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Machine on the Field: Opera Listens to You

  Last Friday, the usually vacant staircase outside of Gallery 4 was activated, perhaps for the first time ever, by Juliana Snapper’s work in progress “Opera Listens to You”. It was the first ever performance of the piece and I was lucky enough to witness the rehearsal process of Juliana Snapper and the Twin Cities [...]

Opera luxuriates on the steps in a moment of repose during rehearsal.

 

Last Friday, the usually vacant staircase outside of Gallery 4 was activated, perhaps for the first time ever, by Juliana Snapper’s work in progress “Opera Listens to You”. It was the first ever performance of the piece and I was lucky enough to witness the rehearsal process of Juliana Snapper and the Twin Cities vocal ensemble Deviated Septet and observe the work’s development. I even had the privilege of being the test subject. The ensemble started knowing that they were to listen to the subject’s feelings and respond to them musically. In its fledgling stages, the chorus oscillated between responding to people through formal song structure that mutated based on mood, and a more abstract and guttural response. Through pragmatic experimentation, they eventually chose the latter and after a thorough listening session, the Operatic chorus would vocally reflect the subject’s feelings and problems, in what was for many, a moment of catharsis.

 

The chorus empathized not only sonically, but also physically. Members of the chorus were united beneath an airy, white parachute, a costume choice that evoked a less structured version of Merce Cunningham’s parachute dresses. The parachute-clad ensemble literally opened its arms to the participant, bending to let him/her into the center of the parachute where s/he was then enveloped by the walls that materialized as the chorus raised all 14 of its arms. This gesture created a visual and sonic barrier between the subject and the rest of the audience so that as the subject shared his/her/their thoughts and feelings with Opera, audience members could barely decipher the subject’s words. Indeed, we were not entirely sure whether or not we were supposed to hear the person’s musings, which created an intriguing voyeuristic tension. After the listening session was through, the chorus morphed to physically embody the subject’s feelings. Their theatrical gestures took on a sculptural quality when performed underneath the white parachute. The performance was at once able to blur the line between sculpture and performance as well as private and public.

Opera raises its arms and envelops me like a cocoon.

But these underlying tensions are only the technical aspects of what made the piece so compelling. I, for one, was touched by the piece’s sincerity and in admiration of the willingness of the subjects and the ensemble to make themselves vulnerable. Everyone involved was pure in intent and galvanized by the opportunity to create. At times, the interaction between the ensemble and the participant seemed to verge on the spiritual. The wonderful acoustics in the space created overtones, which evoked the acoustics of a place of worship, and the intense emotional reactions, ranging from laughter to tears, imbued the space with a kind of mysticism. These tenuous moments of transcendence were what gave the piece its true power.

 

At one point, after what appeared to be two particularly emotional sessions, the ensemble proposed a listening and vocalizing exercise with audience members. In an ethereal sweep of swooshing white parachute, the human sculpture floated down the steps and perched themselves at the bottom. Juliana introduced us to an exercise called “Teach Yourself to Fly” by the musician and composer Pauline Oliveros. In this exercise, everyone closes their eyes, finds their breath’s natural rhythm, and lets out a sustained note of their choosing, for the duration of their choosing. We sat on the stairs, breathing out of sync together, sometimes singing, sometimes listening, and slowly, we made music. It was void of traditional rhythmic structure, atonal and amorphous. And that is why it was so beautiful. We were able to listen and to sing however we felt like and, for one suspended moment, this united us. As the noise slowly tapered off, I opened my eyes feeling refreshed and centered. My boss leaned over and whispered to me, “I think we need to do more therapeutic art”.  And as usual, she’s right.

Studio Visit: Adam Caillier and Michael Mott

Artists Adam Caillier and Michael Mott have been working collaboratively since May of 2010. They met on a blind referral, and they bonded over a love of a dog next door. Their artistic practice is grounded in writing and driving and focuses on activities which help to pass the middle part of the day. I [...]

