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November 30, 2006

Free Space... everywhere

Austin Thomas, past LMCC Workspace Resident, when faced with losing her studio, took a cue from our Swing Space program and started her one-artist version called Free Space. She has a traveling studio of supplies that she sets up anywhere that she can pull up a free chair. I've spotted her on one of my coffee breaks working in the POPS at 60 Wall, and I've even lined up a coworker's desk for her. Check out Austin's blog to see just how she does it. It's a project Austin has included me in for a while, and now she's out in Santa Barbara, bringing Free Space and her social sculpture to Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum for a three-month run, and she's doing it all with her toddler Grant in tow. Next week, Hendrik Gerrits from Swing Space is going to be guest lecturer on free space and the studio practice in Santa Barbara. Free Space for all!!!

3 Podcasts - important for all NYC artists to hear

Swing Space artist, Betty Beaumont, just finished her residency at 15 Nassau where she hosted a very interesting series of panels. The first two panels have an impressive line-up of panelest and focus on the displacement of artists in New York, what can be down, and what implications that might have on the city's future.

In Beaumont's third and final panel, she invited Worldchanging and the Buckminster Fuller Institue for the book release of Worldchanging: A User's Guide to the 21 Century. Editor, Alex Steffen, and Dr. Michael Ben-Eli , former student and collaborator of R. Buckminster Fuller, celebrated the book's release with a very compelling talk about how our everyday lives need to change and are already changing with the onset of Global Warming.

All three talks are now available as a podcast.

November 22, 2006

Resident Artist Interview: Diego Medina

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This interview is just one in a series of discussions with Lower Manhattan Cultural Council's thirty artists-in-residence from September 2006 through May 2007.

November 21, 2006

Inwood Coffeehouse @ Piper's Kilt of Inwood

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December 6, 8PM Free

Inwood Coffee House @ the Piper's Kilt: A night of acoustic roots music of past and present will kick off with an open mic at 8PM with an exciting mix of songwriters, instrumentalists and poets, and will be followed by stellar performances by featured acts. Featured acts include:
* Singer songwriter Karen Hudson with guitarist extraordinaire Skip Krevens and the crisp vocal stylings of Maureen Russell performing songs from Hudson's CD "Hudson River View"
* The Demolition String Band and their kid-friendly-but-safe-for-adults program Americana Family Jamboree which draws on songs from the Americana songbook, plus songs from their acclaimed CD "Where The Wild Wild Flowers Grow; The Songs Of Ola Belle Reed," and original material, and
* the Harmony Brothers: Jerry Hertz and Charlie Goldman whose golden voices are supported by mandolin, banjo and guitar, will present their repertoire of high lonesome harmonies in the grand tradition of the Louvin Brothers and the Everly Brothers.

Inwood Coffeehouse @ Piper's Kilt of Inwood
4944 Broadway (A or 1 train to 207th Street; 7, 12 and 20 bus to 207th Street)
212 569-7071

Karen Hudson is a 2005-06 Manhattan Community Arts Fund grantee.

November 15, 2006

Palissimo performs Le Petit Mort

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Choreographer Pavel Zustiak teams up with famed video artist Tal Yarden exposing postmortem ecstasy somewhere between a dream and a memory entitled Le Petit Mort. Raw, unsettling, emotionally charged images ask questions that are ultimately unanswerable - questions of the matters of the end. Scenes of disquieting stillness and agitation, haunting traces of life past living, will leave a residue that can't be washed off.

Performances December 7-10 at Performance Space 122: www.ps122.org/performances/palissimo.html
Additional information at www.lepetitmortshow.com

Palissimo is a 2005-2006 Manhattan Community Arts Fund grantee.

November 8, 2006

It's a GAS-GAS-GAS

Come to a great opening at our friends' Gigantic Art Space tomorrow night from 6 - 9pm at 59 Franklin Street and share a drink with us!

Beside the fact that it's in our 'hood...

