Blogs Field Guide

The State of Things: Part One

“ If life gives you lemons, just take the damned lemons.” Not the classiest way to kick off a blog post, but I wanted to give you a little taste of the gung-ho attitude that blew minds at the Walker not too long ago. On the 13th of May, the Walker Art Center hosted The [...]

“ If life gives you lemons, just take the damned lemons.” Not the classiest way to kick off a blog post, but I wanted to give you a little taste of the gung-ho attitude that blew minds at the Walker not too long ago.

On the 13th of May, the Walker Art Center hosted The State of Things: An Update on Accessible Cultural Programming in the Twin Cities as part of a larger endeavor to increase awareness around the growing accessibility of cultural activities in the cities. And I’m not kidding when I say ‘larger’. Present at our event were over 60 people who were either representing different educational and cultural organizations or attending as individuals invested in the access community. The central idea was ‘radical inclusion:’ giving equal consideration to different ways of experiencing the world. Following the keynote address, we had a panel discussion followed by a Q&A session, both of which I’ll cover in a separate blog post so that this one doesn’t turn into a skyscraper of text.

As we all know, no self-respecting event dares to launch itself without an amazing keynote address. Enter Leslye Orr, a woman who not only took those lemons and made lemonade, but also helped children all over the country do the same.

In her brief introduction, Courtney Gerber of the Walker Education and Community Programs Department delivered a salient quote: “ Disability is a mainstream aspect of being human. It’s not special or other – it simply is.” The words belong to Nina Levent, who works with the Art Beyond Sight program in New York City. They struck a resonant chord not only due to their insight, but also because of how unnervingly well they applied to the keynote speaker of the day. As she stepped up to the podium and faced the audience with a friendly smile, Leslye seemed filled with confidence and a radiant joie de vivre. Very far from the stereotypical portrait of disability.

“ You never know about disabilities,” observed Leslye, whose slender frame houses an immense capability for greatness. On top of being a seasoned playwright, she’s also a performer, an author and a theater workshop instructor for voice, improvisation and acting. She also owns and runs private theater company Dreamland Arts with her husband, Zarawaar Mistry. Impressed? Wait until you hear that Leslye is legally blind – she was born with tunnel vision. Yet her disability, like that of many others, isn’t always immediately perceptible to others. As Leslye cautioned, it’s important to remember that a person’s disability may not necessarily manifest in the most obvious of ways. To avoid being equated to the disability, an individual sometimes manages to rearrange his or her lifestyle in a way that hides it rather well.

At this point, I was a little tempted to consider the afore-mentioned process as a heartbreaking form of compensation. Leslye caught the thought before it took off and firmly popped it with a pin. “ Why can’t what we’re missing also be something we enjoy? There’s so much pity for the disabled. Don’t assume they’re miserable,” she pointed out in her address as I struggled to curb my blush. “ These people have their own delightful experiences that are specific to their condition. It’s their world. They’re fine with it.”

A very striking point. With all acts of charity, the line between sensitive, sincere concern and dehumanizing condescension can wax thin. When we think about people with disabilities, there’s always the tendency to focus on only the tragic and caricaturize a living individual. It’s a common mistake that rears its ugly head in many circumstances.

During two separate activities Leslye asked children to describe an alien of their own design and write essays about their friends with disabilities. In both, the children focused on the differences between them and the subject of their descriptions. In the case of the aliens, they were extolled with affectionate curiosity and wonder. But when it came to the friends with disabilities, pity and sadness permeated the narrative. Leslye asked the children to consider a healthier possibility: why not talk about your friends in the same positive way as you did about your aliens? “ We are proud of ourselves”, said Leslye in her address, her voice quiet but resolute. “We like who we are.”

In addition to coping with her own challenges, Leslye has had an extensive history of helping others who encounter physiological and mental disabilities on a daily basis. As a child, she took care of three brothers with disabilities, two of whom passed away at an early age. The experience was painful and difficult. Nevertheless, it taught her how to interact with people with disabilities and endowed her with a strong, vivid imagination: two skill sets that would later help her use performance art to bring joy and empowerment to children with disabilities.

From helping said children stage stuffed animal puppet shows to conducting disability workshops in high schools in numerous states, Leslye has poured her altruism and ingenuity into a dizzying array of philanthropic activities. She has also written and illustrated a book called The People on the Corner that introduces ideas of disability and diversity to a younger audience.

In describing the contents of the book, Leslye asked the audience: “ If you aren’t exposed to different kinds of people when you’re young, how can you grow up accepting them?” It was a haunting question that really highlighted the importance of holistic early cognitive development in the fostering of a more tolerant society.

