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The Occupy with Art blog provides updates on projects in progress, opinion articles about art-related issues and OWS, useful tools built by artists for the movement, new features on the website, and requests for assistance. To submit a post, contact us at occupationalartschool(at)gmail(dot)com .

Entries in occupational art school (40)

Wednesday
Aug222012

[OAS NODE #1]: [TONIGHT!][Jeff Sugg: "Digitizing Theater"]

Jeff SuggOccupational Art School Node 1 at Bat Haus is honored to present Jeff Sugg: artist, theatrical projectionist, designer [+] on the topic of "Digitizing Theater," Wednesday, August 22 from 7-9PM. Tonight's discussion is the first OASN1@BH class session in our Fall 2012 course. 

[JEFF SUGG'S BIO]:

Jeff Sugg is a New York based artist, designer, and technical advisor. He is a co-founding member of the performance group, Accinosco, with Cynthia Hopkins and Jim Findlay and has co-designed their two critically acclaimed pieces, Accidental Nostalgia and Must Don't Whip 'Um. Other theater designs include: 33 Variations (projections: Arena Stage, La Jolla Playhouse), The Slugbearers of Kayrol Island (co-set & projections: The Vineyard Theater),¡El Conquistador! (lights: New York Theater Workshop), The Thomashefsky Project & Let Them Eat Cake/Of Thee I Sing (projections: San Francisco Symphony), Trece Días (sets & projections: San Francisco Mime Troupe) He has also worked as designer for multiple works with theater companies including: The Colllapsable Giraffe, Pig Iron Theater Company, DASS Dance, Transmission Projects. Music design: Natalie Cole (lights), and Natalie Merchant (lights).

In addition to his work as a designer, Mr. Sugg is regarded as a premiere technical consultant and system designer. Some credits include: The Wooster Group (technical artist), Laurie Anderson (video system design), Richard Foreman (video system design), Mikel Rouse (video system design), GAle GAtes et al. (effects designer/engineer), and The Baseball Music Project (video system design). Mr. Sugg has also taught Media and Technology at Swarthmore College. He has led several workshop/intensive courses in media technology at the University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign), Rude Mechanicals Theater Company, and others.

For his work on Must Don’t Whip ‘Um, Mr. Sugg received a 2007 Bessie Award and was nominated for a 2007 Hewes Design Award. He was also nominated for a 2007 Hewes Design Award for his work on ¡El Conquistador!.

For his work on The Slug Bearers of Kayrol Island, he received a 2008 Henry Hewes Award, 2008 Obie, and a 2008 Lucille Lortel Award.

A Jeff's-eye view of the stage.

[PROPOSITIONS]:

 

  1. If drama is the lens through which humanity views itself, how will we see ourselves when that vision is mediated via networked computer arrays? Will theater inevitably become mechanized? 
  2. How can or will acting, directing, scripting, blocking, audience interactivity and experience, etc., be affected by new media's intervention in the dramatic sphere?
  3. Is there an emergent theater appearing or promised, driven, by the intervention of digital tools and techniques?
  4. What does this phenomenon, the digital theater, mean for the economics of theatrical production?
  5. How is movement on stage, and the dramatic imagination, adapting to 01 conditions?

One of the shows Jeff worked on.We'll be continuing a discussion started earlier this summer when OAS Co-organizer Paul McLean visited Jeff at St. James Theater to view a tech rehearsal for Bring It On - The Musical, while Jeff was working. We'll be talking about how the computer has shaped new theater practices and hierarchies.

 

Wednesday
Aug222012

[OAS NODE #1]: More about Bat Haus & things to do in our Bushwick neighborhood

Here is the current look of Bat Haus, a co-working space and community nexus in Bushwick.[FROM THE BAT HAUS BLOG]:

Bat Haus is located at 279 Starr Street, Brooklyn NY, 11237 (Bushwick). We are right off Jefferson stop on L train, about 25 mins away from Manhattan.

Here are some of our neighbors:

  1. The famous Tortillera Mexico taco joint is right next door from Bat Haus! 
  2. Awesome local dive bar, Pearl’s Social & Billy Club (one block away),
  3. One of our favorite get-together places, The Bodega Wine Bar (one block away), 
  4. Great local food at Northeast Kingdom (one block away),
  5. Organic and natural food market, Hana Natural (one block away), 
  6. Super chill Wyckoff Starr Café (one block away), 
  7. Delicious brunch at Café Ghia (two blocks away),
  8. Ridiculous cheap but delicious food at Tina’s (ten min walk), 
  9. Great brunch, great drinks, great dance parties at Tandem Bar (five min walk),
  10. New cafe down the block, The Cobra Club (one block away).

