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Goshka Macuga: It Broke from Within

Remember France? It broke from within. That can happen here. We can only protect our own country within by making more of us understanding of each other’s freedom and each other’s work and possessions. We must learn to place a high value on the things that we have created an built and which we would [...]


Remember France? It broke from within. That can happen here. We can only protect our own country within by making more of us understanding of each other’s freedom and each other’s work and possessions. We must learn to place a high value on the things that we have created an built and which we would inevitably lose through disunity and social revolution. Nothing is more important to us than those civic institutions, of which the Art Center is one, that create a broader appreciation of our common bonds — our homes, our work, and our personal expressions.

The London-based Polish artist Goshka Macuga uses the history of the Walker—from founder and lumber baron T.B. Walker to the Herzog and de Mueron expansion in 2005—to prompt a larger examination of the relationship between civic institutions and the communities that they serve. The quote above appears in a fund-raising brochure from the 1940s, and invokes the invasion of France by Germany as warning that if there was no effort to foster relationships and better understanding between different communities (whether cultural, political or economic), our “greater sympathy” would break and give way to disunity and social revolution as it was doing so rapidly in Europe at the time. This text became the source of the title of Macuga’s first solo-exhibition in the United States, Goshka Macuga: It Broke from Within, and helps frame her investigation into the Walker’s endeavors, both benign and controversial, and its connection to the Twin Cities and Minnesota.


Walker Art Center membership drive brochure, 1941

It Broke from Within is composed of a number of different elements, all of them the product of her research here at the Walker in April 2010. At the far end of the gallery is the centerpiece of the exhibtion: a large 48 foot woven tapestry, bringing together images and elements from her search in the archives against the backdrop of the Lost Forty, a parcel of land in northern Minnesota spared from the aggressive lumber industry in the 19th century due to a surveying error, making it one of the few old-growth forests left in the state. A raised platform in front features sunken areas for seating, which were based on an early Herzog and de Mueron sketch of Cargill Lounge with communal pits that was never realized. On the other side of the gallery, a collection of objects and archival pieces from our own collection displayed in custom frames (pictured above) based on a work by Sherrie Levine.

Installation view of the exhibition

This exhibition also marks a special collaboration between a visiting artist and the design department. The tapestry, while composed by Goshka, was composited by our senior imaging specialist Greg Beckel, and the photographic backdrop of the forest was shot by photographer Cameron Wittig, who accompanied the artist during her second visit to Minnesota in October 2010. Both Greg and Cameron will post more about the technical aspects of producing a tapestry of this size, and the experience of photographing the Lost Forty. A booklet, mainly organized by Macuga, and co-curators Peter Eleey and Bartholomew Ryan, was also included as a component to the exhibition, which includes an interview with the artist about her time here and thoughts about her practice and the Walker, as well as texts that examine some of the issues surrounding our institutional history. The publication also includes some of the archival material which Macuga uses in the tapestry, as well as a key to the piece itself. It is free and available to visitors in the gallery.

As a document that will be in our own archives for years to come, I’m personally interested in how this publication will be viewed in the future, and whether or not we’ve been true to the promise of providing sources of “new pleasures, to new horizons of appreciation, and, in community life, to a greater sympathy for the efforts of each other.”

Goshka Macuga: It Broke from Within is on view in Burnet Gallery until August.

Call for Applicants: The Walker Design Fellowship 2011-2012

Now accepting applications–Deadline: June 20, 2011 Since 1980, the Walker Art Center Design department has maintained a graphic design fellowship program that provides recent graduates (both undergrad and grad) the opportunity to work in a professional design studio environment. Selected from a highly competitive pool of applicants, fellows represent a diverse range of graphic design [...]

Now accepting applications–Deadline: June 20, 2011

Since 1980, the Walker Art Center Design department has maintained a graphic design fellowship program that provides recent graduates (both undergrad and grad) the opportunity to work in a professional design studio environment. Selected from a highly competitive pool of applicants, fellows represent a diverse range of graphic design programs, such as Art Center College of Design, California College of Art, California Institute of the Arts, Cranbrook Academy of Art, Gerrit Rietveld Academie, Minneapolis College of Art and Design, NC State University, Rhode Island School of Design, Royal College of Art, Werkplaats Typografie, and Yale University, among many others.