But learning is never just a one-way street – in this world, everyone is both a teacher and a student. “ It’s important to keep mainstreaming and mixing different ways for people to keep communicating their ideas,” Leslye noted, underlining the fact that all individuals have the potential to contribute something valuable to the discourse on art and accessibility.

It was a lot to digest in one go, and I had a feeling that most of our guests weren’t used to fully re-examining their perceptions of people with disabilities at ten in the morning. Thankfully, Leslye was completely aware of this. She moved on to the realm of more logistical concerns, suggesting practical ways of making an institution a more welcoming place. Don’t underestimate the importance of good signage: try to make ones that can be easily removed from walls and perused up close. Make sure that transportation options are highly accessible. And last but definitely not least, remember that people choose to visit museums when they can relate and engage with what’s on display. Without this crucial process, the connection is lost and then so is the interest.

In the wake of such a compelling and thought-provoking keynote address, there were plenty of ideas and questions to share. Stay tuned for Part Two, in which I share the details of the enlightening panel discussion and Q&A session which followed! If you’re interested in watching Leslye’s keynote address instead of just reading about it, here’s the video.

 

TAKE 5: Five questions answered by Angela Sprunger of ARTSWAP

TAKE 5: Five questions answered by activity organizers on Open Field this summer Name: Angela Sprunger Occupation: Administrative Assistant by day, artist by night City/Neighborhood: Whittier Open Field Activity: ARTSWAP Description: We invite people of all ages and talents to bring a work of their creation and swap for a work in our collection. Date [...]

I BROUGHT

I GOT

    TAKE 5: Five questions answered by activity organizers on Open Field this summer

Name: Angela Sprunger
Occupation: Administrative Assistant by day, artist by night
City/Neighborhood: Whittier

Open Field Activity: ARTSWAP
Description: We invite people of all ages and talents to bring a work of their creation and swap for a work in our collection.
Date of Activity: Saturday July 9 and Saturday August 28
Check it out on the Open Field calendar of events!

1) What’s your favorite public space, in the Twin Cities or beyond?

Greenway! I love using it and I love seeing bikers, walker, runners, movers of all kinds using this transit way all year.

2) How did you find out about Open Field and why did you decide to host your own activity on Open Field?

I went to Drawing Club a couple of times last year so I had participated in Open Field. Over the past year we’ve done a couple ART SWAP events in different venues and when Open Field was going to happen again this year we thought it would be the perfect venue and perfect audience for an art exchange.

3) If you could learn any skill on Open Field, what would it be?

How to grow, apply, and cultivate moss graffiti art

4) What is the ideal audience for your Open Field activity?

Anyone who likes to make things of any age. From professional artists to budding artists. We’ve had glass blowers exchange their “castoffs” for children’s drawings. If you call it art, we call it art. We don’t mediate your swaps. It’s all about what you like, what you call art, and how you value art.

5) If Open Field had a mascot, who/what would it be?

We actually have a mascot! It’s a giant pom-pom. We started as an ice shanty with the Art Shanty Projects and atop our shanty sat a giant hat with a giant pom-pom on top. We made the big pom out of lots of tiny hand made poms at a pom-making party. It has made an appearance from time to time but it’s looking a little tired after getting caught in the rain a few times. We’ll see if we can revive it for the Open Field.

ARTSWAP pompom mascot in action at the Art Shanty

Looking at Exposed: “The Unseen Photographer” and a Good Cause

“It is not going to be easy to look into their eyes.” (James Agee, Now Let Us Praise Famous Men). When Weegee exposes a kissing couple to an infrared camera that sees in the dark, it seems to me uncomfortably funny, or unfair, or both, that a  photographer can take a shot of people who [...]

“It is not going to be easy to look into their eyes.”

(James Agee, Now Let Us Praise Famous Men).

When Weegee exposes a kissing couple to an infrared camera that sees in the dark, it seems to me uncomfortably funny, or unfair, or both, that a  photographer can take a shot of people who don’t see him or her.  The power’s on the camera’s side.

Weegee (Arthur H. Fellig), Lovers at the Movies, ca. 1940; gelatin silver print. Collection SFMOMA. © Weegee / International Center of Photography / Getty Images

Exposed’s “Unseen Photographer” snaps away with a camera hidden like a bomb in a shoe, disguised under clothing, or with a camera that can sneak a sidewards look while seeming to aim frankly ahead.