Bat Haus is a coworking space (what is that?), co-founded by Cody Sullivan and Natalie Chan. You can find our little story here and an article with Natalie’s crazy jumping pics here

Tuesday
Aug212012

[OASN1@BH Internal Review]: Holography: Merging the Real and Virtual for the 21st Century

Eric Leiser [OAS Node 1 @Bat Haus, August 17, 2012 (Photo by Paul McLean)]

"Holography: Merging the Real and Virtual for the 21st Century"

Eric Leiser, Occupational Art School, Aug. 17

By Christopher Moylan

So much of the art that draws large crowds to museums and galleries is of the sort that demonstrates a breakthrough in the understanding of human perception. Egyptian art in its various stages, Early Renaissance painting, Impressionism, Pointillism, and Cubism, as well as early photography and film combine the intrinsic appeal of the image with a more abstract, historical interest in how the image was made and what this process says about the ways in which people experience the world.

Of course, the works that are so widely appreciated are not simply technical demonstrations or curiosities. There is something transcendent and simply perfect in Piero della Francesca’s “The Flagellation of Christ,” as there is in Seurat’s “The Bathers at Arsnieres”, Monet’s Haystacks, and so on. Every period in art history has its corresponding high points, and it could be argued that any serious work of art, in any medium, reveals something about the workings of human perception.  Nonetheless, certain changes in art practice are striking and remain so through time. The development of linear perspective in the early Renaissance represents a fundamental change in the understanding of the picture plane, and of how the eye constructs meaning out of environmental information. Anyone can see this, and anyone looking at one of Piero’s paintings can take part, intuitively and vicariously, in the pleasure of this breakthrough.

When a person who has little or no academic background in art history volunteers that Impressionism is his favorite kind of art, this is not a cliché, at least not for him or her. It’s a statement of affiliation to something powerful and continuously new; this is beautiful and interesting, and I don’t care what you say, I like it. High Modernism may be the last period in art history to be widely associated with this kind of perceptual advance. (There may be others; Clement Greenberg and Walter Gombrich can sort out what and when.) No doubt not many in the huge crowds that line up for a large scale exhibition of Picasso’s work might have some difficulty discussing the importance of duration, multiple perspective and geometric configuration in his Cubist phase, but they know something of all that and they find it fascinating.

So after Impressionism, Pointillism, Cubism, what next?

Holography, perhaps.

This may seem unlikely; holography is most often seen in science fiction movies, and even that context it’s a novelty or gimmick. Eric Leiser, speaking at Occupational Art School, had little patience with that view of the technology. A filmmaker and pioneer in holographic technology, he is developing holography as an art form and in the process investigating the metaphysical properties of light as material information. A talk which was originally planned as a demonstration and lesson in basic holographic process, along with a sample of Leiser’s holographic images, quickly turned into something spiritual and yet utterly practical.

A holographic image, he explained, is not merely a technical process, splitting a laser beam against mirrors so that the light drapes the surface of the object while another beam strikes the emulsion. It is a thing, a material form of light as information. This thingness is in some processes directly apparent. With haptic holography, for instance, the projected energy is so dense that one can touch it. For that matter, one can construct a building with haptic holography, or a bridge, a structure that can be just as useful as something made of brick or wood but with the advantage that it will vanish when the object is no longer needed, leaving no trace on the site where it stood.  Haptic or cymatic holography uses ultrasonic waves to give density, tactile resistance, and thingness to a holographic image.

All of these processes dissolve the constructs that delineate experience, impose boundaries and markers—me-you, this-that, signifier-signified—that are purely expedients of our cognitive makeup. We anthropomorphize the signified, make sense of it with the thinking, experiencing equipment we have—eyes, nerves, brain and so on. The usual separation of inert and living objects begins to dissolve in holography. The holographic image reveals that every object is constituted with energy in different configurations and this energy is interactive—dynamic. The rock doesn’t just sit there, no more than the person does. It acts, and in a sense, speaks. The hologram captures this speech within the spooky quantum physics of light waves.

In quantum physics information is reality or, as Rob Braynton puts it, “our reality is just an expression of the information encoded within the underlying fabric of quantum fields” (“Imagining the Tenth Dimension” blogspot). A great deal of research, distilled to an evocative phrase, has it that this universe is a hologram of a fifth dimension. The holographic images Eric Leiser makes in his studio offer glimpses of this quantum reality. The holograph is not an image of the subject, it is the real of the subject.

The real, in this way of thinking, is a far cry from the horrific fissure in the signifying system that it is made out to be by Lacan, Zizek and their followers. For Zizek, the thinged word is Das Ding, a monstrous something that appears in a crack in the signifying system, an impossible glimpse at noumenal reality. In this view, the signified and signifier cannot meet; we shouldn’t be able to bite into the word apple. For Leiser, the real is not threatening at all. It is fascinating, approachable and often quite beautiful. With lasers costing only a few dollars, it is also affordable; almost anybody can make one.

But, if I have it right, this is almost like saying a prayer is free, anybody can say one. There is more to it than that.

The art of holography, as Eric presented it, seemed the art of spiritual reflexivity. A way of thinking of the soul in his view, for example, is to think of a hologram making a hologram of itself. Similarly, we can think of the brain not as an organic system encased in a hard shell, but as a star system with its own pulsars and black holes, its vast array of energy transfers and informational novae where holographic interference patterns establish themselves in dimensions that it hurts the ordinary brain to consider. Everything, everywhere we look is multivalent, dynamic and endlessly possible. Our idea of energy as such need not be restricted to oil and gas and nuclear; a room is filled with endless energy, should we choose to access it—and, according to Mr. Leiser, the  time when we will do so isn’t that far off.

