Education and Community Programs

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Last Night at the Walker


 
by Morgan Wylie at 3:12 pm 2005-10-25
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Educators around the Twin Cities piled in last night for a peek at all the resources on display for the 2005 Walker Art Center Educators’ Evening. Several themed tours were offered, a preview of the Animation Innovation student film series, the Minneapolis Institute of Arts, ArtsConnectEd.org, and other representatives were also on hand. I was working the Art Lab Activity Take a Chance, inspired by the Walker exhibition, House of Oracles: A Huang Yong Ping Retrospective.

The activity uses roulette wheels that visitors spin to get a list of materials and instructions with which to build a sculpture. It is based on the divination methods used by artists Huang Yong Ping in his own projects.

House of Oracles

The House of Oracles (detail), 1989-1992. Collection, Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain, Paris. Installation photo from House of Oracles: A Huang Yong Ping Retrospective.

Huang also utilizes the I Ching text as well as divining rods and other methods in his projects, in addition to the wheels pictured above. Visitors to the Art Lab had all kinds of materials to build with and divination tools to inspire their work, like color wheels, weather reports, Chinese astrology, and more.

There is also a version of the activity for elementary students that uses the roulette wheels to construct imaginary animals. Cool!

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by Morgan Wylie at 4:28 pm 2005-10-17
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Kerry James Marshall is kind of an unassuming guy. In fact, when I first saw him, I wasn’t sure I was facing THE artist, Kerry James Marshall. On the phone, I was so impressed with his articulation and his warmth. I guess I was expecting someone in a cardigan and slacks. I thought, shouldn’t you be in a suit? Where I expected formality, I found a quiet and powerful thinker who is eager to share his views with you (at great length) and make you comfortable in the conversation, even when the topic can be anything but comfortable. I found a guy in jeans, a button-down and a ball cap with an easy demeanor and a ready laugh. I could tell as I listened in on his presentation to the Walker Art Center Teen Arts Council that it was going to be a great evening.

Paired with poet and scholar, Elizabeth Alexander, the Contemporary Art in Conversation series at the Walker continued on October 13 as part of Target Free Thursday Nights. The event advantage was all mine because not only are Alexander and Marshall artists aware of, and fans of, each others’ work, they are also close friends, thus promising some great conversation.

Alexander opened the evening with a reading from her latest volume of poetry, American Sublime. She uses a masterful mix of formal elements with words and phrases that she identified as “ black vernacular.” I’ve never studied poetry so I have nothing helpful to say for you poetry-loving folks, but I was impressed with what I heard, and many of the themes that appeared in her work were echoed as Marshall took the stage to present a look at his own work.

Marshall came armed with 70+ slides, and the more he said he needed to move fast through them, the longer he seemed to linger over individual works and let his thoughts develop along some very interesting lines. Marshall is such a fascinating speaker and I loved hearing about the development of his various works. By far a favorite of mine was the triptych Heirlooms and Accessories, a work that starts with the photograph of a lynching and fades the entire image but for the face of one of the white audience members. Around this image is a locket/pendant with chain that frames the face. At first glance you just see the necklace and this face, but as you study it more, the very grim scene of the lynching becomes clearer. Marshall talked about the idea of heirlooms: items and legacies we pass down through generations. It’s a very striking piece.

As the conversation got under way, it was clear that you had to have your head in the game just to keep up. Being already acquainted, Alexander and Marshall immediately jumped into a dense and fascinating conversation about the “ black aesthetic” and “ black creativity,” and also this idea of the “ post-, post-, post-black artist,” which I understood to be the question of when a black artist can effectively work without first establishing their work as a reclamation and reaffirmation of black artists from the past. No fluffy stuff here! Lucky for you, the event was webcast and you can check it out here. As if I could cram all the good stuff in this one post.

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by Morgan Wylie at 3:48 pm 2005-10-10
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I dropped in for the October 9 presentation of Sound Art Cinema (as part of the Christian Marclay artist residency) and it was quite an assortment of films. There were a couple of early Disney pieces, some Fluxus-inspired work by Sonic Youth, and two other works that look at the incorporation of sound and image. Curator Christian Marclay spoke about his interest in these connections between pop music, pop culture, and high art.

Piano Piece #13 (Carpenter’s Piece, for Nam June Paik) was a favorite of mine. Produced by Sonic Youth in 1999, it’s a rough-looking video of the band members pounding nails into the keys of a shabby little upright piano. Each key in turn lets out a mournful last note, and then all you hear is the pounding of the hammer on the nail. At first, each band member approached the piano alone, and then it swelled into a crescendo will all the members nailing away so that the notes of the piano combined with the percussive elements of the hammers.

I think it would have been interesting to see the Global Groove piece, produced by Nam June Paik, when it was first aired on WNET-TV, New York, in 1973. The video is comprised of so many different aural and visual elements – TV cello performances by Charlotte Moorman, Japanese Pepsi commercials, Native American chanting and drumming, John Cage reading a lecture – that I felt a bit overwhelmed by all the color smears and effects. I wondered if this is the kind of film that, rather than popcorn, people would opt for illicit drugs instead? Just how much psychedelia and tap dancers can be crammed into 29 minutes of film? I’ll get back to you on that one.

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by Morgan Wylie at 3:48 pm 2005-10-10
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Directed by George Clooney, Good Night, And Good Luck is a beautiful black and white film that tells the story of journalist Edward R. Murrow and his struggles against Senator Joseph McCarthy and the injustices of McCarthy’s witch trials to root out Communism and other un-American activities during the 1950s.