Men's shoes with camera hidden in heel. National Museum of American History Photographic History Collection

Assuming the position of the camera lens, I look too–unseen, uninvited, invasive.  Some of the photographers in Exposed’s “Unseen” section give an excuse for this lopsided exercise in power: they have to expose their subjects in order to expose the social injustices that oppress them.  So goes the story on Jacob Riis, shocking immigrants in turn-of-the-century tenements with his flash, visually victimizing them so he could show the better off just how, in the words of his eponymous book,”the other half lives.”

Jacob Riis, Lodgers in a crowded Bayard Street tenement: Five cents a spot. From the Collections of the Museum of the City of New York. ca. 1890.

Two values seem to conflict, here:  exposing social injustice and respecting its victims. In the case of Riis’s disturbed sleepers, did reformist ends justify the invasive means?  Or did visual invasion serve the purpose of better-informed  social control over slum-dwellers?   And now, do we look with sympathy at these people or with a callous curiosity?

Lewis Hine’s photographic invasions aimed at factories that exploited child workers.  Yet the children, trapped by the outsized textile machines they tend, seem like  illustrations to a problem, their faces too far away to read, blocking connection.  Even the Dorothea Lange image selected for this show seems to avoid the path of easy emotional identification, going against the grain of many social documentary photographs of the thirties;  instead, she pulls back to a polite distance.  Or is it an impersonal distance?

Dorothea Lange, White Angel Breadline, San Francisco, 1933. Minneapolis Institute of Arts

Real time brings its own distance:  the descendants of Riis’s immigrants have long since been assimilated, soup kitchens have a new clientele, sweatshops have moved offshore along with child labor, while children here are now subject to a different, and more benign form of machine discipline.

How do we respond to these historic reforming photos now? Do they simply document time past and injuries no one would dream of inflicting any more, or do they carry their meaning forward into the social memory of the present?  Do we look for the same problems returning to haunt us in new guises, documented with new technologies?  Does the museum setting allow a new kind of relationship with these long-gone people?  Or, as I sometimes uneasily feel peering into faces blind to mine, am I disrespecting the helpless, even or especially the long-dead helpless?

In spite of my vicarious intrusion, though and perhaps because they survive in these images, the unaware subjects, snapped from above, in the dark, or from the side,  oddly seem to retain their dignity.  A man sitting up in the center of Riis’s flophouse blinks in the sudden light of the flashgun, seeming to ward off contact, and suggesting instead some kind of beleaguered inwardness.  We are unseen to each other.

The moral philosopher Kwame Anthony Appiah describes giving respect to every individual as one of several kinds of ethical response.  He points out that the right to dignity, once reserved for royalty, has been democratized, to the point where we feel it is a right common to us all, and not entirely for altruistic reasons.  But at the same time, the technology of photography has developed, too. These days the democratization of visual respect goes along with the democratization of visual assault, enabled by a mobile photographic technology that can, among other effects, galvanize reform, or disseminate scorn.  That’s today.  What do you think?

Next time I’m moving onto the street and from compassion to curiosity.

More Info

 

The 40th Sleep Position: WE HAVE A WINNER

June 4th marked an explosion of arts activity in the Twin Cities—the eve of the all-night, city-wide nuit blanche Northern Spark festival. At least one invention came out of the spectacular event—a 40th Sleep Position. As part of Nightshift, the Walker Art Center’s contribution to Northern Spark, we partnered with McSweeney’s Publications, author Evany Thomas, [...]

June 4th marked an explosion of arts activity in the Twin Cities—the eve of the all-night, city-wide nuit blanche Northern Spark festival.

At least one invention came out of the spectacular event—a 40th Sleep Position.

As part of Nightshift, the Walker Art Center’s contribution to Northern Spark, we partnered with McSweeney’s Publications, author Evany Thomas, and artist Amelia Bauer to bring to life their book, The Secret Language of Sleep: A Couple’s Guide to Thirty-Nine Positions.

Many of the 4,500 people who came through the Walker between 9pm – 6am on June 4 tried on some of the positions printed as larger-than-life illustrations. They also had a chance to enter into a contest for a 40th Sleep Position. Some highlights from the night include the Supported Dreamer (most acrobatic), Bow and Arrow (sleeping grace), Gordian Knot (conceptual star), and Dominating Bear (as slapstick as a sleeping position can come). See more of the positions here, http://www.flickr.com/groups/1662795@N24/

From an array of these and other ingenious positions, Amelia Bauer and Evany Thomas have selected the “T-Square” as their winner—a pose developed by sisters Jenny Immich and Rebecca Immich Sullivan.

