Education and Community Programs

Just another Walker Blogs weblog

Part of: blogs.walkerart.org

General


 
by Witt Siasoco at 4:35 pm 2009-01-26
Filed under:
4 Comments

This article was written by 15 year old filmmaker Kaisi Haarstad. Haarstad is a TVbyGirls Core Girl and, at the age of 8, was the youngest filmmaker to be screened in a Girls in the Director’s Chair film festival.

Last Wednesday, I had the pleasure of viewing Bruce McClure’s tech rehearsal and conversing with him after.

As a young filmmaker, I was enthralled with how meticulously he worked to engage his audience and enhance his work. I t was great to hear about the methods he used to create his piece. He gave the group a basic understanding of how film works and explained that he would use analog projectors to create intense configurations of light and sound. In addition to talking about his use of film, he also discussed the use of guitar peddles in his work. He told us how he came to use guitar peddles in his work. When working in his studio, a friend watched and suggested the use of the peddles to manipulate the sound. Once he tried it, he never performed without them. As a struggling college student, Mr. McClure had originally wanted to create drawings and paintings. However he found the combination of expensive art materials and the amount of space needed to house such art to be problematic, so he turned to less conventional methods of making visual art that would free him of space and money – creating combinations of light and sound that could only be performed live.

The following day, I attended Mr. McClure’s performance in the Walker’s Cinema. At first, the fast paced images and music was slightly stressful, but as the crowd became used to it, the rhythmic patterns of the sounds and lights made the experience quite relaxing. This performance followed a pattern like a book complete with an intro, body, climax, and conclusion. As with any good story, the climax could be quite stressful at times. However, he took care not to leave his audience uncomfortable for too long. He concluded his performance by turning the images and sound into a soothing rhythm of simple beats allowing the audience to relax and enjoy the resolution of the cacophony.

At the beginning of the performance, the images faded from seemingly random dancing light splotches to a calming image of beautiful birds of pure light. The image suddenly changed to circles and squares of one color occupied the center of the screen while a brilliantly bright light flashed across the entire screen in random intervals. It was bright enough that you wanted to cover your eyes to shield them from its brilliance. Captivatingly the image made me keep my eyes open, but when I managed to close my eyes, it only intensified the performance – the exact opposite of each image flashed on the back of my eye lids. I loved the odd sensation of the power given off by it. As I became use to the flashing brilliance of the full screen light, the image transformed into two new brilliant colors of the full screen flashing in succession to the partial screen in a pattern and speed that, looking at the projectors, looked like the sound of someone drumming their fingers on a table. While looking at the screen, it seemed as though there were four different projectors flashing different colored lights at the screen while, in reality, there were only three. Even though there were not many elements, each second of this performance was drastically different from the next and nothing ever seemed to repeat itself. In the end I asked myself, “How could something so stressful relax me?”

The sound, with its rhythmic patterns, loud volumes, and intense timings, was also something not easily captured or described outside of a live performance. At first, the volume was soft, with a single beat about once a measure and which gradually increased in speed. The second you got used to the single beat, the number of notes increased. However, by this time you were transfixed with the images flashing across the screen to the point that you heard it just as a light background to the image. The sound became faster paced and more intense every second through out the performance and when I listened, I heard more sounds than he was playing. In reality, the performance was enhanced by tricks that your mind would play on you. Near the end of the piece, it became so intense that many people had to leave because they simply could not stand the intensity any longer. About five minutes later, he gradually slowed the music, matching the pace of the beginning, cutting out images and any other sound allowing the audience to focus entirely on the rhythm of the piece and at the same time allowing people to adjust to the reality and hidden, rolling rhythm of everyday life.

After the performance, I was left in awe and unable to really think about anything else while my eyes and ears adjusted to normal sound and light. This performance was nothing like anything I had ever heard or seen before. It was inspiring to see what a person could do with some average equipment and an imagination. This performance showed me the intensity and beauty in things most people take for granted, sound and light. It took the everyday action of turning on and off lights and listening to basic sounds to the extremes. In all honesty, no description could ever replicate the full feeling of the piece. In my mind, few things could ever be equivalent to Mr. McClure’s performance and I look forward to seeing him perform again when next he returns to the Twins Cities.

 
 
by Christina at 5:38 pm 2009-01-20
Filed under:
1 Comment

Arty Pants is all about the exhibition Text/Messages: Books by Artists in January and February, so we’re making books with guest artist Ellen Ferrari. Here’s the fantastic conversation I had last Tuesday with Jack, age 5, about his book.

