Presenting visual and performance art in unexpected public spaces.

AiOP 2017: SENSE- Get to Know This Year’s Artists! Beatrice Glow

AiOP Sense Banner

Name: Beatrice Glow

Title of project and short description

UNDERCURRENTS

In the months leading up to SENSE I will take routine walks along 14th Street with my eyes closed while being guided by a partner. I will surrender my sight to get to know the busily transited street through heightening my olfactory, auditory and tactile senses. Written and audio documentation of these experiences will build a psychological portrait of the street. During the festival, I will invite people to go on blind walks with me.

How have you chosen to interpret the theme “SENSE?”

In a world that militarizes images to shock our optic receptors to the point in which violence is normalized, we are becoming desensitized and forgetting our full dimensions as sentient beings. Guided by this impulse to reclaim our humanness and to engage the world fully, I will practice sharpening my senses of perception to get to know 14th Street, a corridor that I transit frequently, in a different light.

This island of Manhattan is ancient. Before it became New York City, it was Mannahatta of Lenapehoking – the original homeland of the Lenape people. Beneath the strata of bustling commerce and asphalt, there is bedrock that has witnessed the transformation of a biologically diverse island to the present urban environment brimming with streams of cars and pedestrians. If I isolate one sense–in this case that of sight–and tune into other senses, might I be able to grasp more of the layered site?

These walks are devised to broaden the sense of perception and go beyond what meets the eye. To close my eyes is to access the invisible undercurrents of our world in-flux; to discover blindspots. Without darkness, we cannot appreciate light. Without light, we would not know that we are in the dark.

Beatrice Glow
Why do you believe 14th Street is a compelling site for creative response?

14th Street is a main artery of NYC where privatization is encroaching on an ever more endangered public space. For many years it was a borderline between Uptown and Downtown, high and low culture, the haves and the have-nots, the buttoned-up and underground.  Now this border is blurred with gentrification in full force as mega-chain retail stores are sweeping out the mom ’n pop shops. It is also the strata above the L train line, which represents the conduit of gentrification flowing into Brooklyn.

By engaging with this endangered borderline through activating art in public space (without asking for permission), the festival is aligned to the origins of performance art being a non-commodifiable and anti-capitalistic gesture that responds to urgent questions of its time. Furthermore, the festival’s usage of public space is a necessary people-led exercise against the codes of conduct expected of robotic consumer/citizens. Collectively, AiOP probes and expands the psychological boundaries 14th street.

What reactions are you hoping to draw from the public?


Perhaps passersby may assume I am visually impaired and am being helped by another. If so, I hope they would exercise more compassion and empathy and slow down a bit in their strides for a differently-abled stranger. Perhaps they may realize that I am simply walking with my eyes closed to get to know a place better and would be receptive to alternative types of behavior in public space. For those that listen to my audio recording during and after the festival, I hope it inspires them to try to replicate this practice by inviting another person to trust them to walk with their eyes closed and open their own sense to 14th Street and beyond. During the festival, I will invite a few people to experience this walk with me as a gift of perceiving the beaten path of 14th Street in a new way. When they open their eyes after a prolonged walk, I hope that they would gain new insight and appreciation for the gift of sight.

AiOP 2017: SENSE- Get to Know This Year’s Artists! Enrique Figueredo

AiOP Sense Banner

Name: Enrique Figueredo

Title of project and short description:

If I Could Build Anything I Wanted III
2017
Hand-carved plywood, wood, concrete, and oil paint
8’ x 4’ x 4’

If I Could Build Anything I Wanted III is a temple in disguise. Resembling a NYC construction facade, this unassuming green monolith-like structure houses a giant relief of human existence: past, present, and future. Inspired by pre-Columbian glyphs, the rectangular structure attempts to connect us to the cosmos and travel through time. It is a wish to see something other than commercial development through the diamond-cut windows we pass and ignore daily. If discovered, the mysterious and hidden carvings within invite the passerby to stop and look through windows in each of the four panels.

Reference If I Could Build Anything I Wanted I & II: http://enriquefigueredo.com/projects.html

How have you chosen to interpret the theme “SENSE?”

I find it difficult to interpret what I see between the jackhammer and my phone. I am desensitized because time in NYC is elusive and I respond “oh well” to everything. Maybe I’m not alone in that feeling. I like the idea of hunting for peoples’ senses using art as bait. By placing an odd visual trap in the street that blends with and enriches the visual environment, audiences may pause the hustle, offsetting the city’s constant development with sites of collective imagination.

If I Could Build Anything I Wanted III 2017 Hand-carved plywood, wood, concrete, and oil paint 8’ x 4’ x 4’

If I Could Build Anything I Wanted III
2017
Hand-carved plywood, wood, concrete, and oil paint
8’ x 4’ x 4’

Why do you believe 14th Street is a compelling site for creative response?

I’ve always found 14th street to have everything that makes up a city on one street. I guess you can say that about any street in NYC, but 14th street is king. There is an industrial electricity plant on the east river side, followed by affordable housing, followed by clinics, restaurants, and big commerce. Passing Union Square, a busy subway hub and “bohemian” hangout, 6th Avenue approaches, reminding me of the grit of old New York only to arrive at the high-end Meatpacking District and the High Line. The widest street in Manhattan cuts through the entire spectrum from blue collar to blue chip. All of that, coupled with a large volume of tourists, brings you one of the most diverse streets on the planet.

What reactions are you hoping to draw from the public?

I will be happy if the passerby stops and recognizes that my work is for them. I hope that they take a minute disconnected from the City and think about something they haven’t thought of in a while. Maybe it reminds them of a place they’ve been or maybe it starts a conversation between families. Perhaps they will recognize the iconography from old history books and find a link between the carvings to their own lineage. Together we contemplate the future.