Presenting visual and performance art in unexpected public spaces.

Our Curator and Her Team

“We will not go back to normal. Normal never was…”

-Sonya Renee Taylor

 

This quote is the embodiment of 2020. Usually by this time of year Art in Odd Places would have wrapped up it’s annual festival. The team behind the festival would be enjoying a much-deserved break and would have probably held a dinner party to celebrate another successful festival. Due to COVID-19 though, the festival has been pushed back from October 2020 to May 2021, the team is still neck-deep in planning and preparing, and no dinner parties will be held for a very long time. Much like the art and locations AiOP showcases, this year has been odd. 

 

Our team is composed of Ed Woodham, the founder of Art in Odd Places, and a group of powerful young women. We have 2021 Curator Furusho von Puttkammer and our Curatorial Assistants Yasmeen Abdallah, Lorelle Pais, and Natalie Ortiz. Laurie Waxman is our designer/developer, while  Amanda Wu and Taylor Ryan make up our Social Media and Public Relations branch. The team is rounded out by Hannah Waskowitz, our Volunteer Coordinator, Clara Grusq, our Admin Assistant, Angela Liao, our Photo and Video manager and Eve Doudnique our InternOu. 

 

Behind any festival or show is the Curator. So for this blog post, we decided to have Furusho von Puttkammer give some insight into her connection to the festival. 

Photo includes: Furusho vo Puttkammer

What does AiOP mean to you?

 Art in Odd Places’ meaning is simply in the name for me. AiOP is about taking art outside of the galleries and museums, and bringing art out onto the streets of New York City. In the past couple of decades, art has become increasingly removed from everyday people. You walk into a gallery and you need an MFA + a dictionary in art speak just to understand what message the artist is trying to convey with their work. The art world has become increasingly elitist and inaccessible. AiOP rebels against that and acts as a tribute to the DIY Punk nature of old school NYC performance art. We’re accessible in multiple ways. Not only is the festival free to apply to and free to view and attend, the artists we work with align with our anti-elitist nature. We are here first and foremost to bring art to the masses. 

 

How did you hear about AiOP?

I had heard of AiOP since moving to NYC seven years ago, but I only first became involved with the festival in 2018. I was at an art opening and was introduced to Katie Hector, who was on the 2018 Curatorial Team for AiOP. After discussing the festival, she mentioned AiOP’s need for volunteers and I quickly jumped on the opportunity. In 2018 I was a volunteer and in 2019 Curator LuLu LoLo asked me to return as the Volunteer Coordinator. About halfway through the pre-production planning of 2019, I was asked to also take on the role of Curatorial Assistant. In 2020, I was asked to come back as Curator. 

Photo includes: Furusho von Puttkammer and artist Henrietta Mantooth

Because you have been a part of AiOP for a few years what is your favorite memory associated with the festival?

 

I’ve had so many positive memories associated with AiOP, but I think the #1 memory is when one of our artists needed a volunteer performer for his performance. His piece was about the voicelessness of those incarcerated in the US prison system and he needed a volunteer to act as a performer who would ask him a series of questions that he, as the prisoner, could not respond to. I volunteered to be the reporter and made my AiOP performance debut with Susan Fettuccine, your ditzy local neighborhood reporter. I slapped on a blond Party City wig and some blush and asked the questions in the most nasally, annoying voice I could think of. I loved every bit of it, and it was fun to inject a little humor in an extremely heavy piece. 

 

Close second would have to be on the last day of the festival last year in October 2019. The AiOP curatorial team all ended up meeting at Coppelia’s on 14th and 7th ave. It was a cold, rainy day and Coppelia’s was a haven from the weather. We didn’t plan to all meet there, we just all showed up around the same time in small groups. We combined our tables and spent hours drinking and eating and discussing the festival. All the stress from the last few months was gone and we could finally relax. It was such a fun time. 

 

How does your performance practice relate to AiOP’s performance practice? 

