Archive for the ‘inspiration’ Category

Lee Mingwei

Friday, October 28th, 2011

Artist Lee Mingwei recently installed his latest participatory artwork, ‘The Moving Garden’, at the Brooklyn Museum in New York. Located in the museum’s lobby, the piece includes a 45 ft. long table filled with roses. The purpose of the piece is simple, and yet really powerful. Mingwei asks that if you take a rose, you fulfill two missions. One is to take a detour on the way to your next destination and the second is to give the rose to a stranger along the way. I love projects that get visitors interacting, but also extend beyond the gallery walls.  Incorporating projects into the public realm is exciting and I see it is as a vastly untapped method for cultural institutions to reach new audiences and have an impact on their communities.  Lee Mingwei is new to me and browsing through the amazing projects on his website is inspirational – take some time to explore his work.

You can follow participants’ stories of giving and receiving through Twitter at #mygardengift.

Bookmarks

Saturday, October 1st, 2011

I have lots of websites bookmarked, way too many in fact.  To say I am an avid bookmarker is a probably an understatement.  At any given moment I typically have 20-30 tabs open and only with a great deal of internal struggle can I finally close a tab by bookmarking the site in a folder.  That’s becuase I love being surrounded by information.  I use the bookmarks of interesting articles and pictures both for posts and my own personal library of thoughts.  Too often though, this library stays closed up and I forget about all the amazing bits of inspiration I have found all over the web.

And then I remember I have several blogs.  So in an effort to share this library, and my ideas, I will be posting items from my archives. Sort of like a digital cleanse and an opportunity for reflection.  I am going to try really hard not to self-edit or choose only certain bookmarks to share, but instead just steadily tick down the list as I have saved them.  Some sites represent something very simple, like a certain color, while others touch on much larger and more complicated topics.  For each post, I will share what it was that struck me and made me love it so.  I hope you will love it too.

The Work Office

Thursday, March 3rd, 2011

The Work Office, located in NYC, was a temporary art project, “disguised as an employment agency.”  Organized by Katarina Jerinic and Naomi Miller, the project was inspired by the 1930’s Works Progress Administration (WPA) which employed thousands of people during the Depression.  Jerinic and Miller translated the idea of “making work” by setting up an art gallery/work center to hire local artists to complete certain tasks.

Challenges such as ‘giving a concert for your houseplant’ or ‘recording an oral history’ were issued weekly to utilize the artists’ skills while offering them a small wage.  For each completed task, artists were given a paycheck in line with Depression era salaries.  At the end of each week, the Work Office hosted Payday parties that served to issue checks and share the artwork produced by each challenge.

This is the best kind of community art project, one that spins and spreads to encompass a web of participants.  The project started in 2009 and ran again in 2010.  I hope they get funding to continue their work this year as well.

Artist Credits

Top Image: Sarah Nicole Phillips: Curbside Object Status Tag, Challenge: Document a Need for Repairs

Bottom image: Lori Nelson: Souvenirs of a Recession, Challenge: Record and Oral History

The Johnny Cash Project

Saturday, December 4th, 2010

I just came across this project while preparing for an upcoming presentation for Denver museums.  Director Chris Milk decided to create a special tribute to Johnny Cash when making a video for the song “There Ain’t No Grave.”  Milk launched a website that allows users to select a frame from the video and create a drawing of the scene.  The user submitted images are linked together to create a complete film.  As of October, the website collected over 250,000 submissions (it launched in March) and it is still collecting contributions.  Just watch the video above, so beautiful.

Imagination Station

Tuesday, November 2nd, 2010

I have a growing fascination with Detroit.  Once considered a shining example of US industry and American products, it is now mainly known for its high crime rates and abandoned neighborhoods.  But it is also a city with amazing potential.  More and more frequently I am reading inspirational stories of re-building and community collaboration.

One such endeavor is the Imagination Station, a new non-profit founded by Jerry Paffendorf and Mary Lorene Carter, but made possible through the work of many many more in the community.  When two run down buildings in the Corktown neighborhood went up for auction, Paffendorf and local resident Jeff DeBruyn bought the structures for $500 a piece.   One is burned out and slated for demolition, but will be transformed into a public outdoor meeting/art space.  The building next door will be renovated to create a new community center, with room for artists in residence and other activities.

The Imagination Station successfully completed a Kickstarter campaign for initial funding and they are now working on the next phase.  But in the meantime, they are using every opportunity to document, create and share their work.  Before the burned structure is torn down, artist Catie Newell has made a stunning installation.   The organizers will be sharing their entire process, from fundraising to building, on their website with the aim of inspiring others to replicate the process in their own neighborhoods.  This concentrated community effort and support has resulted in a nimble operation that can make its own rules.  As quoted by the Metro Times, “If major foundations and nonprofits were involved in the Imagination Station, as they would have to be in a city like Chicago, there’d have to be 6,800 meetings before anything got accomplished,” Debruyn says.

When I created the Denver Community Museum I had the same feeling.  As an individual there were no grants to apply for and partnering with a local institution may have delayed the project (by several years).  I am intrigued by people/organizations who are making things happen using new models.   The Imagination Station is one amazing example.  Founder Jerry Paffendorf is also undertaking another project called Loveland, a micro financing platform that is both innovative and inspirational.  More to come on that one in my next post.

Baltimore Symphony Orchestra: Rusty Musicians

Sunday, June 6th, 2010

The Baltimore Symphony Orchestra has launched an amazing program that welcomes ‘Rusty Musicians’ to join the professional orchestra for select performances.  Hoping to increase interest in the BSO, the organization has included hundreds of amateur musicians in its concerts.  I love this program because it is inclusive and community building, but it also offers an affordable way to attend the symphony.  Tickets for rusty-pro musician shows sell for $10.

(via sloverlinett.com)