Adam Cailler and Michael Mott

Artists Adam Caillier and Michael Mott have been working collaboratively since May of 2010. They met on a blind referral, and they bonded over a love of a dog next door. Their artistic practice is grounded in writing and driving and focuses on activities which help to pass the middle part of the day. I sent the two artists some questions recently, about making art through collaboration, their day-to-day routines and negotiations. Below are their (frequently laugh-out-loud funny) responses.

*****

Where do you live and work?
Michael Mott: South Minneapolis.
Adam Caillier: On a corner.

Studio (fig 2)

What is your studio space like?
AC: It’s a basement. There are some windows, a slop sink, and a small radio. There is a nice little yard in the back with a picnic table (fig 2) where we sometimes sit and have a smoke. We might have a drink if it’s been a particularly trying or exciting day.
MM: A cold beer or maybe some vodka and grapefruit juice.
AC: Right. We don’t just work in the studio though. We spend a lot of time out in the world.

What’s your preferred medium?

Studio (fig 3)

MM: Paper. We go through quite a bit of gasoline too.

Do you work separately or together?
MM: We work together.
AC: Yeah. Sometimes we’ll do a bit of writing separately but it just gets put back in.

Inside the studio (fig 1)

What do you listen to in the studio?
MM: We listen to the radio.
AC: Yeah, it’s strange—it just plays and plays.
MM: We listen to it all the time—especially on Saturday and Sunday afternoons—and we enjoy just a small percentage of the programs.

AC: I would say that we dislike most of them.
MM: Yeah we dislike most of them, but it is always running. We love the radio but we hate what’s on it.

How do you two resolve your creative disagreements?

Untitled still from "Finally We Are All Young Again" at MAEP, 2011, dimensions variable. Part of "Die Erotische Hauser or The Sweetest Taboo: Collected Erotic House Photos."

MM: We try to follow the path that is obviously the best. If that doesn’t work we use chance operations or acrostic poetry to settle things and move forward.

What are the most rewarding aspects of collaborative work?
AC: I like the talking—it’s good to have someone to talk to during the creative process. We really love our ideas and we love the work that it takes to turn them into quality ideas. So, we talk about them and we try to see the good ones through. It’s like, I can have an idea or Michael can have an idea, and then we spend a month or a year loving up on those ideas. We love up on them so much that, by the end, we have no idea where they came from—only that we love them.
MM: We can work on an idea so much that we become its only experts. I think that we haven’t yet figured out how to make mistakes—or how to call mistakes mistakes. So, the work might not be for everyone, but to us, it’s perfect.

Do you have any rituals for the studio?
AC: Definitely not.
MM: Yeah, no.

Still from the show "Finally We Are All Young Again," from the series "On Dancing Legs", 2011. Dimensions variable.

What are you working on now? Is there anything on the backburner?
MM: We’ve been working on cleaning up our image. And, our book of potato paintings, “You Make Me Wanna Smoke,” will finally be released in early 2012 by Die Erotische Hauser.
AC: Yeah—it’s 300 pages long. We’re also excited about our desire to show work in the Walker Art Center’s shop window—like they let Liz Miller do. We really think that we’re the right people for the job.
MM: We could be so professional.
AC: Totally. Other than that, we just have projects going. We are kind of in a purple period. We’re trying to teach the dog to walk itself.

Is there a local artist whose work has caught your eye lately?
MM: Justin Schlepp is great.
AC: Yeah, Justin Schlepp. Kate Farstad and David Frohlich have an MAEP show in April—that could be good.
MM: And Bruce Tapola is always up to something.
AC: Yes, Bruce. And there are others, of course.

______________________________________________________

Related exhibition details, additional information and links:

Finally, We Are All Young Again: Adam Caillier/Michael Mott will be on view, alongside Movie: Scott Nedrelow, in the Minnesota Artists Exhibition Program galleries of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts from July 22 – October 2.

Caillier and Mott were the featured banner artists for a recent issue of access+ENGAGE. See the article about them, created for mnartists.org’s e-journal, here.