Jenny, a PhD candidate in Anthropology at the University of Minnesota, enjoys hedgehogs, medieval archaeology, Lady Gaga, and Russian literature. Rebecca, currently pursuing a Masters in Divinity at Luther Seminary, enjoys running and watching TV show marathons. The “T-Square” is, in fact, a position employed by Jenny when she has the urge to sleep in an “L” (which happens often).

Amelia and Evany both leaned immediately towards the T-Square. Why? Amelia explains: “Perhaps it is because I was raised by an architect father that I first fell for the T-Square. It s a simple but perfect pose. One body shapes itself into what actually appears to be a cozy position, and uses the other body to align itself. It’s something of an odd-couple’s pose. There’s a “straight man” in this story, paired with an odd-ball. And yet, look how perfectly they fit together! I’m going to try out the T-Square will napping on a square-shaped pic-nic blanket in the grass.”

Evany says: “Although it’s too early to draw any official conclusions, preliminary sciencing seems to indicate that the T-Square is in fact the long-sought-after daytime pose, the true oasis of stolen afternoons and gray Sundays. Amelia and I must conduct our own field studies and data-crunches before we can confirm these early findings, but we expect to have a fully ratified classification to share within the next week or so — clear your calendars!”

We urge you to try to T-Square for yourselves, and stay posted for Amelia and Evany’s write-up and illustration for this winning pose.

Tragedy on the Sea Nymph: An operetta for dogs, starring dogs

Every dog has its day as the saying goes. This is particularly true on Thursday, July 21st, when Machine Project presents Tragedy on the Sea Nymph, an operetta in three acts starring an all-dog cast in Walker Open Field. All canines are welcome! Written and Directed by Elizabeth Cline, Tragedy on the Sea Nymph is [...]

Every dog has its day as the saying goes. This is particularly true on Thursday, July 21st, when Machine Project presents Tragedy on the Sea Nymph, an operetta in three acts starring an all-dog cast in Walker Open Field. All canines are welcome!

Written and Directed by Elizabeth Cline, Tragedy on the Sea Nymph is a 10 minute silent film starring  dogs who perform the romance and tragedy of clandestine lovers shipwrecked at sea. The film will be accompanied by five opera singers and the Cedar String Quartet. Dog lovers, share this trailer with all your friends. And mark your calendar now so you and your dog aren’t left standing in the dog park when you could be at the opera.

Tragedy on the Sea Nymph
Thursday, July 21 9:15 and 9:45 pm, Walker Open Field  FREE!
Rain Date: Friday, July 22 9:15 and 9:45 pm
(Plastic baggies will be provided.)

Machine Project stars and fans

Looking at Exposed: Introduction

For me, the Exposed exhibit on view now at the Walker Art Center isn’t about visual pleasure.  Too many corpses, too many people trying to escape that intrusive lens–or caught unaware of its presence. There’s a stereo daguerrotype on view that’s billed as being racy, but hard as I squint I can’t make it out. There [...]

For me, the Exposed exhibit on view now at the Walker Art Center isn’t about visual pleasure.  Too many corpses, too many people trying to escape that intrusive lens–or caught unaware of its presence.

Weegee (Arthur H. Fellig), Lovers at the Movies, ca. 1940. Gelatin silver print; 10 5/8 in. x 13 3/8 in. (26.99 cm x 33.97 cm); Collection SFMOMA, purchased through a gift of Lynn Frances Kirshbaum; © Weegee / International Center of Photography / Getty Images

There’s a stereo daguerrotype on view that’s billed as being racy, but hard as I squint I can’t make it out. There are spies caught red-handed by the camera, but without the caption to tell me so, the image just looks like a bad photo of some guys in business suits, talking something over on an ordinary street.  Many of the photographs puzzle me.

Some arrest me.  A small video camera in one of the galleries aims at an abstract painting as blank as an unmarked Malevich. It seems senseless to film this black canvas.  Suspecting a trick, I turn back to the camera and there I am, in the picture, among the witnesses to a 1915 lynching. Thanks to artist Oliver Lutz’s use of infrared technology, I appear in a vintage photograph that serves as proof of a murder, evidence of hate, and historical document. By so baldly turning the viewer into the subject, the work seems to ask, “Where do you stand?  What is your relationship to this event–and to its contemporary afterlife?  What if the same CCTV system inserted you into the Abu Ghraib photos?”