To return to art in its usual sense; there were pictures, lovely pictures projected on the wall of Bat Haus. One could tilt the ipod from which an image was projected and the image would morph. The possibilities for abstraction—a kind of abstraction in physics—are just beginning to be explored, as is the relation of holography to traditional media. Eric has experimented with projecting holographic images on painted canvases; the possibilities along those line are intriguing. The development of three dimensional printing opens new possibilities for the book, for sculpture and so on. The necessary condition for such possibilities to be realized, however, is that holography be situated within art practice and discourse.

Eric is remarkably well placed to do just that. A graduate of CalArts with an extensive technical background, he is the founding member of Albino Fawn Productions along with his brother, composer Jeffrey Leiser. He has exhibited widely in the U.S. and around the world. His work has appeared in major museums and art festivals. The films he and his brother have produced are widely distributed. He was about to depart for a film festival in Hiroshima at the time of his talk, and his work was on exhibit at "Hologalactic" at All Things Project at The People's Church of Greenwich Village (curated by Sam Kho and Susan Joyce of Fringe Exhibitions) He is extremely productive.

It is unlikely, however, that Eric thinks much about career, or money or even little things like dinner or sleep. He strikes me, anyway, as someone completely liberated by work. It is appropriate for him to appear in an Occupy or Occupational space because he is so liberated and so generous; I imagine that if the fellow selling him a hot dog or cup of coffee asked about holograms that Eric would sketch it out for him, teach the basics of holographic technique on the spot and set him up with the url addresses of sites where he could pursue this further. One can quarrel with all of the metaphysical ideas Eric generates, if one choses, but the good news remains. He, and lots of the people, are at work outside the capitalist system of mega-profit and celebrity self-aggrandizement, busy transforming not only our understanding of perceptual systems in art, but our understanding of the human. The technology for unlimited energy supply may be a ways off, but the vision of separating energy from exploitation and violence is pertinent and necessary right now.  Eric’s holistic view of the production and  hermeneutics of art are as far removed from current discourse in the art world as can be. 

I am beginning to think that the art world of the oligarchic collectors and fashionistas is tilting on a precipice of crazy economic conditions and general cultural indifference. Be that as it may, the kinds of technical, spiritual and artistic explorations Eric Leiser is pioneering matter now and no doubt will matter increasingly as time goes by; the crowds will line up sooner or later.

Tuesday
Aug212012

This Week [w1] at Occupational Art School

Jeff Sugg at OASN1@Bat Haus on Wednesday, August 22, from 7-9pm. FREE. Click on the image to visit Jeff's website.

OAS seminars commence on Wednesday, August 22nd, from 7-9pm. Through the end of October, we will present a series of fun and compelling expositions that explore perception in time, of space, for being. Classes will be held on Wednesdays and Fridays, from 7-9pm. Additionally, OAS Node 1 will host two or three events per month, featuring performance and exhibition, the types of programming that bring the weekly courses to a visceral point of experience.

AWS Fabrication at OASN1@Bat Haus on Friday, August 24, from 7-9pm. Click on image to visit AWS Fabrication Tumblr.[OASN1@Bat Haus Gift Program]:

 

  • FIRST CLASS IS FREE!
  • Each student will be offered pay plans and options.
  • Bat Haus members will receive 20% discounts for classes.
  • Each class will be retailed at a $10 value.
  • Package plans will be offered at a 20% discount.
  • The undiscounted retail value of attending all classes (through the end of October) is $168.
  • So, a free pass/full OAS package to attend all classes will be $135 and will allow the student to attend all OAS events for free, as an added bonus!
  • Plus, any OAS student with a free pass & all Bat Haus members will receive a 20% discount on any item sold in any of our exhibits and performances! Wowsa! 
  • And, to make it an even sweeter deal, we will post a list of barter items (using a variation of the OurGoods system of Have/Needs, and the system we tested for Ingrid Burrington's solo expo at SO@Hyperallergic) that student can exchange in lieu of cash!*

*Events will give us a chance to test other exchange models, including the shareware approach. Events pricing will vary, ranging from $5-10 or $20 retail value.

 

DisciplineAriel at OASN1@Bat Haus, Saturday, August 25, 7-9PM. Click image to visit the DisciplineAriel Tumblr.

