Presenting visual and performance art in unexpected public spaces.

AiOP 2010 artists, Nicole Seisler and Liene Bosque will try to make a good impression during the festival

Memento is latin for “remember”. It is also known, less formally, as “keepsakes” or “souvenirs”: something to invoke a memory. It is not surprising the word “memento” is very similar with the word “moment”: both denotes a specific frame of time. For Nicole Seisler and Liene Bosque, Art in Odd Places 2010 artists, capturing a specific tangible “moment”, often of things seldom noticed, is the goal. With wet clay on their arms, both artists will take a chance to make art by creating great impressions of 14th street. Their impressions of “mementos of moments” (mOmento, anyone?) will definitely give new meaning to the term “first impressions last”,

Let’s take a moment and get to know them.

Aiop: Tell us about you
N&L: We met in a class called ‘Walking the City’ in our first semester in Graduate school at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC). It became quite clear that our interests overlap in many ways and we started working together in December 2009. Being new to Chicago (Liene is from Brazil and Nicole moved here from Boston), working together was a way for us to explore the city and embrace our desires to make work on the streets of Chicago.

Photo courtesy of Nicole and Liene

Aiop: How did you hear about Art in Odd Places?
N&L: Liene heard about the festival from the Nancy Gildart, Director of Career Services at SAIC.

Aiop: What made you decide to submit a proposal for the Festival?
N&L: Art in Odd Places (an excellent name, by the way) offers us a chance to explore NYC and make art outside of the realm of galleries and traditional ‘art’ spaces. Our work involves the mapping of cities and we are also excited about engaging audiences that might not traditionally seek out an ‘art experience.’

Photo courtesy of Nicole and Liene

Aiop: How is the preparation coming along for your piece this October?
N&L: We have been spending a lot of time in the welding shop lately. The cart we previously made for this project is large, heavy, and welded together in one piece. In order to make our project mobile, we are currently building a new modular cart that will fit into a suitcase. We are also figuring out how to make the clay component of this project mobile. If anyone reading this works in an NYC ceramics facility, we could use your help, so please get in touch with us! A lot of preparation has gone into this project, including scoping out 14th street earlier this summer. AiOP will be the first time that we take City Souvenirs to New York.

Photo courtesy of Nicole and Liene
Photo courtesy of Nicole and Liene

Aiop: What’s your favorite spot on 14th street?
N&L: There are a lot of intriguing things about the mixed use of 14th Street but we keep coming back to how quirky that little Russian souvenir store is.



Aiop: Any message to the people who will be in 14th street during the festival?
N&L: If you see us passing by with our cart, please stop for a moment to talk with us and create a clay impression of 14th Street!

Participation is encouraged, so prepare to get your hands dirty and create lasting souvenirs. You can catch them starting October 8 starting 11 am heading East. Visit the www.artinoddplaces.org for more any updates.

Andrew Tosiello's matchbook tickets can go up and down. Buy them during the Art in Odd Places Festival and win big

Can you believe the Art in Odd Places Festival is just a few days away? We hope to see you during the Opening Event @ Theater Lab this Friday. If you haven’t RSVPd, now is your chance to do it:

http://tinyurl.com/aiop-opening

To keep the excitement going, we are featuring another artist appearing on 14th street come October. On a previous entry, we mentioned about “bartering” through the works of Heather Hart. This time, 2010 AiOP artists Andrew Tosiello, is encouraging everyone to GAMBLE. With his project called “The Numbers Racket”, Andrew will be selling match books tickets at various businesses on 14th Street. What is fascinating about this project is the method of determining the winning number: a formula from the stock prices report. Stock Prices?? Where do you even begin to wrap your head around the idea? You now ask what does the winner get? Well, I encourage you to check the Art in Odd Places website, take a chance and play the game. Andrew’s work is definitely not your grade school raffle drawing.

Andrew Tosiello

Aiop: Tell us about you
AT: I live in work in San Francisco, CA. My work employs the images, history and tactics of the Italian-American Mafia to consider the work of art. I also work in the trucking industry.

Aiop: How did you hear about Art in Odd Places?
AT: Curator Petrushka Bazin and I both attended the California College of the Arts and she had participated in an earlier version of my numbers racket project.

Aiop: What made you decide to submit a proposal for the Festival?
AT: The location and theme of the festival seemed tailor-made for this project.

Aiop: How is the preparation coming along for your piece this October?
AT: I’m basically all set for the project. Now I just need to get to New York.

Aiop: What’s your favorite spot on 14th street?
AT: I can’t really recall any places on 14th Street from previous visits, but I’m sure I’ll find a favorite during the festival.

Aiop: Do you have a hidden talent you would like to share?
AT: No.

Aiop: Any message to the people who will be in 14th street during the festival?
AT: Players Win and Winners Play.

Just as he said, Winners are players! Check the website and the Art in Odd Places twitter feed (@ArtinOddPlaces) to find his performance dates and location.