibits made up of cut-out words from various old periodicals was titled Nevera Urbana (Urban Fridge – top photo) urging the public to play with the words like magnetic poetry on your fridge. The exhibit Tangrams (bottom three photos) offered similar play. An example of a more seriously themed exhibit would be Contra la violencia de género (Against Gender Violence) where egg cartons were used to house images of the many layers of a woman: their beauty, emotional strength, intelligence, death as well as a mirror to remind the viewer that they are the ones reflected in the box.

This month lagaleriademagdalena celebrated their two-year anniversary with their 53rd (these ladies are busy!) exhibit: #EnCinta (2nd through 6th photos). A wall of cassette cases with inserts designed by the participating artists also included their playlist with a link to it on a special lagaleriadelamusica site set up by las magdalenas and audible via spotify or grooveshark. In addition, each case had a little spool of recycled cassette tape. The intervention was a huge hit with an impressive turnout, everyone inspecting the cases and lists, with all of the urban gift cassettes disappearing rather quickly. Seems that many in-the-know have started to collect these artworks.

There are many, many more exhibits to see and read about on their website and blog. The charming magdalenas (interview video in Spanish here) and their transient gallery are definitely ones to watch. They have grasped the true meaning of “public” art. Bravo!

Photos courtesy of lagaleriademagdalena.

Thierry Fournier: A+ (See You)

Video street installation in France by artist Thierry Fournier titled A+. Video of same street 24 hours earlier tricking viewersVideo street installation in France by artist Thierry Fournier titled A+. Video of same street 24 hours earlier tricking viewersVideo street installation in France by artist Thierry Fournier titled A+. Video of same street 24 hours earlier tricking viewersClick to enlarge

French artist Thierry Fournier works in digital media, video, performance and installation art. His work explores the physical vs. perception bringing together commonly dissociated space-times such as fiction and reality, living and non-living, interior and exterior.

In his installation A+ (also titled See You in English) which most recently was exhibited on a street in Lille as part of its Fantastic Festival — which ran from last October up until yesterday — Fournier placed a video screen displaying the street that continued on the other side of the framed screen, as if looking through a window except that the video being shown had a constant 24 hour delay. This confusing image had pedestrians stopping, trying to figure out what, in fact, they were watching, while at the same time being filmed themselves. As the artist describes it: “Two temporalities into the same perspective creates a ‘temporal depth’.” Those who pass in the image and those who observe them coexist without ever communicating. Very trippy…

You can see it in action here.

Photos courtesy of the artist.

via lille3000 Fantastic

NYC Culture on the Cheap: Weekend 1/11

Free and Cheap things to do in NYC weekend 1/11/13Free and Cheap things to do in NYC weekend 1/11/13Free and Cheap things to do in NYC weekend 1/11/13

Free and Cheap things to do in NYC weekend 1/11/13Free & Cheap cultural events in NYC weekend of 1/11/13Free & Cheap events in art, theater, music, film, fun, food, in NYC weekend of 1/11/13Free and Cheap events in NYC weekend 1/11/13

Free and Cheap things to do in NYC 1/11/13 through 1/13/13

Free & Cheap events in art, theater, music, film, fun, food, in NYC weekend of 1/11/13Free and Cheap things to do in NYC 1/11/13 through 1/13/13Free and Cheap things to do in NYC 1/11/13 through 1/13/13Free and Cheap art events in NYC weekend of 1/11/13

Free and Cheap art events in NYC weekend of 1/11/13Free and Cheap things to do in NYC weekend 1/11/13

Free and Cheap things to do in NYC weekend 1/11/13

Free and Cheap things to do in NYC weekend 1/11/13

Free and Cheap things to do in NYC weekend 1/11/13Free and Cheap things to do in NYC weekend 1/11/13

This This weekend’s picks for Free & Cheap things to do in NYC (1/11 to 1/13) in art, music, theater, film, performance, comedy, architecture and general fun. Click through on the images above for the corresponding event page and details, or use the links below.