 

My personal performance practice is very closely related to AiOP’s message. I take on the role of my performance character Anchovy, a cartoonish mime, and put the character in increasingly frustrating situations. Anchovy trying to open a door painted onto a wall, trying to push a button that’s -just- out of reach, trying to fall asleep while wracked with insomnia, etc. At the core, my performances highlight the absurdity of our frustrations. How we tend to set ourselves up for failure, or how we get worked up over situations that are out of our control. I think the absurdity and playful nature of my performances is very much inline with the spirit for Art in Odd Places.

 

Any last comments? 

We love you NYC. Stay safe, wear a mask, and practice social distancing. We’ll be doing our part to ensure that all our viewers and performers stay safe this year as well. 

 

We are beyond excited for the festival. With this year’s pool of incredible artists, we hope to show how NORMAL never was. 

 

If you would like a more in depth conversation with the earlier stages of our team, you can check out our interview with BUST magazine:

Photo includes: Ed Woodham, LuLu LoLo, Barbra Lubliner, Billy X. Curmano, Furusho von Puttkammer, Laure Droguol and Joshua Suzanne from Rags a Go Go

Thinker in Residence: Deshon Chan

The past five years of my life have been every and anything but the word ‘normal’. I moved to New York City in 2016, arriving at what I can only describe as my happy place. New York City has been all I ever wanted to experience since visiting at the age of twelve. So naturally, when I was invited to write about Art in Odd Places 2021: NORMAL festival taking place on 14th Street, I was in total anticipation – looking forward to the event. I woke up on Thursday ready to see the art that awaited me on 14th Street and specifically in one of my favorite areas of the city – Union Square. I even invited a friend.  The energy was vibrant in the city that day. Waves of people swarming in the park, sitting, singing, dancing, people shopping from store to store, the streets were filled. It made me once again realize why I moved to New York, and notice how much has changed since I’ve been here. And how much I have changed.

Photo: Angela Liao
Made In Power

The first artist I met was Xiao Yang, whose work was a response to  the human rights violations in her mother country, China and the equally distressing treatment of African Americans in the US.  Xaio had the Universal Declaration of Human Rights -made by the United Nations- be shredded through  a matrix dot printer. A metaphor on how we have spoken volumes about human rights and social justice, Xiao stated “it is like we keep talking and talking, but all the voices go into the social structure shredder, everybody has the right to live, it doesn’t matter the color of your skin.” Thank you for sharing your art with the world, Xaio, and for taking a stand on what you believe in. You remind me light shines in all and all are wanting the same, a life of love, a life of peace, a life humans have the right to.
Photo: Noah Herman

Photo: Noah Herman
Leaf Memorial 

Next my journey took me to Kato Stewart. 21 years ago, her younger brother passed away. Her family decided to spread his ashes in the backyard under a Japanese Maple tree. Time had passed and her family never really talked about the death. It was about a year ago when they had to sell the house, overcome with the sadness of leaving the ashes of her younger brother, Kato felt she had to do something to memorialize him. She began making leaves out of paper and painting them to symbolize the tree where the ashes of her brother were laid. It wasn’t long before she realized how healing and therapeutic making these leaves had become. After sharing her leaves with her community and support groups, they started sending in their own leaves, having online gatherings and workshops. Even before this event, people sent in leaves to be hung on this stand-like figure with the others. A collective memorial of leaves for our lost ones. I was touched by Kato’s artwork because I immediately thought of a close friend I lost seven years ago, I quickly told her I would join and wrote down his name on the leaf. Walking away from her made me feel like my friend was with me in New York that day. I had written his name on that leaf, in Union Square, a place he had never been to, but somehow it felt like he was right there with me at that moment. Thank you for sharing your art with the world, thank you for showing us how to keep our loved ones that have passed, in our mind and spirit. On that day, you showed me that my friend is right by my side and for that I will forever be thankful. Rest in peace to all those we lost. Rest in peace Andrew.

Photo: Bob Krasner

Photo: Brian Schutza

Photo: Angela Liao