I was lucky to get a seat at the Walker premiere on October 7. I found this film to be a stunning account of Murrow (played to perfection by David Strathairn), and I love the fact that so many of the people who were really there, including Joe and Shirley Wershba, collaborated on the film to make it as authentic and true as they could.

This film is going to be a great one for fostering dialogues, and not only on the obvious theme of persecuting people based on ideologies and beliefs alone. What should the role of commercial sponsorship in the news be? How does that affect news as a public essential? How has mainstream media responded to the ubiquity of smaller media outlets on the Internet? Can these smaller media outlets be effective in reforming mainstream media? At what point does government monitoring and surveillance of the public interfere with civil rights and the public’s right-to-know?

Head on over here to get the conversation started at an ongoing forum hosted by mnartists.org.

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by Morgan Wylie at 3:47 pm 2005-10-10
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The teens were out in full-force on October 6 for Sketchy: 2005 Walker Art Center Student Open House. WACTAC – the Walker Art Center Teen Arts Council – put together quite a show, including an Art Swap; three art workshops looking at portraiture, drawing techniques, and graf art; DJ Jennifer of KFAI’s Groove Garden; Sadie Benning films, and registration for mnartists.org.

Leave some art. Take some art.

Clea Felien leads drawing workshop.

Graf artist Roger Cummings leads workshop.

My favorite spot for the night was the Sadie Benning films. Our Film/Video department describes them thusly: “ Using a Fisher-Price toy Pixelvision camera, Sadie Benning created a series of intimate, sexually frank videos tracking her coming out and rising queer consciousness in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.” I love the proximity in Sadie’s films. Not in the way people will say, “ It was so real. I felt like I was right there!” I mean the actual physical distance between Sadie and the camera; between the camera and the objects Sadie filmed. It’s more like your best friend pulling you in close to whisper secrets and truths to you. I love the grainy quality to the film and the way it makes the geography of each object more interesting. Sadie also uses costume and make-up in a way that reminds me of photographer Cindy Sherman. These films will be shown during gallery hours through the end October.

At one point during the night I looked over to the DJ and noticed she was thumbing through a recent issue of Fig. 12, a WACTAC-authored/edited/published work about contemporary art.

I missed the teens while the Walker was closed. I was never so well-dressed in high school.

LINKS:

Sadie Benning Profile

Graffiti.Org

Wooster Collective

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by Roger Nieboer at 2:49 pm 2005-10-07
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A seemingly endless stream of fascinating ideas flowed back and forth across the 9th floor conference room during this season’s first gathering of The Artist’s Bookshelf. “The Lost Flame of Queen Loana” by Umberto Eco served as the topic of our discussion, but as often happens with engaging conversations, we got side-tracked along the way into some pretty interesting territory.

Because so much of the book revolves around memory as a basis for self-identity, the group questioned the nature of human memory, and the influences of various forces, ranging from pop-culture to high-brow literature (i.e., do we become what we read???). We all agreed that these forces undoubtedly DO have an effect, but how that effect might be measured remains (to us) a mystery.

This book’s continual references and allusions to other books, as well as the protagonist being a book dealer/collector, led us to ponder the importance of books in our own lives, and how much of our own identities might actually dwell there.

We closed the session with some thoughts about the Chuck Close exhibit, and its focus on self as content. In a recent NPR interview Umberto Eco declared himself a “puzzle-maker.” We thought that might be an apt description of Mr. Close as well.

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by Morgan Wylie at 5:00 pm 2005-10-04
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If you have yet to visit the Walker Art Center on a Free First Saturday, I’ve got to tell you, you’re missing out. Totally free. Totally fun. Totally for families. What could I possibly say to motivate you towards attending one? Maybe, puppets. Did you catch that?

Puppets.

“ Behind the Scenes” was the Free First Saturday theme for October 1. I was around anyway to volunteer, so I dropped in on some of the activities going on at the Walker.

I saw a performance of One Eye, Two Eyes, Three Eyes, an interpretation of the Grimm Brothers fairytale. A Walker crew of puppeteers headed up by our own Dawn Swartz– and backed up by a trio of local musicians–put on a show full of magic and monsters. This re-interpretation set our story in Cleveland (Minnesota) and there was even a reference to “ hotdish.” Now, I’m not a Minnesota native and I had to be introduced to the concept of hotdish. But sitting in the auditorium, I heard the hotdish reference and there was a ripple of laughter that ran through the audience, and I thought: I get it. I get the joke! Dawn and crew even gave a demo afterwards and talked about the different sorts of puppets they used, including marionettes, body and hand puppets, and stick puppets.

I popped into the Star Tribune Foundation Art Lab and saw crowds of families making their very own stick puppets and putting on performances in ready-made box stages. Walking around the galleries later, I could see kids marching on with little arms raised in the air, proudly displaying their puppets.

I missed the puppet films (for which I felt a large measure of guilt), but I popped in to a WAC-ky Tales reading of Shrinking Violet by Cari Best. Our very own Aaron Szopinski entertained the room with his lively reading about a girl named Violet whose role in the school play changes her from a shy girl into a hero.

I bet now you’re wishing you had been at Free First Saturday. November 5 is your next big chance. Come on out for Random Ruckus and enjoy tours, films, art-making, performance, and story time activities related to the exhibition House of Oracles: A Huang Yong Ping Retrospective opening October 16.

LINKS

Center for Puppetry Arts

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