Many of the images in Exposed put viewers on the spot, ethically speaking.  They’re not just about the photographer and the subject; intentions don’t just morph like magic into meanings. They are, often uncomfortably, about us.  By looking, are we agreeing to what we see?  Does the passage of time between then and now, or does the distance between here and there, us and them, let us off the hook?  Is an emotional response enough?  Why do we invade other people’s privacy? Is the meaning of the image different in a museum, in a news setting, in someone’s private photo collection or all over the internet? Should we protest the acts some of the images attest to? Should we write a letter, shed a tear, or just go on to the next image?

Beginning June 30, I’m posting a series of blogs that relate to the Walker exhibition, Exposed:  Voyeurism, Surveillance and the Camera Since 1870. The blog aims to provide a forum for conversation around themes laid out in the show:  The Unseen Photographer, Voyeurism and Desire, Celebrity and the Public Gaze, Witnessing Violence, and Surveillance.  Some of the issues raised have been alluded to in the catalogue and label copy: our right to look, the relationship between curiosity and compassion; private presence in public space; our responsibilities as witnesses; the power of institutions to watch us, our right to watch them and each other, secrecy and exposure.

A Tour Guide and Contemporary Arts Forum Guide at the Walker for more than a decade, I’m blogging as a correspondent and from the perspective of a viewer. There will be a week between posts for your responses and ideas.  July 28 we’ll have an Open Field conversation to be continued in the galleries. Please join in–and check out  the other programming associated with the exhibit as well.

 

 

 

 

 

13 Dangerous Things You Should Let Your Children Do!

I was delighted this morning when I saw a slide show of  “11 Dangerous Thinks You Should Let Your Children Do” on Huffington Post.  Put together by Gever Tulley, the slides were captioned with reflections of the families after their wild experiments such as boiling water in a paper cup, throwing a spear, and my [...]

I was delighted this morning when I saw a slide show of  “11 Dangerous Thinks You Should Let Your Children Do” on Huffington Post.  Put together by Gever Tulley, the slides were captioned with reflections of the families after their wild experiments such as boiling water in a paper cup, throwing a spear, and my personal favorite, licking a 9 volt battery.

However, there were a few other hazardous endeavors I would like to have seen on the list.  On July 21, we are hosting a workshop for kids about breaking into and out of cars! As part of Machine Project‘s artist residency on Walker’s Open Field this summer, L.A.-based artist Jason Torchinsky will teach kids about the mechanics of cars in a similar spirit of danger and exhilaration that could make the list…
#12: Get Locked in the Trunk

A couple weeks ago a brave intern and I went into the parking garage to see if this would work. We had a little instruction, but when the trunk popped open from the inside we felt completely empowered.

 

#13: Break into a Car

I have spent countless hours in sweltering or freezing parking lots waiting for a tow truck. Had I learned this skill at an earlier age I could have avoided so much trouble.

You can check out what previous participants have thought of the workshop at Make: Online or at boingboing.com. More information will be available soon about how to register the lucky kid of your choice for these education classes that let you break into an actual car! In the meantime, you can check out Tulley’s website for 50 Dangerous Things You Should Let Your Children Do.

 

 

 

 

Field Report: Photos from Nightshift

An estimated 4,000 people came through the Walker Art Center for Nightshift, the Walker’s contribution to the first annual Northern Spark Festival this past weekend. In addition to opening galleries for late-night viewing, we brought special activities to kick off the opening day (and night) of Open Field.

An estimated 4,000 people came through the Walker Art Center for Nightshift, the Walker’s contribution to the first annual Northern Spark Festival this past weekend. In addition to opening galleries for late-night viewing, we brought special activities to kick off the opening day (and night) of Open Field.

Open Field night skyline

View of the skyline from Open Field. Photo (c) 2011 Cameron Wittig

Nightshift is Livestreaming Now!

Hello hello night owls. It’s just past 10 p.m. at the Open Field, and the temperature is a comfortable 68 degrees Fahrenheit (according to weather.com, and that feels pretty accurate). Nightshift is getting underway, and the not yet bleary-eyed crowd is eager for the midnight hour(s). Sadly, since we know some of you can’t make [...]

Hello hello night owls. It’s just past 10 p.m. at the Open Field, and the temperature is a comfortable 68 degrees Fahrenheit (according to weather.com, and that feels pretty accurate). Nightshift is getting underway, and the not yet bleary-eyed crowd is eager for the midnight hour(s). Sadly, since we know some of you can’t make it, we’ll be livestreaming the event below, at least until our cameraman passes out. Cheers!

Watch live streaming video from walkerart at livestream.com