Fellows are employed full-time for one year and are assigned a wide range of graphic design projects, from identities and related collateral for programs and exhibitions, to assisting the design director and designers with large-scale initiatives such as catalogues, campaigns, wayfinding systems, and  websites. Fellows are involved in all aspects of the design process, from conception (the “thinking”) through delivery (the “inking”), and everything in-between. Throughout the year, the studio supports and advises our fellows and the fellow inspires and energizes our studio>>>>>

>>>>Take our COMPATIBILITY TEST if you’re interested in this kind of symbiotic relationship.

Below: A small sampling of projects executed by the Walker’s design studio–including the work of 4 fellows–between the years 2008 and 2011

 

How to apply Please attach a letter of interest, a résumé with the names and contact information of three references, and a pdf portfolio containing 8–10 examples of graphic design work to design.fellowship@walkerart.org

2011/2012 Fellowship deadline: June 20, 2011

All candidates will be notified of their application status by July 31. No phone calls please.

For more information please visit the Design Fellowship page on the Walker Art Center Design website here.   Also check out the Walker Job Board.

 

☠♞✺⌂⊉⌚: Midnight Party Graphic Identity

We have a great permanent collection exhibition up right now called Midnight Party, organized by Joan Rothfuss, Adjunct Curator, with Eric Crosby, Curatorial Assistant. It’s a beautiful and diverse show, filled with “art whose content is primarily spiritual, visionary, enigmatic, or dreamlike—in a word, subjective.” Check out a creepy and mesmerizing video promo of the [...]

We have a great permanent collection exhibition up right now called Midnight Party, organized by Joan Rothfuss, Adjunct Curator, with Eric Crosby, Curatorial Assistant. It’s a beautiful and diverse show, filled with “art whose content is primarily spiritual, visionary, enigmatic, or dreamlike—in a word, subjective.” Check out a creepy and mesmerizing video promo of the exhibition here.

An interesting theme from the show deals with our attempts to impose logical structures onto illogical and subjective ideas. To that end, the graphic identity is a loose interpretation of Freud’s “dream rebus”—a series of seemingly unrelated images, a pictorial composition, that are the key to decoding the meaning of a dream.

“The dream-thoughts are immediately comprehensible, as soon as we have learnt them. The dream-content, on the other hand, is expressed as it were in a pictograph script, the characters of which have to be transposed individually into the language of the dream-thoughts. If we attempted to read these characters according to their pictorial value instead of according to their symbolic relation, we should clearly be led into error. Suppose I have a picture-puzzle, a rebus, in front of me. It depicts a house with a boat on its roof, a single letter of the alphabet, the figure of a running man whose head has been conjured away, and so on. Now I might be misled into raising objections and declaring that the picture as a whole and its component parts are nonsensical. A boat has no business to be on the roof of a house, and a headless man cannot run. Moreover, the man is bigger than the house; and if the whole picture is intended to represent a landscape, letters of the alphabet are out of place in it since such objects do not occur in nature. But obviously we can only form a proper judgment of the rebus if we put aside criticisms such as these of the whole composition and its parts and if, instead, we try to replace each separate element in some way or other. The words which are put together in this way are no longer nonsensical but may form a poetical phrase of the greatest beauty and significance. A dream is a picture-puzzle of this sort and our predecessors in the field of dream-interpretation have made the mistake of treating the rebus as a pictorial composition: and as such it has seemed to them nonsensical and worthless.” —Freud, The Interpretation of Dreams

Presented on color backgrounds, the objects evoke the retro natural history museum vibe that infuses the show, suggesting artifacts, mythology, and science. Another reference point (especially for the type) was an encyclopedia/magazine of the occult called Man, Myth & Magic. Both title graphics for the show feature a rebus of three objects each, seemingly random, though begging decryption. The groupings evoke hieroglyphics—an alphabet that refuses to abstract itself completely, instead grafting a second meaning on top of the objects, a system of somewhat subjective relationships that needs to be decoded to be understood. We asked our Facebook fans to guess the name of the exhibition based solely on the skull, cow, and disco ball rebus, and they came up with some great suggestions. Maybe we should start crowd sourcing our exhibition titles . . .

For the Card Catalogue brochures (pictured above), the relationship between the object and the featured artwork was more direct. A shell makes an appearance in Guy Maddin’s film, the Minoan bull suggests Sterbak’s meat dress, and the timer refers to Strassheim’s forensic-like attention to light and exposure. The show also features two great audio guide tours, one called “Shadows” and one called “Visions”.