Find more examples of the artists’ work and additional information on Caillier’s website, mnartists.org/michael_mott, and at the site for Location Books. Inquiries about specific work may be directed to the artists themselves.

Machine on the Field: Melons, Music, Mowers and Movies…Summer Jubilee Field Day II

For the past two weeks The Walker Art Center has welcomed the L.A. collective Machine Project to Open Field. Whether investigating art, technology, natural history, music, literature, food, or any of a wide span of interests, Machine Project approaches everything they do with a curiosity and enthusiasm that’s infectious.  That has ranged from Dog Operas [...]

For the past two weeks The Walker Art Center has welcomed the L.A. collective Machine Project to Open Field. Whether investigating art, technology, natural history, music, literature, food, or any of a wide span of interests, Machine Project approaches everything they do with a curiosity and enthusiasm that’s infectious.  That has ranged from Dog Operas to Apple II Orchestras; Parking Garage Concerts to Traveling Musical performances; Spontaneous Trumpet Soundtracks to  Polygraph tests.

We invite you to the second, and final Summer Jubilee moment this Thursday, July 28th for an entire day of melons, music, movies and mowers on the Open Field. So grab a friend and plot your day from the packed schedule below.  There is truly something for everyone.

Thursday, July 28: Summer Jubilee Field Day

11:30 am–12:30 pm, 2–3 pm, 4:30–5:30 pm, and even 7–8 pm

Meet the Earbees or Games for Ears
: Earbees look a lot like transistor radios, but instead of playing top 40 they record whatever you like and play it back looped. They can be placed somewhere particular, hidden, stacked, gambled with, buried, and thrown, there are lots of possibilities. The inventor of Earbees, Sara Roberts, will lead some favorite activities and we’ll see if you come up with some more. Make noise, make more noise, make better noise.

12:30 pm and 3pm

Composition for Photoelectric Array and Ambient Light: Sound artist Kamau performs live on the Open Field using the sun’s rays. Via solar panels and a light-to-frequency converter, you’ll be able to listen to sounds composed by measuring the rays of the sun as the light changes throughout the day. As a favor to Kamau, please refrain from doing any raindances until at least Friday, July 29.

2pm

Cowboys and Angels: Join musician Emily Lacy for a twelve-day world tour of the Walker Art Center. Starting every day from a different location on the Walker campus, she’ll be creating improvised music in reaction to each different space, with an ear towards wistful country songs and vocal electronica. Length of each performance will vary.

2-4pm

Electric Melon Workshop: Make your own amplified melon! All you need are simple soldering skills we will teach you, and one small melon, which we can provide while supplies last. In one afternoon you will:

1) build your own contact microphone
2) combine your mic with a melon to make an amplified melon
3) join our amplified electric melon drum circle
4) eat your melon when you’re done and/or take your melon rinds to the World of Pickling at the Walker Open Field and pickle your rinds.

All participants will be able to borrow soldering materials. No advanced registration required. Drum circle or previous electric melon experience also not required.

2–7 pm

The Fol Chen Verbal Algorithm Composer-Free Song Generator: Samuel Bing and Sinosa Loa of the band Fol Chen (Asthmatic Kitty) will produce a customized, one-of-a-kind song for each person who participates in the Fol Chen Verbal Algorithm Composer-Free Song Generator. This is a one-day event only!  Come fill out a survey about your experience at the Walker, turn your survey in to Bing and Sinosa Loa, and receive a CD of your very own custom song minutes later. At the end of Summer Jubilee, they will release the songs as a digital download Open Field EP.

3–10 pm

Echo Park Film Center: Filmmobile: Join Los Angeles’ Echo Park Film Center at the FlatPak House for hands-on workshops in filmmaking and stay for a screening of the workshop films in the evening. Between the workshop and the screening Walker curator Dean Otto leads a film pickling workshop. Creating equal and affordable community access to film and video resources since 2001, the EPFC are taking their show on the road this summer in a big blue bus that has been transformed into the EPFC Filmmobile: a full-service, eco-friendly screening and educational facility on wheels. They are stopping at the Walker for one night only—make sure to catch the bus!