FROM LEFT TO RIGHT, TOP TO BOTTOM (numbers will be added to photos next week, promise. This week I was struggling with iffy internet..)
1. TALK: Deborah Eisenberg and George Saunders Short Story Writers. Purchase of book or $10 gift card. 7 to 8pm
2. MUSIC/HUMOR: No Place to Go; Ethan Lipton & Orchestra 9:30pm $15
3. COMEDY: Funny Sh#t Comedy Fest. 8pm $10
4. TOUR/CONFERENCE: Charting the Road to Resilience. Site visits and conference to share lessons learned from Hurricane Sandy. FREE
5. MUSIC: Dirty Projectors and Andrew Bird at 8pm. $30 and up.
6. THEATER: Kristen Kosmas – “There There” Critically acclaimed play. $20
7. MUSIC/THEATER: Prototype Opera-Theater Fest, through 1/18. $15 to $20.
8. THEATER: The Improvised Shakespeare. 7:30pm $27.50
9. MULTIMEDIA PERFORMANCE: Emily Johnson/Catalyst Niicugni. $20
10. THEATER: Under the Radar Festival
11. STREET ART/FILM: NYC Street Pop. Opening reception film, photos and more by Ken Brown. Sat. 1 to 3pm. FREE
12. ART: Haroshi Virtual Reality, opening Sat 7 to 9pm.
13. ART: Aakash Nihalani – Portal. Opening Sat 7 to 9pm.
14. PERFORMANCE: New York City Pod Fest – Improv $8 for one $45 festival pass
15. THEATER: Urinetown the Musical $18.
16. FILM: Chasing Ice – Photographer James Balog captures images to show the Earth’s climate change in this stunning documentary. 6pm. $14 adults.
17. TOUR: Yale University Gallery & George Nelson Exhibit Tour: 11:30 am to 5pm $5 students $35 adults
18. MUSIC: Gregg Kallor Hurricane Sandy Relief Concert. 7:30pm $20
MORE:
Fri 1/11 & Sat 1/12 15th Contemporary Dance Showcase including Anarchy Dance Theater’s Seventh Sense (see post). 7:30pm. $28
Sat 1/12 Family Day: BankInk! 75-minute demo Sumi-e class. 1 to 2:15 pm. FREE
Sat 1/12, Documentary – The Atomic States of America at 7 pm. $10.
Sun 1/13 Improv Everywhere No Pants Subway RideFREE
Sun 1/13 Comedy/Music – Reggie Watts performs at 8:30. $10
Starting Monday – NYC Restaurant Week 2013. $25 Lunch; $38 Dinner

Sat 1/12 The All-Day Sandy Benefit with readings by Nick Flynn, Jonathan Ames, Emma Straub and more.
Sat 1/12 & Sun 1/13  Film: Clandestine Childhood (Infancia Clandestina) Argentine film with filmmaker Q&A’s.

Check back for possible updates throughout the weekend and peruse previous Culture on the Cheap posts for ongoing events.

Sbagliato: Roman Street Art Collective

Sbagliato, window wheat pastings from Roman street art collective Sbagliato. Graffiti, street art, wheat paste, doors and windowsSbagliato, window wheat pastings from Roman street art collective Sbagliato. Graffiti, street art, wheat paste, doors and windowsSbagliato, window wheat pastings from Roman street art collective Sbagliato. Graffiti, street art, wheat paste, doors and windowsClick to enlarge

The art collective Sbagliato (meaning “wrong” in Italian) pastes images of windows and doors in the most unexpected places, suggesting a way inside and adding a surreal quality to the ordinary; makes me think of the holes in the Yellow Submarine. The anonymous group redraws urban surfaces, promoting a new reality by subverting order and changing landscapes — in some cases existing buildings, in other cases rock formations, and in still others stone walls by the river banks — by adding a twist with their surprising windows, shutters, and doors.

You can see more of their work here and here.

via tribeart

The New Colossus: Bronze Union Rat Statue

The New Colossus, Bronze statue of an inflatable Union Strike Rat at the Lever House, by Bruce High Quality FoundationThe New Colossus, Bronze statue of an inflatable Union Strike Rat at the Lever House, by Bruce High Quality FoundationThe New Colossus, Bronze statue of an inflatable Union Strike Rat at the Lever House, by Bruce High Quality FoundationClick to enlarge

Last week while waiting on line to deposit a check at a midtown bank, I noticed a new sculpture across the way in the plaza at the Lever House. The New Colossus, as it is titled, is a bronze replica of the giant inflatable rats that labor union strikers often park outside the employer’s premises they are picketing, usually for hiring non-union workers. There’s definitely some irony there, seeing this working class object converted into a piece of fine art in a very white collar part of NYC.