[OASN1@Bat Haus Course Description][BETA/Draft 2.0]

We have given ourselves permissions to establish a neo-pedagogy. The protocols are emergent, inspired by Novads, rooted in the pre-figuration praxis of the Anarchives, in the spirit of Revolutionary Games. Our modus operandi is dimensional. The Occupational Art School Node 1 is an iteration of Vo-Tech. We are committed to discovering our calling(s), our vocation(s), and willing to delve into technology, as such, to implement vision now. OASN1 is residential and commercial, just like Starr Street, where our host is located in Bushwick. We are zoned as hybrid. The discovery of the formula for our educational and artistic discipline is a direct action as alchemy, an accident, like the invention of Holography. Our goal is to move from occupation to Stage 1 Civilization. OAS assumes sufficient power in the present, assumes we can simply access all we need in the existence in which we are currently situated. Our art is multidisciplinary. It is convergent and multivalent. The space we inhabit is in flux, and we are adapting to conditions as they are and as they evolve or progress. The world is our studio. The OAS student body is not pre-defined. It is self-selected, a phenomenon of free radicalism. The approach we encourage among you is scientific, of curiosity, of wonder. Illumination is a function of collective movement, in our case, a systematic swarming that generates a glow, a flow. Through this creation-dance in the commons, we find ourselves, each one of us, in possession of a gift and, for want of a better word, a "SOUL." In this immaterial nature, we work with materials, tangible, Real. Thus, Occupational Art School is practical. It is Boolean. It is AND/OR and/or not or NOT. We are, in short, dimensional. 

Is this enough? OAS suggests that we will find out, in Time. The Occupational Art School's luminous faculty and staff, all artists and practitioners, themselves, will engage in transmissions with the student body and with the world beyond our classroom walls, utilizing virtual media and actual (p2p, f2f), documented vocalic, aural interpretive exchange, the feedback loop,[+] as our universal transportation-vehicles. It is a question of temporary bands and bandwidth. OAS views this all-directional sensory scenario as a philosophic opportunity, during residency, to test the dynamics of the Media Equation and the Hermeneutic Circle (or spiral). FYI: Teachers are invited to switch and become students, from one class to the next, for instance, either online or in real life (IRL). Our methodology is DIY, together. Our suspicion, based on observation, is that our best students have already settled the argument once and for all, through [r]evolutionary means.

MTS: Talk about Hyperreal! [...]

 

 

[CONTACT]: artforhumans [at] gmail [dot] com

Photo by Paul McLean

Sunday
Aug192012

Eric Leiser [OASN1@BH 9/17/2012]

Image by Paul McLean

Saturday
Aug182012

#A18: Novadic Transmission [Bold Jez]

Photo by Paul Talbot[From Jez]:

Fragments of a thought as it passed thru my brain:

...each Novad is an irreducible radicand under consideration and considered at its root a monad-like or atomic metaphysical entity.  If we drive for something deeper, we find more of the same: the identity-being. 

...the Novad root is not true of all avenues, or at least does not seem to be, for in the course of life one can ride ferries to new ideas, pass thru secret passageways between thought, and feel hopelessly lost in endless mazes.  The Novad has within itself an unidentifiable root, like an imaginary number, attached or embedded to make it a less-than-perfected ideal.

Wednesday
Aug152012

Flyers for OAS Launch [Eric Leiser, "Art Holography..."] @Bat Haus

[FREE DOWNLOADS]

Wednesday
Aug152012

QR Code for Facebook Event for OAS Node #1 @BH Launch with Eric Leiser

Wednesday
Aug152012

OAS Node #1 @BAT HAUS: 8/17 Friday - Launch day, "Art Holography: Exploring New DimeNsionality" with Eric Leiser, 6-9 PM

Launch of Occupational Art School Node #1

Occupy with Art, Art for Humans and Bat Haus are pleased to present an evening with multimedia artist Eric Leiser. Eric's latest show "Hologalactic" at All Things Project at The People's Church of Greenwich Village was curated by Sam Kho and Susan Joyce (Fringe Exhibitions) and featured new holograms, sculptures, moving images and paintings. Next week the artist will be traveling to Japan to attend a screening of his work at the Hiroshima International Animation Film Festival.

Film still by Eric Leiser
Evening program:
  • 6PM: Introduction to OAS Node #1 at Bat Haus, by co-organizer Paul McLean
  • 7PM: Presentation by Eric Leiser: "Holography: Merging the Real and Virtual for the 21st Century"
  • 8PM: Q&A + Mixer

Click to read more ...

Friday
Aug102012

OAS Node #1: #TITMOTA Program 1 [August 9]

Bold Jez & anarchivists during the presentation "Recording Future History" at OAS Node #1 pre-launch #TITMOTA at BAT HAUS[LINK to photoset on the Bat Haus Tumblr]

Last night the Occupational Art School celebrated the Anarchives and their inventor Bold Jez, as the ghost of Peter Cooper floated monumental over our shoulders, invisible at times in the light. Special guests DAF encouraged rubbings and created a typological street intervention. We shared cookies, Etherpad, avocados, reflections on pre-9/17 Arts & Culture stunts, chronicles of Magic Mountain, QR Codes, artifacts of occupation [+]. An electrified hula dancer performed, and a poet. Bushwick passed by, asked questions, and we tried to provide true answers. The event was free.