EPFC Filmmaking Workshop: 3–6 pm, FlatPak House
Film Pickling Workshop: 6–7 pm, Walker Open Field
EPFC Film Screening: 9 pm, Walker Open Field

4–7 pm

World of Pickling: What’s summer without pickles? Come and partake in the wonderful world of pickling on the Walker’s Open Field. Watch in awe with a growling stomach as local chefs and brothers, Chris and Rhett Roberts demo the art of melon rind pickling and surprise the crowd with pickling some unexpected objects. Taunt your palate further as chef-farmer Nick Schneider makes sauerkraut and introduces you to the world of lacto-fermentation. Providing a glimpse into what it takes to win a State Fair Blue Ribbon, pickling and canning expert Barb Schaller will be in conversation with local writer Andy Sturdevant. Bring a jar from your own pantry to have it signed by Schaller. Strike a pose with either your favorite jar of pickles or with Dilly, the Gedney Pickle, as a caricature artist commemorates the moment. To round out the pickling panoply, draw a pickle still life at Drawing Club then pickle film with the Walker’s own Associate Curator of Film/Video, Dean Otto.

7–7:30 pm

the american lawn, and ways to cut it: Join us for Machine Project’s grand finale event: a three-part exploration of the American lawn and ways to cut it, via sheep, choreographed gasoline-powered ride-on-mowers with mounted oscillators tuned to the drone of their engines, and push mowers. Come help us examine the sonic nature of the Walker’s Open Field, while giving the lawn a much-needed trim.

11 am–9 pm

Invisible & Subtle Performances Pamphlets,  Adam Overton suggests private actions you can perform yourself, should you choose to do so. Written specifically for the Walker Art Center.

11 am-5pm

Poetry Phone, Look around the Walker for the black rotary dial phone on a fake rock. When the phone rings, pick up! There is probably a poet on the line waiting to read to you. The poetry phone offers mobile personal poetry performances, given via telephone by a variety of poets. Readings take place throughout the day in a variety of locations across the Walker campus. Poetry curated by Joshua Beckman, who is a poet himself, and enjoys the occasional phone call.

The shutdown is over but its effects linger on

TIPSHEET, July 21, 2011 It’s over. After this week’s special session, both houses of the state legislature passed the necessary budget bills to get government services back up and running again. The governor signed them in short order, and as of this morning, thousands of state workers are being called back into work. Shew — [...]

TIPSHEET, July 21, 2011

As of Thursday, July 21, Minnesota is open for business (sort of)

It’s over. After this week’s special session, both houses of the state legislature passed the necessary budget bills to get government services back up and running again. The governor signed them in short order, and as of this morning, thousands of state workers are being called back into work.

Shew — right?

But hold your horses: The shutdown may be over, but organizations, students, and artists will be feeling the effects of the nearly three weeks of limbo for a while longer. First, as the business of the state resumes operation, I suspect the wheels of government are going to grind a bit more slowly than usual. Just imagine the mountain of interrupted paperwork, missed calls, and email state workers will need to wade through to get things moving normally again.

So, even with most public employees returning to work today, if you’ve been chomping at the bit to talk to someone, say, at the Minnesota State Arts Board (MSAB), a bit more patience is in order. If you have questions for the administrators of the Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund about upcoming grant deadlines, or a pressing question about a contract, you’ll likely be waiting a little longer for a response.

Without “sufficient lead time” to prepare, Perpich Center for Arts Education has cancelled their Summer Music Workshops. A number of key grant deadlines will have to be pushed back. Even regional arts centers organizations not wholly reliant on the state are feeling the pinch of the shutdown, due to the cost of borrowing or dipping into cash reserves to maintain operations in absence of state funding support since July 1. Even with the resumption of state operations, we’re probably still a ways away from business as usual.