The group behind the sculpture is the Bruce High Quality Foundation known for their provocative art. The rat has actually been at the Lever House since last July when it accompanied an exhibit of the group’s works in the lobby called Art History with Labor: 95 Theses. The show consisted of real objects including a bucket with a mop, a wheelbarrow with a bag of soil, a floor polisher, a ladder, a trash can, and other elements that made it look like a construction site. Each object had a built-in audio speaker with voices emanating from them reading texts about art and labor, as if the objects that experienced the daily work became animated. I wish I had seen the show, but I wasn’t even aware of the rat until last week.

Photos: Lucy Hogg; Lever House art collection; and Polichtallix

MRtoll: Clay Street Art

MrToll, Brooklyn street art made out of clay, clay sculpture and poetry street art by Mr.Toll, GraffitiMrToll, Brooklyn street art made out of clay, clay sculpture and poetry street art by Mr.Toll, GraffitiMrToll, Brooklyn street art made out of clay, clay sculpture and poetry street art by Mr.Toll, GraffitiMrToll, Brooklyn street art made out of clay, clay sculpture and poetry street art by Mr.Toll, GraffitiClick to enlarge

Brooklyn-based painter and street artist MRtoll has been placing his clay street sculptures and street poetry around town for the past couple of years. These brightly colored clay works include everything from humorous word conjugation-like panels (my favorites) to emoticons and more illustrative pieces such as fried eggs, feathery birds, skulls and more. From the looks of his tumblr, the childlike quality of some of these may be toddler-inspired.

Photos: newyorkshitty; according2g; hragv’s flickr; saatchionline; and mrtoll.

via according2g

From the C3 Archives: Part II

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red_people_scooters_pprofessors_collabcubedLiu_Wei_collabcubedjr-liu-bolin_nolita_nyc_nystreetart_collabcubed

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roman_tyc_semafory_collabcubedjuergenmayerh_berlinische-galerie_collabcubedkuggen_the-cog_wingacc8ardh-architects_collabcubed

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Here are some more of our popular posts from 2012. Superhero Saints; Ana
Soler’s suspended bouncing balls; the House that Fell from the Sky; the Red People in Russia; Liu Wei’s amazing Cityscapes made from schoolbooks: Liu Bolin’s fun collaboration with JR; So-il’s Kukje Gallery; the amazing Twist Bridge; the Mr. Dictator Heads; Roman Tyc’s replacement traffic lights; J. Mayer H.’s cool number installation Rapport; Kuggen the colorful cog; a typographic bike path; Giant snails take over the roof of a Milan cathedral; and Snarkitecture’s Memorial Bowling.

Click on the photos to be taken to their corresponding post.

From the C3 Archives

key_frames_Groupe_LAPS_collabcubedSlinky_Springs_Tobias_Rehberger_collabcubedRubbertree

MiddleKingdomPorcelainCleaningBottlestrampoline-bridge-paris_azc_2_collabcubedStags_Piccinini_small

Barcode_Garcia-FraileCupnoodles_Museum_Yokohama_collabcubedboa-mistura_brasilandia_typography_street-art_collabcubed

TrafficConeArtandDesignKunsthofpassage_Germany_collabcubedCaitlind-Brown_Cloud_collabcubed

Tiger-and-Turtle-magic-mountain-landmarke-thomas-mayer4-collabcubedsergio-garcia_mad-tricycle_collabcubedcmyplay_by_av_studio_collabcubed

HighTrestleBridge_collabcubedMolecule_PurifiedTap_collabcubedUntitled-1-2586

We’re taking a few days off to enjoy the holidays. In the meantime here are some of our favorites from the archives. Click on an image above to be taken to its post, or feel free to scroll through by category using the pull-down tab in the right margin, or randomly if you prefer. You can always like us on facebook, follow on twitter, or if email is your thing, you can subscribe at the bottom of the site.

Happy Holidays!

Urban Maeztro: Firing Back with Street Art

Urban_Maeztro Honduras Street Art Iconic Paintings wheatpasted with arms, Firing back against violence with street art, collabcubedUrban_Maeztro Honduras Street Art Iconic Paintings wheatpasted with arms, Firing back against violence with street art, collabcubedUrban_Maeztro Honduras Street Art Iconic Paintings wheatpasted with arms, Firing back against violence with street art, collabcubed

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Urban Maeztro the Honduran street artist, wheat-pastes provocative images of iconic paintings, such as the Mona Lisa and American Gothic, adding vividly rendered firearms to the images protesting the terrible gun violence in his country. The masked artist has often dodged bullets while posting his art in dangerous public spaces throughout Tegucigalpa, fearing the police as much as criminals.

