Presenting visual and performance art in unexpected public spaces.

AiOP 2017: SENSE- Get to Know This Year’s Artists! Ricardo Miranda Zuniga

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Name: Ricardo Miranda Zuniga

Title of project and short description

INCERTIDUMBRE

Incertidumbre is a virtual reality game about cultural dislocation. Game play takes place in an urban maze, throughout the maze are disembodied voices sharing tales of gentrification.  At other points in the maze, the player will encounter video portraits of people who share personal accounts of cultural loss, or dislocation and uncertainty.  The player escapes the maze by collecting these stories, but must also avoid pursuer that seeks to stop the player.

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

The streets of Manhattan overwhelm the human senses.  I hope to intervene upon the street noise and activity by providing pedestrians a virtual reality respite in which the senses will be masked by the sounds and graphics of a confined digital experience.

Ricardo Miranda Zuniga

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

Anytime a creative intervention is placed in a busy public location, such as 14th Street, the outcomes are entirely unexpected and the possibilities of interaction are exciting.

What reactions are you hoping to draw from the public?

Awe, pleasure and critical analysis

AiOP 2017: SENSE- Get to Know This Year’s Artists! Jan Baracz

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Name: Jan Baracz

Project Title: Cosmic Error

Project Description:

I will create a printmaking station responding to the atmospheric conditions and make prints on paper plates that will be a direct response to the weather on each day.

Materials

Table
Paper plates
Chair

Location

between University Place and 7th Avenue

Web link: http://janbaracz.com/

Jan Baracz

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

I resonate with the phrase “intuiting the unseen at an intimate or collective level”.

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

14th Street is a hub and therefore great way to reach a cross-section on New York population.

What reactions are you hoping to draw from the public?

I have no expectations as far as reactions are concerned. It’s an experiment.

 

Jan Baracz was born in Warsaw, Poland and moved to New York city in 1981. His latest installation On the nature of dust deposits, Minerva owl flight patterns and other commonly overlooked events is on view at Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art in Peekskill, New York. He has received grants and awards from the Asian Cultural Council, the Edward F. Albee Foundation, and the Pollock-Krasner Foundation, among others. Baracz’s photography has appeared in Paris Review, American Letters & Commentary and Jane magazine.