On the other hand, it looks like the state parks may well re-open to visitors as early as Friday (for day-use, at least); a number of other facilities, like the Minnesota History Center, are already open for business today. (On a related note: with MNHS back in business, that means this coming Tuesday night’s 9 Nights of Music concert is also now a go.)

So, it may be a few weeks yet before the state gets its groove back – and our public servants will have their hands full getting their houses in order in the meantime.

______________________________________________________

Before I go, a couple of “closing soons” you should know about:

LAST CHANCE: The Minnesota Museum of American Art’s final “Patio Nights” will take place on St. Paul’s riverfront this Friday, and it’ll also be your last chance to see Jim Campbell’s stellar installation, Scattered Light.

LAST CHANCE: The McKnight Photo Fellows’ exhibitions will close this weekend. The shows, at Franklin Art Works and Midway Contemporary Art in Minneapolis, show work from two years of fellowship recipients, from 2009/10 and 2010/11. You can read Miranda Trimmier’s thoughtful essay, “A Shuffling Game,” on the show here.

______________________________________________________

So, what state services and amenities did you most miss during the shutdown? Did the interruption of government call your attention to any previously-unappreciated services and programs in your own neighborhood? Weigh in with your experiences and reflections in the comments section below.

Machine on the Field: We have the bells, you bring the mower

Have you every wanted more out of your lawn mower?  Have you ever felt your mowing ability called for a special stage? Do you want to be a part of a large-scale-choreographed-sound-centric-mowing of the Walker Art Center’s Open Field?  Do your own or have access to a “reel” old-school-analog mower?  If so…we want you and [...]

Have you every wanted more out of your lawn mower?  Have you ever felt your mowing ability called for a special stage? Do you want to be a part of a large-scale-choreographed-sound-centric-mowing of the Walker Art Center’s Open Field?  Do your own or have access to a “reel” old-school-analog mower?  If so…we want you and your grass cutting talents.

Chris Kallmyer and Machine Project are asking community members to bring their reel mowers down to the Walker Art Center to perform a composition celebrating the American lawn.  You will participate in a large-scale, mobile-mower-orchestra with 50 other mowers covered in bells.  The piece will be loosely choreographed and will be a lot of fun!  If you are interested in participating you have to provide your own reel mower, but we will bring the bells (and the beer).

Here is how you can be part of our community mowing chorus!

1. Email scott.stulen@walkerart.org to let us know you are interested, available and committed.

1. Drop your reel mower off at the base of the Open Field hill (Vineland by the Sculpture Garden) on Thursday, July 28th between 5 and 6pm.  The Walker Art Center’s Mower Valet will have staff and signage indicating the drop off zone.  

2. Park in the Walker’s garage.  We will give you a ticket for free parking before you leave.

3. Meet with Chris Kallmyer and receive instructions for the piece at 6pm.

4. Outfit your mower with bells for the performance.

5. Mow the Walker’s Lawn from 7:15 to 7:30.

6. Have a beer, on us. Seriously, you have earned it.

about the piece

the american lawn, and ways to cut it

A three-part exploration of the American lawn, and ways to cut it.  The song-cycle will begin with an amplified sheep cutting the grass of the Walker’s Open Field.  The piece will continue with a duo of gasoline-powered ride-on-mowers with mounted oscillators tuned to the drone of their engines.  Finally, community members with ‘acoustic’ push mowers will encircle listeners in a feat of amateur choreography and blissed-out-sonic-grass-cutting.  The piece will serve to examine the sonic nature of the Walker’s Open Field, while giving the lawn a much needed trim.

Machine on the Field: Echo Park Film Collective and the Green-Energy Filmmobile!

As part of Machine Project’s Artists in Residence Summer Jubilee, the LA based artists Collective invited their friends and neighbors the Echo Park Film Collective to stop by the Walker. EPFC is a non-profit arts organization dedicated to making film/video an equal and affordable resource for the community. They do this via five channels: a [...]

