A new exhibition curated by William Staples brings together visual art works in two and three dimensions to reflect on how those two formal approaches engage the viewer. The properties that define each medium and the demands they make are distinct, whether flat or in the round. In the case of painting or other two-dimensional work, the beholder stands in front of the surface, encountering the composition vis à vis their position before a solid vertical plane. By contrast, three-dimensional art works occupy the same space as the viewer, who must circle the object to consider its various angles and surfaces. Ultimately, both formats are unified by their visual generosity toward a thoughtful viewer.
Comdy Central Pretends and BHQFU (The Bruce High Quality Foundation University) present:
an evening of experimental comedy inspired by Bloch
Tragedy and Healing in Nantucky
Nantucky is a small, quiet town. It’s the kind of place where everybody greets their neighbors, and no one locks their doors. But, it was recently discovered that Nantucky is home to the worst, most deranged and truly evil criminal in history. While the residents of Nantucky will never forget the hundreds of lives that were taken and destroyed by this monster, the town is ready to move forward from this tragedy. It’s time to let the healing begin.
Lectures: Presentations: Workshops: Experiments: Studies: Concerts: Exchanges:
Under the guidance of Daniel Neumann, CT-SWaM founder and accomplished sound engineer, this 3 day workshop is catered to sound artists, noise producers, composers of electronic and electro-acoustic music, as well as experimental musicians and sound designers, interested in deepening their practice and exploring spatialization as a creative element.
The workshop will give a historical overview on the subject with some technical background and explored aesthetics and techniques for spatialization. One objective is to practice listening as a phenomenological activity: the listener immersed in inner spaces / distance and continuity / sound as intersubjective space.
For more information on attending the workshop click here.
The workshop itself is now closed to the public but participants and guest performers will present work at Knockdown Center on the following days:
Sat, Nov 14
4p-6p: performances by participants
6p-8p: Pedro Lopes (Berlin), lecture and performance
Sun, Nov 15
2p-6p: performances by participants
Tue, Nov 17, $7 suggested donation
Kamron Saniee
Michael Hammond
Gus Callahan
Matthew Gantt
&
Gabe Raines
7pm Gabe Raines will present “Sun Castle – Room of a Thousand Doors – Door Two”. His sound project describes various spaces inside an imaginary castle. The spaces can be together into a functional audio map of the cavernous circular room.
8:30pm Jenn Grossman: multi-channel pieces
9pm Woody Sullender’s “Variations on Furniture Music” is a series of multi-channel electronic music performances utilizing arrangements of modular cardboard forms outfitted with audio transducers. His work encompass a variety of media including music, sculpture, performance, theater, installation, architecture, origami, and even sonic weaponry. Among other activities, he is founding co-editor (will Bill Dietz) of the sonic arts publication Ear | Wave | Event (earwaveevent.org).
All performances are open to the public.
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Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/ctswam
Free and open to the public! Come in costume.
Photo portrait booth!
Trick or Treating!!
Fun sensory games:
TOUCH: guts, brain, eyeballs, and more!
HEAR: Play our spooky Theremin!
TASTE: Bob for an apple, and have it candied… in blood!
SEE: Hand-print spider craft project
3:30-4:30pm Free shuttle to Mt. Olivet Cemetary gates: the starting point of the Maspeth Lions Club Halloween Ragamuffin Parade
Exhibitions also on view 2-6pm:
Maybe I’m Amazed
Things with Claws
Things with claws don’t just scratch us but get deep inside of us. They cling to our bodies and we walk around simultaneously burdened and accompanied by them, never alone, always with this thing attached to us. J McDonald presents some of these things as Part II of the A Way From Home project.
As part of Quebec Digital, New York (October 22 – 25), Elektra and FuturePerfect co-present two audiovisual masters from Montreal — Herman Kolgen and Nicolas Bernier. Kolgen performs his acclaimed Dust, an audiovisual masterpiece inspired by Man Ray’s photograph “Elevage de Poussiere.” Concerned with giving form to what the eye cannot capture, Kolgen creates a spectacular world from mere dust particles, revealing their fibrous networks, deep structures and hypnotic complexities. At the threshold between the invisible and the visible, Dust becomes intoxicating and the video surface a veritable accumulation of x-rays. Simultaneously emotional and conceptual, audiences will never see or hear dust again in the same way.
Nicolas Bernier’s Frequencies (synthetic variations) is a part of an ongoing process that draws upon basic generative systems. Performed in real-time, this is Bernier’s first laptop performance, a dialogue between sound, light and material. Frequencies consists of pre-written sequences of synthetic sounds with light synchronized within small acrylic structures; a digital work visually translated into physical elements. With incredible precision and minimal means, Bernier creates a mesmerizing work where audiences can either hear the light or see the sound.
Click here for more info.
BLOCH PARTY with Packet Biweekly
and a giant Swiss log
at Onderdonk House
18-20 Flushing Ave, Queens, NY 11385
October 17, open house beginning 1pm,
performances and magazine launch 4-6pm
What does a 100-year old Swiss log on a journey around the world have to do with New York City’s oldest Dutch farmhouse? Come find out on Saturday, October 17! Onderdonk House hosts Bloch for an afternoon of family-friendly activities, with tours of the historic 18th century house. An afternoon of refreshments, readings, and musical performance marks the launch of Packet Biweekly’s special log edition. A campfire on the house grounds at sunset will close the evening.