Title graphics:

We had a good time shopping for some of these objects to photograph. A few things we purchased but didn’t use: a small boat anchor ($10), a creepy hotel key ($3), a 550 Million year old trilobyte ($5), and a pair of meat hooks ($10) that I keep in my office now to freak people out.

(Dylan & Cameron at Hunt & Gather.)

Interview with Harsh Patel

Hey, Harsh. Where are you from, originally? I was born and raised in Nairobi, Kenya up til age 9 or a bit later. My secondary years were spent in Texas. You were living in New York and you just recently moved to Los Angeles. How has that been? Any LA moments so far? No particular [...]

Hey, Harsh. Where are you from, originally?
I was born and raised in Nairobi, Kenya up til age 9 or a bit later. My secondary years were spent in Texas.

You were living in New York and you just recently moved to Los Angeles. How has that been? Any LA moments so far?
No particular moments. It’s sort of a never ending impression process. Overwhelmingly positive, per my tastes. I’ll wait to see where it goes, going on five years here now. I love to drive my car through Los Angeles.

Has the move affected your work or your projects in any way?
Yeah. I think I’ve changed entirely since I’ve lived here. Far more aware and comfortable with the pace at which I take in and process everything.

Have you found anything recently (ephemera, artifacts, etc) that you’ve been really into?
Himaa (http://www.himaa.cc) very kindly gave me a black and gold pencil from Japan which I like to write with. Apparently, these are standard fare there.

Any recent trades to speak of?
Yes, with two of my favorite publishers, Juan Moralejo and Benjamin Sommerhalder. I forgot what I traded Juan for a complete seven issue set of his magazine Sede (http://www.revistasede.com), and I traded Ben the entire 10-project catalog of my label Zulu for all five issues of his [pre-Nieves] magazine Zoo (http://www.nieves.ch/catalogue/zooinside.html). I wouldn’t trade either of those for the world.


Can you include a mix or a song? (Our blog needs some music up in here.)
This particularly good performance of “Like A Daydream” by Ride.

And while we’re at it, any youtube clips you’ve been into recently?
A lot of interviews, I guess. That’s probably the one format I consume more than any other. I like watching Norm Macdonald’s talk show appearances, particularly on Letterman. Bernie Mac talking to Charlie Rose.

Are you more of a collector or a documentarian? Do you distinguish between the two?
I’ve never seen myself as either of those, or thought about them much. I do collect a few things, but, I consider that collecting a hobby on its own and haven’t considered too much it in regards to my work, yet.

Do you think context is important in presenting your work?
Coming from a very middle-class angle, I have a very pointed opinion about “pop”. Surface is important to me. I do think getting to know someone better as a person is always a way to penetrate past that surface, but that’s a personal decision, I suppose. I don’t think I lessen something’s validity, myself, by choosing to skim over it. There’s still a way to get something constructive out of it. And, who has the time, anyway? I’m recommended one movie or book or whatever else a day, it’s too much. Naturally I’m glad to meet people who are really interested in who I am and why I do this or that, but, more often than not I am invisible. And I’m alright with that.


Any thoughts on design right now in 2011?
Read “Andy de Fiets: Letter to Robin Kinross” published by True True True (http://www.truetruetrue.org)!

And anything coming up you’d like to let us know about?
I’ve just published a few new books: “Guido Poems” with my friend Miles Jopling is available at Stand Up Comedy in Portland, and “God God Technology God Berlin” by Maxwell Simmer and “Standard Remote” by Dena Yago are available at X Marks The Bokship in London.

Harsh Patel is a graphic designer based in Los Angeles.

Julian Assange interviewed on e-Flux

  This has been posted everywhere, so I thought I’d post it again: Hans Ulrich Obrist interviewing Julian Assange of Wikileaks on e-Flux. Interspersed throughout the interview are samples from Metahaven’s hypothetical identity for Wikileaks. The second part of the interview will feature Assange responding to artists, including Ai Weiwei and Metahaven, asking him questions [...]

 

This has been posted everywhere, so I thought I’d post it again: Hans Ulrich Obrist interviewing Julian Assange of Wikileaks on e-Flux. Interspersed throughout the interview are samples from Metahaven’s hypothetical identity for Wikileaks. The second part of the interview will feature Assange responding to artists, including Ai Weiwei and Metahaven, asking him questions by video.

Also, Metahaven will be presenting their new project FaceState, an exploration into the intersection of social media and government, in the Walker’s upcoming graphic design show, Graphic Design: Now In Production later this year.