As part of Machine Project’s Artists in Residence Summer Jubilee, the LA based artists Collective invited their friends and neighbors the Echo Park Film Collective to stop by the Walker. EPFC is a non-profit arts organization dedicated to making film/video an equal and affordable resource for the community. They do this via five channels:

  • a community microcinema and meeting space
  • free and nominal cost media arts education programs
  • a comprehensive small format film equipment and service department
  • a green-energy mobile cinema/film school
  • an international touring festival showcasing local established and emerging filmmakers

Their visit is just one stop on their cross-country tour in their green-energy mobile cinema and film school the Filmmobile! They will be hosting a workshop in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden Flatpack House from 3-6 on Thursday, July 28th followed by a film screening at 9PM that evening.

EPFC is stopping by Minneapolis on their tour across the vast and varried American landscape.

EPFC is stopping by Minneapolis on their tour across the vast and varried American landscape.

For More information check out  www.filmmobile.org  and www.echoparkfilmcenter.org
For exact show times and locations, follow us on Twitter @EPFCFilmmobile
Contact Paolo Davanzo and Lisa Marr by sending a message on Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/echoparkfilmcenter
https://www.facebook.com/filmmobile

You can follow their trip across the US of A on their blog http://www.epfcfilmmobile.blogspot.com/.

An invitation to participate: 1,001 Chairs: An Observance in Honor of Silenced Voices

We were excited to learn that Chinese artist Ai Weiwei was released from detention on June 22, but his voice remains limited by the government as are the voices of millions artists worldwide. To call attention to repression of artistic freedom, the Walker is hosting an event on what would have marked the 100th day [...]

We were excited to learn that Chinese artist Ai Weiwei was released from detention on June 22, but his voice remains limited by the government as are the voices of millions artists worldwide. To call attention to repression of artistic freedom, the Walker is hosting an event on what would have marked the 100th day of Ai Weiwei’s detention.

Fairytale: 1001 Qing Dynasty Wooden Chairs

THE EVENT: Inspired by one of Ai’s works, Fairytale: 1001 Qing Dynasty Wooden Chairs (a monumental installation made up of the titular antique chairs (see image) and was first presented at Documenta 12 in Kassel, Germany in 2007) we invite you to bring a chair or chairs of any type to place in front of the Walker Art Center on Hennepin Terrace. The goal is to amass 1,001 by 6 p.m as a way to acknowledge both Ai and other artists in China and around the world who work under oppressive conditions where artistic freedom is compromised. We are also anticipating a special contribution to the collection.

WHEN: Tuesday, July 12th from 8am to 6pm

WHERE: Walker Art Center, Hennepin Ave Terrace (rain or shine)

HOW CAN I PARTICIPATE?  It is as simple as bringing your chair.  Starting at 8am you may place your chair (or chairs) as part of the collection of 1001 on the Hennepin Terrace on the East side of the building.  Walker staff and volunteers will be present to greet and guide participants.  We ask that you leave your chair till the culmination of the event with a moment of silence and brief remarks by Walker Director Olga Viso at 6 p.m.  After which you are invited to (please) take/pickup your chair to take home.  Pickup will continue till 8:30.  Parking is available in the Walker ramp and on Vineland and Groveland Ave.  Please do not pickup or drop off directly on Hennepin Ave.

OTHER PROGRAMS: The Walker will offer free gallery admission the entire day, and galleries will remain open until 6 p.m., an hour past its usual closing time.

We will also be screening a short clip from American documentary filmmaker Alison Klayman,  who is in the midst of making a feature film Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry that follows the Chinese artist over a two-year period between 2008 and 2010. She is now updating the film with the recent events in his life.  So far she has over 200 hours of video, shot while traveling to seven countries and 11 cities with Weiwei, interviewing his family, friends, colleagues and fellow artists.  An 18 minute segment titled Who’s Afraid of Ai Weiwei was shown on PBS’s Frontline around the time of his arrest in Beijing on April 3, 2001. This short segment, which will play at the Walker Art Center on July 12,  provides background on Ai Weiwei’s work as an artist and activist.  He was released from jail on June 22.