Wednesday
Aug082012

OAS: #TITMOTA e-flyer

Wednesday
Aug082012

OAS Imaginary Movie: #TITMOTA 1 & 2

BY PAUL McLEAN

The Occupational Art School commences its program auspiciously with "Time in the Mind of the Anarchive," a conversation-starter in two [2X∞] parts, #TITMOTA 1+2. The opening festivities slated for Thursday, August 9 at 7PM at Bat Haus in Bushwick include a presentation by Bold Jez, a/k/a Jez Bold, a/k/a Jeremy, a/k/a Jez3PREZ, etc., entitled "Recording Future History: Activist archivism in Occupy Wall Street." The actuality of our expo is N+1-oriented, so come prepared. It's a hot summer in Brooklyn, and 11 months after the first interventions in and around Wall Street popped up, the promise of occupation is a multi-faceted proposition, if not an outright seduction, to be fulfilled. #TITMOTA is therefore a beginning that looks behind us, over our shoulders. The movement, if that what it is and was, or will be, has never been subject to the embedded command of prediction. Although OWS has exclaimed its advocacy for the 99%, no 99% has embraced it. In America, at least, popular change is a spectator sport. For the vast silent masses of Americans, quasi-citizens, Occupy could have as well been the Olympics. OWS has been much more real for the 1%, who are so close to complete victory, their sphincters clang shut at the first sign of popular dissent.

Click to read more ...

Sunday
Aug052012

[OAS NODE #1]: #TITMOTA Flyers

Click the image for the free download (8.5" x 11" 300dpi 14.4mb)

Click the image for free download (8.5" x 11" 300dpi 8.6mb).

Sunday
Jul292012

Novadic Song in 7+ Parts

Dearly beloved,

Please find attached this novadic song for voice, guitar, subway train, whistle, siren, drunk girls, wind, silence, etc. Free to download here; encouraged to play in any order:

https://www.evernote.com/shard/s223//sh/b15eee1a-521b-4b6c-9490-fd70f4befaf8/08774e0860b39ae6fa9e67adc42f13a8

This was recorded from 2:30-3:40am on a pocket-sized hotness while finding my way from a shabbat dinner in Queens to a hot couch in Harlem, using a borrowed guitar, stealing melodies from singers I love (e.g. Calamity & the Owl) and words from the subway walls (do not pull the emergency cord, Emergency Workers...).

Excerpted Lyrics:
Wacky guitar...wacky guitar...oh no...oh no ooOOooOOooooo...and I wonder why the song is outside...We've got nothing left to do but play music on an empty subway platform...and o wonder why, the rails are electrified, why the floors all have their lights on (2x)...inside our minds, inside the heart, inside the hope of being One...and don't you wonder why the stars all healed inside, its not like were the last ones to consider the rain upon the sun...A Pyramid of muskets; a Teepee of guns...And don't you wonder why the lights are left on all night long...[whistles like clock chimes finding their own time]...and I wonder why, and I wonder why, and I wonder why, this song is outside. Ohhhhhhh ohhhh ooOOOooooooOOoo...

[Animation by Paul McLean, generated by Zen circles and compressed, digitized and/or dimensional simulations thereof... for OAS Node #1]

[PLEASE NOTE]:

Occupy with Art, Bat Haus and the Occupational Art School are pleased to announce that Jeremy Bold will be kicking off our Bushwick program at OAS Node #1 in August (details TBA soon).

Sunday
Jul222012

OAS Node #1 [Prospectus][BETA]

Updated on Tuesday, July 24, 2012 at 01:34PM by Registered Commenteradmin

[SUMMARY]:

The Occupational Art School proposes to conduct a three-month long residency at Bat Haus in Bushwick. The programming will consist of workshops, screening series, a reading group, exhibits and other arts, cultural and educational exchanges. What follows is a suggested outline of the residency, created with the idea that we can adapt it to better suit the space, to meet client needs and interests, and to accommodate artists and instructors who approach us with interest in participating in OAS@Bat Haus. 

 

Click to read more ...

Saturday
Jul142012

[OAS Node #1 [July 13]

Technical

[Session 5]

Today we visited the St. James Theater and a tech rehearsal for the "Bring It On - The Musical," at the invitation of designer Jeff Sugg.

[CONSIDERATIONS, OBSERVATIONS + CONJECTURES]

