Presenting visual and performance art in unexpected public spaces.

AiOP 2015: RECALL Thinker in Residence: Helen Cretu

For five days, Art in Odd Places activates unexpected public spaces with a myriad of performance and visual art works for the public to participate with, both knowingly and unknowingly. The 2015 AIOP Recall festival took place from October 7 to 11 along 14th Street, spanning from Avenue C to the Hudson River. Over the course of the festival, I had the exceptional opportunity to meet with some of the artists and learn more about their work.

I opted to not be guided by the map listing the artists’ locations but rather as a regular passerby in an attempt to experience the use of art in public spaces as such, but also with indication that there was art to seek along the way. During my walk, I found myself becoming more aware of my surroundings, observant to all that was happening in the most unassuming of places. The city began to give me little hints including text on doorknobs, disposable manmade materials and ambient sounds found throughout the streets of Manhattan.

Chance Meeting Door Knob Hangers by Linda Hesh

Scattered along the street and hanging in doorways on West 14th, doorknob hangers articulate what one might say to another upon meeting by chance. The text is polite, conventional and humorous in its superficiality. Hesh invites the public to interact with her work, asking them to photograph the doorknob hangers where they find them and then upload them to social media using the provided hashtag listed on the back. This work was playful and engaging; I found myself keeping an eye out so that I could spot all eight of the doorknob hangers along the way.

Linda Hesh

 

Road Kill Stuffed Animals: Endangered Species by L. Mylott Manning

A couple of blocks later, in the Meatpacking District, I met up with L. Mylott Manning and learned more about her work, Road Kill Stuffed Animals: Endangered Species. Manning raises awareness of environmental issues and concerns of endangered animals threatened by the affects of overconsumption in a consumer driven world. Stuffed animals created by junk mail, plastic bags and other man-made materials, harmful to the environment, are installed throughout an area of New York known for its shopping and dining experiences. Manning’s work brings attention to the need of environmental awareness and sustainability.

L. Mylott Manning

 

Collapse by Edith Raw

Performance artist Edith Raw also utilizes man-made materials such as plastic bags and packaging to explore the struggle of consumer culture, dehumanization and dysfunction. Under a quilt made of plastic, an unrecognizable form approaches unsuspecting people and elicits a variety of responses, ranging from being intrigued to indifferent. Raw provides the viewer the opportunity to interact and respond to her work as much or as little as they want to.

Edith Raw

 

Joan of Arc of 14th Street: Where Are The Women? By LuLu LoLo

At Union Square, Joan of Arc of 14th Street cries out, “Where are the Women?” to highlight the inequality between the number of monuments honoring men and women. In New York City alone, there are over 150 monuments of men compared to the staggering number of only five for women. LuLu LoLo invites the viewer to shed light on a woman who they feel deserves being recognized on a permanent monument by writing that name on a place card. The public’s choices and images are later posted on social media where we can see the range of women, all deserving of recognition.

LuLu LoLo

 

Eight Places of Empty by Jantar

Further down East 14th, an ambient soundscape of electronic music captures my attention as I walk towards a loud construction site, full of sounds of its own. The music is unrecognizable; but provides me with both solace and nostalgia in a busy intersection that I may have otherwise kept walking though. I’m curious to know where the music is coming from, find myself delving into every possible nook and cranny and looking in every direction, in an attempt to locate the origin of the sounds. Eight Pieces of Empty asks the viewer to explore themes of place, space and sound and the relationship between all three in the everyday urban experience.

Jantar

 

Lengua, Libertad! By Jenny Polak

Finally, in the Lower East Side, I speak with Jenny Polak about her performance, Lengua, Libertad! In a neighborhood with a prevalent Puerto Rican presence, Polak asks passersby to teach her how to speak Spanish in an attempt to break cultural barriers and explore themes of immigration, community and identity. To celebrate the bilingualism of her volunteer instructors, Polak then presents them with a Certificate of Appreciation, hoping to remove the stigma many Spanish-speaking people in the US are often faced with. By breaking these barriers, a mutual understanding is cultivated between the artist, participant and the viewer.

Jenny Polak

Art in Odd Places allows people to experience a variety of art, both visual and performance, in unconventional and unregulated, urban spaces. My interaction with the work was different each day as many of the variables that contributed to the way I viewed the work, often changed. If the artist relocated or other participants engaged with the work differently, my experience was altered slightly as was the context of the work and my interpretation of it. By doing this, new ways of seeing, interacting and understanding were made possible for me. With that said, I look forward to next year’s festival. Thanks, AIOP!