About making the film Alison Klayman says, “I began filming Ai Weiwei in December 2008 and quickly got to know him through the stories he recounted about living in New York as a youth — something I could relate to as a young American who’s also now living in a foreign country. We talked about the evolution of his political consciousness, from his childhood in domestic exile with his father (renowned poet Ai Qing) to his decision to return to China in 1993 and remain a Beijing resident and Chinese citizen.”

The Walker plans to show the feature film when it is completed in spring of 2012.

ABOUT AI WEIWEI

As a message on the Facebook page dedicated to freeing Ai Weiwei puts it, “He may be out of prison, but he is not free. We must remember those who lack the most basic human rights and raise our voices in support of freedom.”

“We believe that no artistic voice should ever be silenced in any society,” said Walker executive director Olga Viso. “We envision the chairs on the Open Field as a reminder of artists across the world—artists we may not even know—who have been lost and who face repression and censorship every day. Weiwei’s art and his recent detainment have brought this reality into disturbing and important focus.”

Ai was detained April 3 by Chinese police at the Beijing airport while en route to Hong Kong. Though Chinese authorities have alleged that Ai is guilty of tax evasion, many in the international community believe the arrest was the government’s response to his politically-charged work and social activism – just as they believe that his release was brought about, at least in part, by international pressure.

Named in 2011 as one of Time magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world, Ai is a sculptor, architect, installation artist, and filmmaker. He  is perhaps best known in the U.S. for helping conceive the design of the “Bird’s Nest” stadium for the 2008 Beijing Olympics (he later wrote an op-ed for the Guardian UK titled “Why I’ll stay away from the opening ceremony of the Olympics”). His work has been exhibited in more than a dozen countries; in May, just weeks after his detention, his Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads was installed at New York’s Grand Army Plaza, one of the gateways to Central Park.

The state government shutdown – how is it affecting the local arts community?

(Last update: 7/15/11 at 11:00 am) UPDATE (7/15): A tentative deal between the principal negotiators – House Speaker Kurt Zellers, Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch, and Governor Mark Dayton – was announced yesterday afternoon when Gov. Dayton reluctantly accepted the GOP’s offer of June 30, tendered just hours before the shutdown began. However, none of [...]

(Last update: 7/15/11 at 11:00 am)

UPDATE (7/15): A tentative deal between the principal negotiators – House Speaker Kurt Zellers, Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch, and Governor Mark Dayton – was announced yesterday afternoon when Gov. Dayton reluctantly accepted the GOP’s offer of June 30, tendered just hours before the shutdown began. However, none of the parties involved appear to be enthusiastic about the outcome of the budget agreement, which relies on a substantial education payment shift (in plain English: the state takes out a one-year IOU for 40% of the funds it owes local school districts), as well as borrowing from future state tobacco settlement funds. If it passes both the DFL and GOP caucuses in the legislature, the state will likely recall its workforce and resume operations in the very near future.

According to a newsletter announcement this morning sent by the advocacy group, Minnesota Citizens for the Arts, included in the current budget agreement up for a vote are provisions which will release much-needed Legacy Amendment funds to the Minnesota State Arts Board and regional arts councils, and from there to the local artists and arts organizations awaiting their grants.

You can follow the developments in the budget talks and shutdown:

on MinnPost.com

in the Minneapolis Star-Tribune

on Minnesota Public Radio

in the St. Paul Pioneer Press

in the Minnesota Independent

in the Minnesota Daily

in the Duluth News-Tribune

in the Rochester Post-Bulletin

in the Associated Press

*****

Well, here we are. Minnesota’s fiscal year ended at midnight last night, and without agreement between the legislature and the Governor on the state’s 2012-2013 biennial budget, we’ve officially entered the uncharted territory of the most sweeping government shutdown in Minnesota state history.