  • OWS has been characterized as an art medium, and analyzed relative to performance, performance art, relational art and other modalities of staged expression or exchange. Precursors to the Occupation like Zefrey Throwell's naked staged intervention on Wall Street ("Ocularpation: Wall Street") expand the set of considerations, as do the actions of the original Arts & Culture group/gamers and the Aaron Burr Society, suggesting that there is something to it. Many kinds and instances of performance, often involving professional performers, were and continue to be integrated into Occupational activities, such as "The Tax Dodgers," the Brecht performers and so on. One of the most compelling collective circle-discussions hosted by Hrag Vartanian during the Spatial Occupation @Hyperallergic centered on these phenomena. Where does performance (as situated in entertainment or artifice) stop and Occupation-as-performance begin and/or end? Does the conflation of performance and occupation diminish the latter and trivialize it, by compressing the redress of grievances into a modality of coded narrative for desire-satisfaction? Etc. Certainly this is fertile territory for analysis with tactical or strategic implications. [David Graeber has written on this subject relative to protest, police, puppets and media propaganda, which we also attempted to address in SO@H residency reading group. Graeber's text(s) indicated the anarchist's jaundiced and limited vision for art in conjunction with direct action, minimizing art into a protest utility functionary, and redefining it to the extent that art is a fungible creativity applicable to all activities human, an absurdist conjecture ultimately. Is falling down art (if an art does it)? And, if everyone is an artist, is all falling down artistic? 
  • The observation of the "Bring It On" tech rehearsal was profound for this viewer, who has been away from professional theater for the most part for the past decade, with some notable exceptions (Circle X at Ford Theater in LA, and other theatrical entertainments covered elsewhere). The opportunity to assess the evolving role of electronics in the medium led to the formation of some important seams of conjecture, mainly pertaining to the reformation of hierarchies in production, and the staged spaces in which artifacts from old, even ancient, models of dramatic transmission are being fundamentally redesigned, reoriented or constituted as ana-spaces for performance, due to the intervention of computer-sited processes in play-making and/or 4d presentation. Jeff and I briefly discussed these "advances" and related effects, and committed enthusiastically to further explore their significance. The power of theater in revolutionary change cannot be underestimated. These developments potentially point toward new theatrical practice that obviates the insipid corporatized "creative" economic content that passes often for top-shelf theater, now. Like similar spectacle-ism in sports, music, art, political races, war coverage, etc., the need for dimensional veracity for collective sharing of imaginary-real experience as vision is vital in reclaiming a democratic commons for us all. This is a key in expelling propaganda in all its insidious iterations from the field of dimensional perception. 

[Session 6]

Art Gatherings, Community, Exchange


 

  • SLAG Gallery, Bushwick
  • Opening for Claudia Chaseling, "Infiltration"

 

This communique is a stub. The subject is the continuing progressive evolution of Bushwick, Brooklyn as a locus for an international art community and market, and much, much more. [Full disclosure: The author is represented by SLAG] OAS Node #1 will host Bushwick-focused study and celebration of the dimensional "art scene" materializing in the neighborhood, which is our neighborhood. Bushwick's emergence is THE art story of the moment, now. Chronicling its "happening" is vital, and must not be left to the 1% or corporate media. Each OAS Node will be encouraged to analyze and document the art topology(-ies) it inhabits. The accumulation of data drawn from this analysis and documentation we hope will eventually yield a database that in its totality will paint a very different picture than the one(s) that exists now about art, artists and especially art-/artists-in-community. 

Friday
Jul132012

OAS Node #1 [July 12]

Alex Carvalho's birthday/transmigration party at Liberty Square (Photo by Katherine Ramos)

[FOCUS ON SPATIAL ISSUES]

[Session 3]

Location Search

  • SITE: Bat Haus (279 Starr St., Bushwick)

I visited Bat Haus and spoke to Cody Sullivan about locating OAS sessions at their brand-spanking new multi-use member-model facility (see website). Updates to follow. The Bat Haus Tumblr has lots of process photos that trace the space build-out and furnishing.  

[Session 4]

Alex's "party" at Liberty Square: a complex rupture of backwards & onwards situated as a celebration of birth, an intervention, a bon voyage convergence of gamers, novads, salonists, and Occupiers, disguising a re-occupation. 

As is typical of AC's Way, the phenomenon of his appearance was multi-faceted. For OAS purposes, the sub-action involved the continuing expansion of our subtle and dimensional trans-course. Alex introduced me to DAF co-organizers Andrea Haenngi and Robert Neuwirth. We triangulated to discuss the DAF presenting or workshopping an OAS session. Both Andrea and Robert could lead sessions rooted in their respective "solo" or trade practices. I spoke with Robert at some length both about his squatter studies and his work on alternate economies, which of course is of great interest to OAS. 

OWS painter and "99% Tax Dodger" James Rose was on hand, and we quickly formed an idea for an OAS session for him, too. He has a painter-friend in Bushwick, whom he thought would be fine studio-hosting a figure drawing class led by James in the near future. When the logistics are sorted updates/calendar will be passed along to you, dear OASer. 

Jez was also in attendance, and we briefly followed up on yesterday's session/debriefing. Finally, Alex passed along a flyer/handbill for the New World Fair, which is happening 7/21 in Flushing, Queens.

[NOTES]:  

The OAS structure is refining itself, now in all directions. It occurred to me that one important influence for the program would be Mr. Rogers. 

Wednesday
Jul112012

Occupational Art School Node #1 

JULY 11, 2012

[INTRODUCTION]:

