Matthew Slaats is not a fellow who is ever wanting for a way to fill his down time. He concluded the Hyde Park Visual History Project last October with a long awaited interactive projection at the Hyde Park Drive In and now he's fully involved in the Midddle Main Revitalization effort, working to leverage artistic activity to invigorate the cultural and economic life in a stretch of Poughkeepsie's Main St.
Matthew's work is interactive and participatory. His impulse is toward community building and he engenders that in activities which are engineered to pool the knowledge, experience and creativity of a given community.
His latest project is an online and real world project called Freespace. The website of Freespace seeks to generate a network of sites of of significance - of personally held significance as opposed to significance on an institutional or national scale. The nature of the project is open ended and will ultimately be determined by the aggregated character of submissions by the public, and the site will map those locations and experiences and individual's experiences tied to that location. As stated in the website's About section, the impetus for the project arose out of a visit to the Vanderbilt Mansion in Hyde Park as a way to spur a sort of National Park System that reflects the American experience of the common individual. The project is a cataloging of the relationships built between people and place.
When Matthew sent the link and an invitation to participate I was reading James Fallows' article How America Can Rise Again in The January 2010 issue of The Atlantic and the pairing felt particularly synchronous.
In the article, Fallows questions several individuals on the state of the nation's well being and tracks the attitude that's been ingrained in the American psyche since its infancy that the society's high point has passed and the downhill slide is underway. Fallows' inquiry takes stock our current state and indexing the values of today's society against the real and perceived visions of our history. Freespace is a similar activity, codifying the involuntary habit we all have of staking claims on our surroundings based on our experiences and emotions. Freespace charts this new territory in land we all already to navigate it with new insight;
it's just one particular approach on remaking the concept of the commons. Stake a claim, then open it up for your neighbors to enjoy and share.
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Showing posts with label community. Show all posts
Showing posts with label community. Show all posts
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
The Pressure is mounting; more details on the Art Handling Olympics
Paddy Johnson from Art Fag City has an interview with Art Handling Olympics founder Shane Caffrey reveals valuable details of this Sunday's competition, including, the menu that is part of the qualifying event: dumplings and shots of whiskey.
The members of rBad are getting psyched with every passing moment.
The members of rBad are getting psyched with every passing moment.
Sunday, February 21, 2010
It's a small world after all; a potluck invitation: Spire Studios, Sun, Feb 28, 2010
Some 20 artists from around the world are descending on Beacon on February 28 for a two day residency at Dia:Beacon. The artists who are all enrolled in the TransArt Institute MFA program are being hosted by Beacon residents in their homes.
Folks are invited to join the group at Dia:Beacon on Sunday at 11:30 am to lead blindfolded artists from the museum entrance through the galleries and to the interior of one of Serra's Torqued Ellipses. The artists will spend two days at the museum working on projects that will respond to Dia's exhibits.
After the museum closes on Sunday, the group will convene at Spire Studios for drinks, conversation and a little potluck dinner. If you're interested in stopping in an being part of the conversation, feel free to, and bring a little something to munch on. For more information, contact Angelika .
Angelika is in the final stretch of getting her MFA program through TI. The program consists of an intensive Summer residency in Berlin with a short Winter residency which starts later this week at the Sideshow Gallery in Brooklyn. She's organizing this Beacon extension to the Winter session. Coinciding the Brooklyn residency, TI will be holding its annual open house for anyone interested in learning more about the program.
Folks are invited to join the group at Dia:Beacon on Sunday at 11:30 am to lead blindfolded artists from the museum entrance through the galleries and to the interior of one of Serra's Torqued Ellipses. The artists will spend two days at the museum working on projects that will respond to Dia's exhibits.
After the museum closes on Sunday, the group will convene at Spire Studios for drinks, conversation and a little potluck dinner. If you're interested in stopping in an being part of the conversation, feel free to, and bring a little something to munch on. For more information, contact Angelika .
Angelika is in the final stretch of getting her MFA program through TI. The program consists of an intensive Summer residency in Berlin with a short Winter residency which starts later this week at the Sideshow Gallery in Brooklyn. She's organizing this Beacon extension to the Winter session. Coinciding the Brooklyn residency, TI will be holding its annual open house for anyone interested in learning more about the program.
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