Christina: Good morning Jack! That is a nice book you’re making.
Jack: It’s a book about shapes.
Christina: Well that’s very cool. I like your triangle (by the way, he has labeled his shapes with proper names, most of them spelled without help).
Jack: Now I’m going to make a hugg-e shape (pronounced “huggie”).
Christina: What’s a hugg-e shape look like?
Jack: It’s two arms like this… (at which point he hugs himself).
Christina: That’s fantastic. I like your book of shapes.
Jack: Yup. I’ts my little book of very large shapes.


The hugg-e shape is picture on the far right, next to the silly shape.

 
 
by Allison at 11:51 am 2009-01-07
Filed under:
Comments Off

The holidays are finally over. The cookies have been eaten, the waistlines expanded, the champaigne bottles are in the recycling, the tree is down, and the kids are back in school. But curiously, some relatives may still be hanging around your house expecting meals and entertainment. Well, take them to the Walker for Target Free Thursday Nights! We have plenty to do and your guests from out of town will be intellectually stimulated as well as in shape from walking up and down all the stairs we have in the building!

The fun starts this Thursday with our first art lab related to the Text/Messages: Books by Artists show. The workshop is being led by local artist Sam Hoolihan. He is a performer, musician, and book artist. You can catch his latest creation at this years Art Shanty projects out on Medicine Lake. Below is a great interview with him about his process as an artist and what we can expect tomorrow.

The fun starts at 5pm when gallery admission is free until 9pm. See the Text/Messages show first, grab a coffee, and then head on dow to the art lab! C U L8R!

What kind of experience can we expect in the art lab on Thursday?

A very open and collaborative environment with ideas being mixed, thrown, passed, cut and pasted between all the participants. There will be a few different stations set up in the lab for generating images and txt msgs, and I’m excited to see what people come up with. I hope the project grows and feeds off the energy everyone brings into the room.

What do you think artist books are and why do you think people make them?

Anything that takes the traditional structure and idea of a book and re-invents it, pushes it, gives it a new life and perspective. I think artists will always be drawn to the physicality and the warmth of books. They are excellent vehicles for sharing information and ideas.

What are some of the things that stand out in the Text/Messages show?

I am repeatedly drawn to the Ed Ruscha section. I love it when artists utilize large commercial printing techniques in a new and creative way, the idea of taking a banal process and performing alchemy with it. I’m also really glad there is a spot to sit and hold books in the gallery, it’s such an important part of the experience for me.

I understand that you, when making things like artist books for example, like to impose limits on yourself. Like, the kind of materials you can use. Tell me what that process is like and why do you do it? What is the result?

I find when I have too many options in front of me I get paralyzed.S etting limitations on myself with the kind of materials I can use forces me to think more creatively, and the results usually end up being more sincere and exciting.

In addition to being a visual artist, you’re also a photographer, performer and musician. Can you tell me about some of the projects you’ve worked on and what they involved?

Well, I’m about to set up the Snap Shot Shanty for the second year in a row at the Art Shanty Projects on Medicine Lake. I’m working with a great group of artists and we are excited to take our portrait studio/performance space to the next level this year on the ice! It’s basically a big ‘softbox’ that utilizes all the natural light reflecting off the snow to illuminate the inside of the shanty for photos and performances. I’m also playing with a local band called Switzerlind, and we’ve been experimenting lately with only allowing ourselves to use typewriters and office supplies for our percussion section. We’ve had one performance with that set up so far, and we are planning to do it again inside the Snap Shot Shanty.
Hope to see you at the Walker Art Lab, and at the Art Shanty Projects!

Comments Off
 
 
by Christina at 10:51 am 2009-01-06
Filed under:
Comments Off

It was a great Free First Saturday at the Walker, inspired by the exhibition Eero Saarinen: Shaping the Future. Here is a snapshot of what went down.

In an activity prompted by Saarinen’s grasshopper chair, families got to make their own chairs loosely influenced by an animal, plant, or insect.

Using only cardboard scraps, tape, and markers people set to work and produced wildly imaginative results.

Building Challenge

Building Challenge

Some families went on a guided tour of the Saarinen exhibition

Father and son duo Larry and Jessup Yazzie of the Meskwaki/Dine and Lakota nations performed the fast and colorful Fancy Dance.

If you’re confused about the connection between the Fancy Dance and a 20th-century architect, check-out this earlier blog.

Special thanks to: artists Kelly Seacrest and Ilene Krug Mojsilov for developing fabulous activities for the families, our rocking team of volunteers for keeping the place going, and the great families who turned out for the event. And, to the girl who turned to her dad and said “I like coming to Walker Art Center, it’s a lot fun”, you made my day!

Comments Off
 

Powered by WordPress