Today we will begin both a conversion and/or "point of origin" phase of OwA/OAS. This post will be added to for the next several days (once installed in this illustrated text, click "READ MORE" link to stay up-to-date on changes, as a bug in Squarespace causes edits to not appear in truncated main page blog posts), to reflect, summarize or represent the organizational trends and features our node has been developing over the past several months, leading to our OAS Node #1 launch. Many exchanges of many types have been undertaken in or through both actual and virtual environments to shape our platform, including conversations, exhibits, performances, data transmissions, shared archives or links. Our process has been informed by research, experience and theoretical positions. Input has come from many sources. The methodology has been "open disciplinary." Several texts have been offered as precursors [See "Soul of Occupy" and "Enough" series, as well as essays for OwA projects "Wall Street to Main Street," "Low Lives: Occupy!" and "CO-OP/Occuburbs"]. The Spatial Occupation @Hyperallergic residency was extremely helpful at a critical time in facilitating key emergent connections among some players in or of our OAS Node #1. Some explanation of how our node has formed will inevitably occur as we move forward, since the mode of the node will consist in part of a (transparent, apparent) practicum. OAS is emerging from OWS and OwA, and our relationship to the movement is fairly complex. As we begin, OAS is situated as an iteration and rejection of OWS arts & culture trajectories, simultaneously. We hope to offer some dimensional solutions to perceived or perceptual problems that OWS A&C exposed, derived of mainly ideological frames [IMHO-pjm] that may or may not, or should or should not apply to Occupational Art as we commence to conceive and manifest it. There are many, and multi-directional, oppositions to our undertaking. Fortunately and/or unfortunately, art and artists, we can see, prove that difficult creative environments are not always effective in crushing free expression. 

 TODAY'S SESSIONS

Session 1

 

Short description: Artist-directed guided tour of "Hologalactic," followed by discussion and pizza at John's of Bleecker Street with Eric and Samuel. The talk covered a range of topics, including Eric's doing an OAS workshop on holography, and Samuel doing an essay and presentation on the subject of the art and the spiritual, as reflected in the programming at All Things Project, plus an exploration of the history of the Neighborhood Church. 

Session Two 

An OAS planning session with Jeremy Bold [original OWS Arts & Culture, Revolutionary Games, Novads, etc.]

Topics included:

 

  • Jez's forming OAS Node 0
  • A networked performance of his moving images later this month
  • 4D digital imaging and painting
  • Potential affiliations with other "schools" emerging from OWS, such as Freedom University
  • Visionary praxis
  • Usage of online tools for creating a content network 
  • The Holodeck Prototype
  • Exhibit opportunities in conjunction with "Time Is the Only Object" at SLAG
  • Exploration of new street art in Bushwick
  • Economic models, alternatives

 

[Image by Jez Bold]

[NOTES]:

Two weeks ago, at the end of June, I sent this out to a short list of friends/collaborators/occupiers to invite their participation in an informal email/phone-enabled "vision/mission" session. Here is the text: 

Hey all,
this is my starter transmission for the rebooting of Occupy with Art, after we celebrated our nine-month birthday...

it's a kind of vision statement

I would like to convert OwA and our website into a node for the Occupational Art School. It's my idea that I will start to form "classes" here in Bushwick in July. I see the conversion to be 
  • a grassroots artist organizing tool 
  • a means by which OwA can become sustainable
  • a way for us to collectively and individually develop means to support our work/networks 
  • the establishment of a production collective for generating shows, "games," actions/interventions, documents, archives, etc
  • an inside>outside interface for revolutionary, democratic and dimensional art
  • a means by which we can promote ideals and principles for art/artists/artistic purpose that we can believe in
  • more.
At this point we have an extensive set of potential participants. we have learned that people (including ourselves) have varying degrees of ability for participating... this project will provide a way for us to mobilize people at their own levels; be a source of info on what those are; and produce clear results (art & art events, etc) that are attractive

I would suggest we platform OAS on 
  • spirit-mechanics
  • dimensional vision (4d)
  • compassion and care for each other
  • respect 
  • kindness
  • fierce determination
  • endurance
It seems obvious that the nature [topography/culture/people] of this project to begin with will be international and local.

The operational start-concept is that each of us is a lead-artist of our own collectives. As a meta-collective, we will seek ways to provide support for each other in our various endeavors; in a slight adjustment of mission, OwA will serve as facilitator for our network'd & solo productions; document our progress; share our experiments and ideas; invite others to join; be a clearinghouse for technique and theory.

The e(n)ducation or e(n+1)ducational structure will encourage mentoring, mediums skill or craft, use of all available technologies, dedication to good assessment of progress and potential "success" on the basis of helping any "student"|"teacher" 
  • to find her or his "best" artistic gift
  • making space where that person can apply the gift successfully
  • account for both history & creation (that one needs a bit of clarification; basically respect for one's particular background/vision/skills/craft/traditions > support for invention/genius 
  • rational progressive development attaching to more responsibilities through the process (sound expectations)
I'm going to stop there - just to open it up to feedback... In a fairly short period of time I would like to open this up to a bigger set of perspectives and contributions. 

I personally have almost no interest in using any GA processes in this effort, based on my experience over the past 9 months with them. Over the past 30 years I've worked out very effective systems for generating highest quality art outcomes. I think all of you can say the same, relative to your own stuff. I say that based on watching you do what you do. 