Confused about how we got here? Just below is an incredibly clear, three-minute explanation of the whys behind the shutdown, courtesy of the folks at MPR. Watch it. (I’ll wait.)

There’s little else in the news all over the state today, and there are a number of handy guides to what’s open and closed in a variety of media outlets. But here’s the thing: even with Judge Kathleen Gearin’s order in hand, while we now have a general sketch of which “critical core functions” of government will continue despite the shutdown, the more precise details about how this will all play out are still pretty murky. But if a state-run or –subsidized program isn’t directly tied to public safety and health concerns, it’s a safe bet that it’s shuttered and closed for business until a new budget agreement is signed and goes into effect.

Visit BeReadyMN.org for more information, including some answers to a few general government shutdown questions.

Closed for business during the shutdown

For artists looking to find out how the shutdown will affect them – in terms of grant information sessions, dispersal of Legacy funds, availability of regional arts councils’ services and programs, etc. the Minnesota State Arts Board (MSAB) has the most complete information on their website. Below you’ll find the high points.

The MSAB will be closed and unable to respond to email or phone calls for the duration of the shutdown. Which means that until the state government is back up and running:

  • No Arts Board grant payments (including those affiliated with the Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund) will be made
  • No contracts (or contract amendments) will be executed
  • No grant applications will be reviewed or approved (pertinent deadlines will likely be extended as a result of the shutdown)
  • No contact or meetings will resume until the shutdown is over

Regional arts councils, as independent nonprofit organizations, are not required to close down during the shutdown, but the State of Minnesota is the principal source of funding for most of them; since the legislature has not approved either the state general fund appropriations, or the arts and cultural heritage fund Legacy Amendment appropriations for fiscal year 2012-13, most of them will not have the funds to continue their operations. You can contact the regional arts councils in your area to find out more information.

Other arts organizations whose operations have ceased or been curtailed because of the state government shutdown include:

Minnesota Humanities Center

Minnesota Historical Society (including its museums, libraries, historic sites, and programs like the “9 Nights of Music” outdoor concert series)

Minnesota Zoo (although the IMAX showings and concert series will continue)

Perpich Center for Arts Education

All Minnesota state parks

A bright spot in all this bad news is that arts programs affiliated with the state’s colleges and universities, as well as those in independently operated and city- or county-run museums, programs, parks, and arts organizations, will for the most part remain open and largely unaffected by the state government shutdown. Among these are the Walker Art Center and Sculpture Garden and mnartists.org; neither is dependent on state funding, and both organizations will be open and operating as usual during the shutdown.

*UPDATE: Judge Gearin ruled this week that the Minnesota Zoo could remain open during the shutdown. “Gearin agreed with the argument posed by the zoo’s attorneys, who said it should be able to open using a state law that directs zoo gate revenue back to the facility. Because it has a standing appropriation, they said, it should be allowed to open.” (Via Minneapolis Star-Tribune)

*UPDATE (7/9): Northfield Arts Guild will remain open, in spite of the closure of the State Arts Board (via Northfield Patch)

*UPDATE (7/9): Ditto for the Metropolitan Regional Arts Council, which will tap their existing funds to remain open during the shutdown as long as they’re able

*UPDATE (7/12): The Board on Minnesota Film and TV is in operation for the time being, but they’re asking for donations to keep the doors open through July, as most of their funding comes directly from state funds still pending. UPDATE 7/14: MinnPost has a nice piece today about the effects of the shutdown on Minnesota’s film industry.

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If you’d like to make your voice heard at the capitol, find contact information for your district’s representatives here.

UPDATED 2 pm, July 1: Marianne Combs, “State of the Arts” blogger for MPR is covering the shutdown, with some good reporting from the regional arts councils.

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Check back next week. I’ll be following the developments as they unfold, and will post again when we have more information about the finer details on how the shutdown is playing out in arts communities around the state. In the meantime, all you artists, speak up in the comments below: How is the government shutdown affecting you?