Mauve Bird with Yellow Teeth Red Feathers Green Feet and a Rose Belly, PART BLUE is a performance and immersive psychological landscape by Tamar Ettun and her performance group The Moving Company. Using dance, sound, vast colors, and everyday object assemblages, Ettun seeks to locate a bodily impulse for empathy. This marks the first part of a performance tetralogy, each associated with colors and seasons (Blue/Winter, Red/Spring, Yellow/Summer, Orange/Fall). A new installment will premiere each year until the completion of the project in 2018.
PART BLUE starts as a still formal sculpture, in which the movers are bound to one another as an apparatus made of humans and objects. The elements lean against one another, so the connections among objects and humans are necessary but tenuous; if anyone were to let go, the machine would collapse on itself entirely. The performers begin to mirror each other’s movements, eventually leaving their places in the system. Each one develops her own unique set of repetitive movements emanating from her object. This piece confronts our own mechanized psychological defenses with accumulated gestures. Through contradiction and complement in stillness and movement, viewers are invited to enter the moving installation, while the various scenes and the performers/movers mirror each other in search of primal empathy.
This performance follows Tamar Ettun’s solo exhibition at Fridman Gallery in NYC, featuring sculptural and video portions of this project.
The Moving Company performers: Maia Karo, Laura Bernstein , Sabrina Shapiro , Rebecca Pristoop , Tina Wang , Mor Mendel, Tamar Ettun. Costume design by Ella Dagan
Knockdown Center is pleased to present Surface Matters, an exhibition of recent work by Brett Day Windham, Carolyn Salas, Daria Irincheeva, Katie Bell, and Leah Dixon, curated by Holly Shen and Samantha Katz. Each artist employs the use of common construction and building materials, as well as salvaged or found objects to create works that address sculptural issues related to perception and presence of the object, and the tactile and spatial elements of its physical form. The works are linked through their exploration of familiar materials, which have been deconstructed through repetitive motions or tasks and reconfigured to appear transformed. At the same time, this undoing and redoing exposes a disconnect between visual apprehension and the physical reality of object surfaces that often mimic more refined materials. Situated within the industrial architecture of the Knockdown Center – a sprawling converted factory space composed of brick, steel and massive timber beams – the works on view here address their environment, underscoring the viewer’s shifting perception of the texture, shape, weight, and volume of each object.
Katie Bell collects and disassembles a range of raw building materials, recombining them into painterly compositions. Structural elements typically hidden from plain sight, such as plaster, expanding foam filling, and wood planks are piled and stacked at precarious angles, reversing their utility as functional supports. Surfaces like linoleum, ceiling tiles, and wood veneers are gouged and torn, exposing what lies beneath these facades.
Carolyn Salas also manipulates industrial processes and materials to explore the potential conflict between surface and form. Cutout No. 2, from the artist’s recent series’ of free-standing planar sculptures, is a flattened wall or divide, which has been rendered obsolete by its large, negative ‘cut-out’ space. The structure betrays its heavy, dense form by appearing two dimensional and lightweight.
Working with basic building materials like brick, wood, paint samples, cement, and construction paper, Daria Irincheeva’s work addresses cycles of development and destruction inherent within complex systems. Her sculptures are representations of the rhythm of building, collapse, and repair. In Morning Composition #072, wooden rods poised like drum sticks lean on bubble wrap on the floor below a gridded array of paint samples mounted to canvas. The muted pastel swatches can be reshuffled endlessly, like the continuous repairs of a fixer-upper home. This delicate gradient rests for the moment in this careful design yet retains a provisional quality of latent transformation.
Leah Dixon’s work is the result of what she describes as gestures of aggression and play upon her materials, which include wood, leather, rubber, and ready-made objects like buckets and baskets. Reminiscent of athletic or playground equipment and the repetitive movements conjured by their implied use, these constructs point to the body as a site to be developed or improved upon.
Brett Day Windham accumulates the detritus of urban environments through habitual walks, taking predetermined routes and collecting items from each passage, such as discarded dime bags, broken earbuds, mussel shells, feathers, floor sweepings, recycled magazines. Paris Flanerie (2015), a large wall-hanging tapestry, is comprised of objects collected in Paris over the course of two months and arranged by color. A detailed map depicting each of the artists’ daily walks accompanies the work, with a color-code for Paris’ 20 arrondissements corresponding to the color groups of these found objects.
Windham’s practice of using cast off materials for continual construction—in this case a kind of oblique storytelling and mapping—is echoed in the approaches of Dixon, Irincheeva, Salas, and Bell, whose work comments on the dynamics of urban fabrication, where new elements are constantly being circulated, erected, and demolished.
Maybe I’m Amazed is an exhibition at Knockdown Center, curated by Sorry Archive. The groundwork for the design comes from Batty Langley’s 1724 writings in Newgate Prison, which remained unrealized until today. Langley, a once well-respected designer of elaborate gardens, fell out of favor after he became involved with freemasonry and esoteric speculations. Hs his predictive theories for sustaining plant life heightened to fixation, his ambitions for unearthly terrain led to experimentations with new soil materials and magnetic drainage; manipulating light spectra, and the gravitational effects of various planetary systems. Although he died broke, Langley’s books were enormously influential for George Washington’s Mount Vernon and other plantations in Britain’s American colonies. Thanks to Spangler’s Candy Company for sample soil. On view weekends 2-6pm October 31 through November 22.
With never-before exhibited work from:
Reade Bryan
Chris Oh
Nicole Reber
Matthew Speedy
Oct 30, opening reception 6-9:30
Meat sculpture reception gleefully provided by Craig Bowden and Michael Merck.
Drop-in séance in the back room with Joan Carra and a 100-year old Swiss log.
Nov 21-22, closing reception / simultaneous events
Tragedy and Healing in Nantucky
Ray Smith Studio’s Chicken Shit Bingo
Pancake Feed