Though in a different — and typically more dangerous — country, parallels can be drawn with Enzo & Nio’s wheat pastings, as they can be with the ever-increasing problem of gun violence and nonsensical deaths in the U.S. as well.

Photos: Javier Arcenillas and Fernando Antonio

via vice

Andrew Baines: Surreal Human Portraits

Surreal Human Portraits, Coalition of the Constipated, Andrew Baines, Australian Contemporary Art, Fun Performance Art, HappeningsSurreal Human Portraits, Up to your neck in it, Andrew Baines, Australian Contemporary Art, Fun Performance Art, HappeningsSurreal Human Portraits, Coalition of the Constipated, Up to your neck in it, Andrew Baines, Australian Contemporary Art, Fun Performance Art, HappeningsClick to enlarge

Charlie Todd has a kindred spirit on the opposite side of the globe. Australian artist Andrew Baines organizes and documents similar “missions” usually taking place on the various beaches of Australia. Baines has a lot to be happy about: after years of struggling with the idea of leaving his commercial art business to pursue his lifelong passion of fine art, Baines took the plunge, met with success, and never looked back. Plus, he spends much of his time on the beach — as he did growing up — but now in the name of art!

Baines’ most recent “guerrilla installation,” and part of his Surreal Human Sculptures series, took place last August when twelve suited volunteers carried their own toilets to the water’s edge and then dropped their pants and sat down to read the paper. The event titled Coalition of the Constipated was an effort to bring attention to the lack of toilets in the Henley Square Eatery district. In 2009, Baines gathered 50 participants on West Beach to be buried in sand up to their necks for his Up to Your Neck in It event, highlighting the way people are bogged down with pressures of everyday life when we should all stop and look around to realize things are not as bad as they seem. And a few years earlier Baines went from Melbourne beaches to ones in Sydney recruiting volunteers to dress in suits and bowler hats with umbrellas and briefcases in hand, and wade in the ocean by the early morning light creating some rather surreal-looking (specifically Magritte-like) images.

There are many other fun events on Andrew Baines’ website, so take a look.

Photos courtesy of the artist; Mark Brake for AdelaideNow; and Bram Booth.

via artinfo

LeChurro

Retail Shop design, Boamistura, Fun churro shop in nyc, Chocolat Factory chocolate mustaches and finger tips, packaging, logo, identity designRetail Shop design, Boamistura, Fun churro shop in nyc, Chocolat Factory chocolate mustaches and finger tips, packaging, logo, identity designRetail Shop design, Boamistura, Fun churro shop in nyc, Chocolat Factory chocolate mustaches and finger tips, packaging, logo, identity designClick to enlarge

Here’s a fun, recently opened, spot in NYC for all kinds of churros: cones of churros, chocolate-dipped ones, mini, and filled churros. LeChurro, the small Upper East Side locale, seats approximately ten people in its nicely designed space. Boa Mistura (previously here and here) the Spanish street art collective, were commissioned to paint the type-driven wall mural. The rest of the shop has nice details from its tables and benches, to the bright orange and wood shelves. The shop’s identity works perfectly from logo to packaging. And if that’s not enough, LeChurro is the only place in NYC that sells Spain’s Chocolat Factory products such as the Mr. Chocolate mustaches and Give me Five chocolate finger tips.

LeChurro is located at 1236 Lexington Avenue near 84th St.

Photos courtesy of LeChurro and eurekasquirrel

via Marguerite

Balcon Additionnel: Julien Berthier

Humorous contemporary French sculpture and installation art. Balcony that attaches to all facades with boom. Street art. Julien Berthier. Fun.Humorous contemporary French sculpture and installation art. Balcony that attaches to all facades with boom. Street art. Julien Berthier. Fun.Humorous contemporary French sculpture and installation art. Balcony that attaches to all facades with boom. Street art. Julien Berthier. Fun.Click to enlarge

French artist Julien Berthier certainly has a sense of humor. His Balcon Additionnel attaches a Haussmannian-style balcony to any façade. How you ask? Via boom-truck that stays attached from below, keeping things construction-free. And funny, of course.