Much respect  
The reach-out garnered a couple dozen replies, some of which were profound. Jez Bold's in particular - outlining his ideas for OAS Node #0, pointed the discussion in radical directions in terms of media and imagination, relative to time and experience. Chris Moylan and James Andrews provided a degree of pragmatism that afforded our brainstorming with a good foundation of realism, addressing not only organizational and economic concerns, but also useful references to other successful and sustainable models already operating in the domain. 
The importance of the archive to our undertaking was in short order reinforced by JB:
I believe that beginning with specially designated activities (for example, the philosophical/political/literary discussion sessions that Richard and I have experience designing and hosting) we could scale up the activities of these archival spaces into a network that I would be proud to call the Anarchives: an exploratory archive that any person of any ability is invited to participate in, consisting of a networked collection of people and artifacts that are free to interact with each other.  This node would be a community archive for anyone in the area who wants to contribute to documenting the life, activities, thoughts and art of people in the local area.  And it would be linked to the network of nodes through the Occupy With Art/Occupational Art School website, the Occupy Map, and other metadata resources that can help document and connect each node (person, space, activity).
As was the question of siting the program. The consensus seemed to point to a virtual/actual configuration or array. I pointed out that we already had online components in place. Both the OwA nexus site and the Occupational Art School Tumblr established for the Co-Lab (Austin) project were pegged to locate some of the essential activity getting started. 
Chris and others suggested disciplines and media (like the graphic novel medium) that had been under-supported by Occupy in reaching demographics vital to the expansion of the movement going forward. Big Ideas like JB/Richard's "Sensatorium" and "Holodeck Prototype" seemed ideally suited to collaborative or collective production. Naturally, a number of voices brought up the question of funding for these projects and initiatives. At this early stage, those concerns were set aside, although the alt.economy for art and artists being developed through the CO-OP project was mentioned. 
Several successful types of alt-schools are now emerging as viable and promising in the domain. James pointed to Trade School, but the spectrum of nodal or franchise or subscription education architectures is broadening at an amazing pace. Starting with say, Mark Allen's immensely successful Machine Project as a point of reference, we can also look to programs such as 3rd Ward, Intercourse, the OWS Summer Disobedience School, Freedom University and many others that are demonstrating that many approaches are possible for serving a wide range of "students" and "teachers" who are finding it more and more difficult or untenable to commit to the establishment academic tracks, for a variety of reasons, from the ideological to the economic. 
Alex and others who provided exemplar inputs, like Shane Kennedy and Ambrose Curry and the Revolutionary Gamers in general, showed that liberated actions and activities, barely recognizable as "teaching," might function as the "best practices" for our school design. The DisciplineAriel project and others, like Mark Skwarek's Augmented Reality combines, suggest that modular production enabled by network tech/electronics offers those tracking collaborations or participating as open-invite new-users in collective projects a means of learning that's low-impact, and fun/easy. 
Repeatedly, conversations touched on the principles of openness and mobility, but also on exciting dynamics with respect to immediate reach among potential collaborators, teachers, students and content developers of all creative flavors. Social media tools plus additive (n+1) tools like WIKI, CMS, fast dispersion -servs like REDDIT, elegant whiteboards like Pinterest, and other share-utilities offer a rich platform of options for us to sample, explore and apply. 
CM raised questions about our attenuation to OWS. Currently, given the nebulous but still potent if mysteriously individuated (if not in some aspects invisible) mass of Occupy, we have to suspend the definition of our relation with the movement, not because that is desirable, but because it is determined by the dynamics of the movement itself. Issues of identity and our interface with media (and potential participants/users) therefore for now remains in flux. For our BETA phase, this may serve to our advantage, by not limiting our developmental parameters. For those of us who were more or less integrated into OWS over the past 9 months, detachment from certain programmatic constraints feels refreshing, if bittersweetly so. 
To wrap up this section of the notes, let's look at JB's vision for Node 0:

I'm so glad this pluralogue is going on. Maybe we could plan a meeting when I can plan a Skype/in-person in where we can come together on some of these ideas.

I don't think I can help answer the question of how to locate OAS, except perhaps to say that I would it to operate on a decentralized basis, but one in which we maintain some conections digitally, and some network of names. (Does the network of networks itself need a name? I dunno. Maybe just call it The World...hahah). I assume we'll be operating kind of using our own expenses, tho it might be a nice model to practice tracking our use of funds publicly, which will be especially necessary if we want to get grants.

How do krystal-images relate to Occupy? The following is an excerpt from a longer piece that I hope should succeed in bridging the K-scope Xp-eriments to Occupy more generally:

...I want to live in the upper levels of human dimensions! Crystals awoke my eyes to unseen possibilities, new-found opportunities, beautiful visions of alternate realities. How can we understand Liberty Plaza without it?

This place was a giant crystal monad through which thousands of visions of society were compacted. And over 2 months, this process produced a group of people so dense and massive, that they turned the world upside down. What was impossible was suddenly very very real! And the people who looked thru that K(aleidoscope)-scope had their entire worlds un-adjusted.

It was tough, awkward at times, but we all learned a lot thru this experience. And the only way it will live on is if we tell this story. And even the stories are starting to revolve around the same points now. Why else would we still be interested in talking to each other about it? It's like we discovered that we all had a secret affinity for something that we didn't really know was possible before...

 


Tuesday
Jul032012

Monday
Apr022012

Occupational Art School at Co-Lab [Austin, TX], #a7-14

[Click the image for info.]

OwA co-organizer Paul McLean travels to Austin for a week of occupational art & BBQ. The expo Tumblr is HERE.

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