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Currently on View:
Waste Not, Want Not
CURATED BY ROBYN DONOHUE
with Alyson Baker and Marichris Ty
May 4 - August 3, 2008
Opening Reception: Sunday, May 4 / 2 - 6pm
Jonathan Allen Macrae Semans The Canary Project
(Annie Murdock, Ed Morris, Jussara Lee)Austin Shull Tony Feher Courtney Smith Lars Fisk Shinique Smith Miwa Koizumi Jade Townsend & Michael Petersen
Rainy Lehrman Paul Villinski Carole Frances Lung Letha Wilson Julian Montague Randy Wray
Waste Not, Want Not Performances:
Albedo Pilgrims Make A Landing by The Canary Project: Sunday, May 4, 2008, 4PM
Walking & Weaving aparticipatory project by Carole Frances Lung
Bring your used garments and textiles to the Park, marked with the address of where it was
acquired: May 4June 1, 10AM-6PM
Weaving performance: TuesdaySunday, June 1-22, 10AM7PM
Long Island City, NY (April 14, 2008) Curated by Robyn Donohue, with Alyson Bakerand Marichris Ty,Waste Not, Want Not is a group exhibition themed around the interpretations and responses to the motivations, goals, realities, politics, and practices of recycling. It is an expansive exhibition encompassing many perspectives about the concepts and methodologies of adaptive re-use, and includes projects that address the creative transformation of the by-products of production and consumption. Whether celebrating the global trend toward greenor critically examining the motives and results of a world-wide focus on sustainability, the works in this exhibition share a common practice of re-purposing wasted or cast off resources.
The opening reception will feature a 4pm performance by The Canary Project, titled Albedo Pilgrims Make A Landing. The Canary Project, whose mission is to bring awareness to the issues of climate change, will install a series of braided ropes made of white work shirts in the tradition of ShimenawaaShinto ceremony. Wearing white is a symbolic effort to increase the reflectivity of the Earth and decrease global warming. Carole Frances Lungs interactive Walking & Weaving project is an attempt to map and analyze the cultural detritus of the global textile and garment industry through the process of generating a bricolage woven cloth. Her production method consists of: walking the grid of the New York Citys garment industry, scavenging raw materials, and collecting donated used garments by the inhabitants of the City. Carole invites people to bring their used garments and textiles to the Park from May 4June 1, and will then perform the labor of weaving this cloth TuesdaySunday, June 1-22, 10AM7PM on a 7 x 7 warp weight loom.
Other projects include: Tonys Fehers (Lipstick Showing), adiscrete and humorous intervention employing a formal economy of found materials; The Things Youve Had, for which Jonathan Allencut and recycled used car, beer, airline, and movie billboards into a surreal 10 x 28 collage; Lars Fiskssix-foot high Trashbags carved from a single block of marble, presenting a paradox of their disposable transience and lasting materiality; Miwa Koizumis Plankton->fuel->plastic- >rubbish: Taking my plastics back to the fuel drum, three ethereal seascapes highlighting a geological timeline of sea life becoming a source of fossil fuel for consumption and eventually being used in the production of the water bottles from which this sculpture is made; Rainy Lehrmans 30 wall of compacted sawdust focusing on the waste created through the labor of woodworking; Julian Montagues Three Stray Shopping Cart Situations, aseries of tableaus that recreate the settings in which the abandoned carts were found; Macrae Semans meticulously arranged, monumentally scaled still life of salvaged materials and found parts including wood, stone and metal components; Austin Shulls Migratory Greenhouse, are outfitted Mazda pick-up turned self-sufficient greenhouse, addressing issues of subsistence and sustainability within an urban context; Courtney Smiths large-scale mosaic made from old doors whose colors, moldings and remaining hardware give the piece a remarkably varied surface; Shinique Smith's installation, October Floor, composed of pieces of reclaimed linoleum and carpet, forming a blanket laid out on the ground on which she has placed a set of disparate items including bricks, bowls and a legless chair; Letha Wilsons Gallery Garden (Jasper Johns), aseating area and multi-level planter for native grasses and flowers, created from discarded gallery and art fair walls; Jade Townsend and Michael Petersen's installation made from wood and other matrerials salvaged from the hastily built and short-lived sets that are created for photo shoots; and Randy Wrays Port, aseries of colorful abstract sculptures made from shredded junk mail and presentedin the style of a Zen rock garden.
Detailed descriptions of the Waste Not, Want Notprojects are available upon request. For additional information including images for reproduction, please contact Ellen Staller at 718-956-1819 x 12 or es@socratessculpturepark.org.
Download Full Press Release (.pdf)