AiOP 2015: RECALL Thinkers in Residence

The Art in Odd Places 2015 festival RECALL is here!  Once again, we have invited a series of commissioned responses to the festival by ‘Thinkers in Residence,’ who will spend time on 14th Street over the festival weekend to reflect on flows, works, publics, and participation.  These responses may take the form of writing, walking, image making, or on-the-spot conversations with the public. The five commissioned Thinkers in Residence are Quinn Dukes, Dylan Gauthier, Britta B. Wheeler, Helen Cretu, and Mary Ting.  Each thinker brings a distinct practice of engagement, performance, and participation in the public realm. Full bios are available below.  Keep an eye out for these thinkers along 14th Street, and on the AiOP blog during and in the days following the festival.

Quinn Dukes

Q_DUKES_ Photo credit_ Nir Arieli

Quinn Dukes is a multimedia performance artist, writer and curator based in Brooklyn, NY. Her work addresses environmental disasters, social injustice, and ritual.

She has performed in galleries and festivals across the country and frequently performs with Grace Exhibition Space (NY). Her performances have been reviewed by Flash Art, NY Arts Magazine and WhiteWall Magazine. In 2014, Dukes founded Performance Is Alive, an online platform featuring current performance art practitioners from across the globe.

Dukes is a member of the art collective, Baroque Power Group and currently serves as Project Manager for The Sphinx Returns performance series curated by Whitney V. Hunter.

 

Dylan Gauthier

Dylan Gauthier.

Dylan Gauthier is an artist, curator, and writer working at the intersection of new media, architecture, ecology, and critical urbanism.  He is a founder of the Sunview Luncheonette, a social center, cooperative, and art space located in a former diner in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, and of the artist-activist-boatbuilding collective Mare Liberum, which has been exploring urban waterways as part of an embodied ecological research project since 2007. Along with Juliana Driever, he co-curated Art in Odd Places: FREE in 2014. He holds an M.F.A. in Integrated Media Arts from Hunter College (’12).

 

Britta B. Wheeler

Britta B. Wheeler.

Britta B. Wheeler, Ph.D. is a sociologist and a life/art artist.  As a sociologist, she studied the institutionalization of performance art 1970-2000 conducting participant observation research in the field while also becoming a performance artist. Seeking to integrate sociology and art, Britta’s interdisciplinary work has taken the form of “Day in the Life Works: Personal Ethnography Collaborations” with artists and others, as well as the embodiment of Belinda Powell, a life/art persona who channels the American context through popular cultural tropes of a white identity.  She has presented work at NYU’s Fales Library, White Box Art Center, Casita Maria Center for Arts and Education, and at Grace Performance Space. www.brittawheeler.com.

 

Helen Cretu

Helen Cretu.

Originally from Vancouver, Canada, Helen Cretu received a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Emily Carr University of Art and Design. As a public art administrator, arts educator and event producer, Helen is interested in developing socially inclusive communities through art and creative placemaking. She has curated multiple exhibitions in non-conventional venues and is fascinated by the possibilities of activating underutilized spaces. In her spare time, Helen enjoys being in the mountains, taking photos, and eating delicious things.

 

Mary Ting

Mary Ting.

Mary Ting is a visual artist working in drawing, sculpture, installation and community projects. The personal and historical narratives of her family in China and New York inform her work, which focuses on the poetics of loss, memory, collections, and nature. Solo exhibitions include: Witch, Whore, Widow at metaphor contemporary, Excerpts from the Dysfunctional Forest at Kentler International and Insomnia Stories at Lambent Foundation. Recent social practice projects include Daffodil Ashes on Grief and Art with the Rubin Museum of Art and Compassion: for the Animals Great & Small, on wildlife trafficking at the Chinese American Arts Council, 456 Gallery in NYC. Ting is a two-time New York Foundation for the Arts fellow, a Lower Manhattan Cultural Council MCAF grantee, Lambent Foundation Fellow, and grants from the Gottlieb Foundation, Pollack Krasner Foundation, Puffin Foundation, Ruth Chenvon Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts. She has been an artist in resident at the MacDowell Colony, Millay Colony, Lower Eastside Printshop, Dieu Donne Papermill Workspace, and the Bronx Museum Artist in the Marketplace among others. Her work has been reviewed in the NY Times, Daily News, NY Arts, and Art in America. Mary Ting is part of the studio art department faculty and the Sustainability and Environmental Justice program at John Jay College. Mary has a BFA from Parsons School of Design, NYC, an advanced degree in folk art research from the Central Academy of Fine Art, Beijing, and a MFA from the Vermont College of Fine Art.

 

Ikechukwu Casmir Onyewuenyi

IMG_3867

Ikechukwu Casmir Onyewuenyi is a writer, curator, and psychotherapist based in New York City. Onyewuenyi was one of the founding members of Pop’Africana. He is currently a curatorial fellow at the School of Visual Arts, and maintains an ongoing writing practice, with his work appearing in Cool Hunting, Pop’Africana, Art Base Africa, and HYCIDE. He is deeply interested in how visual and literary forms of expression can mine the subjective and physical dimensions of the body and geography, inscribing it with faculties that are of the mind and rendering it as an intersubjective site for critique and intervention on matters apropos to race, gender, psychic well-being.