...two more reasons to come:

1. Sam Gould (Red 76) is in it, and besides the fact the he is an interesting artist, was part of LMCC's 'Knock At The Door' exhibition...he will also be working with us on a new print project for Jan 07.

2. An LMCC Asscoiate Curator and his dad are part of the show...

From the press release:

PUBLIC EVENTS:

Saturday, November 11, 2006, 1:00 PM

Encountering Revolution, Thomas Paine a brunch-time talk facilitated by Red76.

Adam Kleinman will speak to his father David Kleinman about that most obscure of founding fathers, Thomas Paine. The discussion may concern general commentaries on the work of Thomas Paine, his life, and also his current stock in the hearts and minds of contemporary American politics. Right now, David Kleinman is thinking about joining the Thomas Paine Society, which will also be a topic of discussion.

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November 7, 2006

Awash Public Art Installation Extended Through December 24

Awash, a sculptural installation by Matthew Geller, invites the public to sit and swing beneath a cooling, offbeat “portable fountain” in historic Collect Pond Park, on Leonard Street between Centre and Lafayette in lower Manhattan. The work will be on view from September 14, 2006 to December 24, 2006, 7AM – 8PM.

Combining the archaic and the modern with an absurdist twist, Geller’s steel-and- Plexiglas structure provides shelter from its own inclement weather. A water tank sprays water onto a skylight incongruously mounted on a "sidewalk bridge," much like the ones that protect pedestrians at construction sites. Inside the bridge hang several seats recalling both old-fashioned porch swings and traditional park benches, allowing up to eight people to sit and talk while rain splashes romantically on the skylight overhead.

Geller’s previous work includes Foggy Day, an artificial fog bank that turned Chinatown's noir-picturesque Cortlandt Alley into a movie set for people who aren't in pictures, while emphasizing less noticed aspects of the locale such as puddles, plants growing in crevices, and the steam jets from adjacent garment factories. His pieces have been described as "urban earthworks."

Like Foggy Day, Awash is a hybrid, or "recombinant" art work that fuses the history of a region with its overlooked present. While sidewalk bridges still dot the Manhattan cityscape, the swings and spraying water hark back to an earlier time, when Collect Pond Park was known as "The Collect," a fishing and recreation lake. After suffering the effects of too-dense urbanization, the Collect was drained by the City and became the home of the notorious "Five Points" district, immortalized in the book and film Gangs of New York.

No longer the scene of battles between gangs such as the Bowery Boys and the Dead Rabbits, Collect Pond Park now sits sedately surrounded by government buildings: the Criminal Court, Civil Court, and Family Court are all visible from the park. Lunchgoers and passersby are invited to sit beneath the fountain while contemplating the past and present of this resonant area.

Awash has been made possible, in part, by the Foundation for Contemporary Arts and by the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council with the generous support of The September 11th Fund. Additional support received from The City of New York Department of Parks & Recreation Temporary Public Art Program. Color photographs are available. For further information please contact: 917-804-0118 or publicart@ix.netcom.com

Collect Pond Park (Leonard Street between Centre and Lafayette Streets in lower Manhattan) is a short walk from:
J, M, N, Q, W, Z, 6 to Canal Street; 1 to Franklin Street; R, W to City Hall;
A, C, J, M, Z to Chambers Street; 4, 5, 6 to Brooklyn Bridge/City Hall

Tom Moody's review of Awash:
http://www.digitalmediatree.com/tommoody/?37746

Go to this website for a listing and picture in Downtown Express:
http://www.downtownexpress.com/de_177/thelisting.html

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November 2, 2006

Access Restricted: City Hall Subway Photos

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Photos from our first Access Restricted tour, a nomadic lecture series which opens to the public rarely visited and often prohibited spaces in Lower Manhattan. First stop: City Hall Subway.

New Swing Space Artists

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Here's the new batch of Swing Space artists that are going to be in 32 Avenue of the Americas from October 2006 - January 2007.

November 1, 2006

Access Restricted Blogged

http://www.interiordesign.net/id_newsarticle/CA6387060.html