The rest of Berthier’s work is also worth perusing. Love-love (bottom three photos) is a functional and safe boat in the shape of a collapsed one. And there’s much more like that over on his site.

via ignant via swissmiss

MOMO: Minimalist Geometric Street Art

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I’ve just discovered MOMO. Well, I actually think that I’ve seen his work before on the streets of NYC, but not until now did I absorb it. And I love it. Originally from San Francisco, minimalist street artist MOMO now lives in New Orleans after years in NYC and traveling extensively. Most recently he’s been working on Practical Geometry a developing set of tools to draft, design, and organize wall murals with adapted masonry techniques. Those geometric shapes with their thin stripes in beautiful color palettes are what initially caught my eye, but what I truly love are the MOMO Maker group of works that were installed throughout NYC a few years back with equipment invented by MOMO. Those are the ones I think I’ve seen before and I can’t get over how a few colorful shapes put together can make me so happy and have so much personality. I would love to have a wall full of these in my home. You can see a clever 3D interpretation by MOMO titled 5 Shapes that developed from the same concept, here.

Photos courtesy of the artist; Lois Stavsky; OutsiderMag; Tishon, Nicole Blommers; invisiblemadevisible; UKSnapper; Hargadon; shoehorn99; and ekosystem

via outdoor festival

Audiomurale: Adriana Ronżewska Kotyńska

Street art, graffiti, Mural in Elblag Poland based on the soundwaves created by townspeople's comments, Sound art mural, interactive street artStreet art, graffiti, Mural in Elblag Poland based on the soundwaves created by townspeople's comments, Sound art mural, interactive street artStreet art, graffiti, Mural in Elblag Poland based on the soundwaves created by townspeople's comments, Sound art mural, interactive street art

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This is an interesting project. Adriana Ronżewska Kotyńska, a Polish architect and painter interested in public art projects, originated the concept behind the Audiomurale and then executed it, with a team, on the wall of a townhouse in the Old Town district of Elblag, Poland, a town extensively damaged at the end of World War II that waited until the 1980s for major reconstruction. The mural is in part a revitalization effort. Kotyńska and her team conducted interviews with passers-by recording their remarks about their town. Selected opinions – including some unprintable remarks – were transferred onto a blank wall of a townhouse in the form of spectrograms (i.e. sound wave patterns); the ‘voice’ of Elblag. The project is intended as a temporary – though not short-term – intervention. The final mural requires a key which will be provided in the form of a display board with a QR code that will enable access to recorded interviews via a mobile phone.

You can hear the mural’s audio track here.

Thanks, Łukasz Kot!

Matthew Mazzotta: Social Space Architecture

participatory public interventions, ecology, public involvement, community building, humorous art installations, street art, Matthew Mazzottaparticipatory public interventions, ecology, public involvement, community building, humorous art installations, street art, Matthew Mazzottaparticipatory public interventions, ecology, public involvement, community building, humorous art installations, street art, Matthew Mazzotta

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Boston-based artist Matthew Mazzotta creates participatory public interventions that aim to criticize, raise awareness, and bring a sense of openness to the places we live. I imagine bringing a smile to most people’s faces might be a goal as well. Mazzotta’s work focuses on drawing people in by curiosity and finding themselves as part of something unrehearsed. Reacting and interacting are key to his work as are community building, ecology and public involvement.

The top installation, titled Steeped in Exploration, was created in The Netherlands as a teahouse without tea.

From the artist:
The physical structure of Steeped in Exploration, made from all local materials, becomes a site of communal tea drinking. The tea served at the teahouse is not from the grocery store or peoples’ gardens, it is foraged by the people enjoying the tea on public outing that take us throughout the area based on knowledge and experiences of the people at the outing. Even the heat to boil the water for the tea comes from a local source, by transforming cow manure from local farms into energy (methane) through a methane digester.

In the following piece titled Looking for a Landscape, Mazzotta converted a standard city utility box into a portable viewing station. The structure is on retractable wheels, and the doors were hinged at the bottom opening downwards creating a cantilevered platform on each side of the box, complete with velvet cushions and mounted binoculars to take in the everyday urban landscapes.

Lastly, the video below goes through the function of Mazzotta’s Insertion Module, designed specifically as part of the negative space in architecture, camouflaged within the façade of a building, but when taken out opens up into a Tea House.

You might want to check out his Open House Project and Park Spark Project too.

via artsake