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by Paul Schmelzer at 5:10 pm 2006-10-31
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The much-anticipated staff pumpkin-carving contest–again demonstrating the triumph of concept over carving–came and went yesterday. Below are highlights of the 2006 smackdown, with top honors going to a wrestling-inspired homage to the work of Cameron Jamie. Kristen Mors, contest organizer and our visitors’ services specialist in Visual Arts, New Media, and Design, offers commentary:

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1st Place - Visitor Services - PP

“Cameron Jamie’s super-8 film, BB, and corresponding portraiture caused some sort of OCD-driven reaction. Thank god the voters liked it.”

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2nd Place - Events and Media Production with Performing Arts - Forgeries

“Inspired by Meg Stuart and Benot Lachambre with Hahn Rowe. For their performance Love, Forgeries, and Other Matters (April 2006), the McGuire stage was transformed into a monumental plush hill courtesy of EMP. I guess it made an impression upon them. Love, Forgeries, and Other Matters was my favorite performance of the season.”

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3rd Place - Wolfgang Puck - Untitled

“What can we say? A perennial staff lunch special.”

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Visual Arts - 1 pumpkin = 1 pumpkin

“Inspired by Thomas Hirschhorn’s Cavemanman. This installation/environment is part of the Heart of Darkness exhibition.”

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Walker Shop - Sirens?

Kiki Smith: A Gathering 1980-2005 influenced these gorgeous pumpkin-headed birds.”

See previous year’s entries: 2005, 2004.

Photos: Cameron Wittig


 
by Paul Schmelzer at 10:29 am 2006-10-27
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Have you been to the Walker Shop? If so, how was your experience?

The Shop is looking for visitor feedback–how’s the book selection? price? space layout?–and the carrot they’re dangling is a chance to win a home accessory from Italy’s Alessi.

[Survey is now closed. Thanks to all who participated.]


 
by Paul Schmelzer at 2:44 pm 2006-10-26
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WCCO TV in Minneapolis is running a new PSA they created for us, and we couldn’t be prouder. The spot animates the Walker identity strip and superimposes it in the galleries, public spaces, and sculpture garden–implying the dynamic nature of a place that hosts so many events in different artforms and for so many audiences. Special thanks to WCCO’s Scott Wooldridge and Kevin Wideman for their remarkable work.


 
by Justin Heideman at 11:03 am 2006-10-24
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The Flickr Blog this morning points out some photos and satellite images of Robert Smithson’s Sprial Jetty.

The Spiral Jetty

Geotagged spiral jetty photos, view from space

It occurs to me how amazing it is to be able to see artwork from this high above. Flickr has, via Yahoo, excellent satellite imagery for the area. Much better than google, in fact. Be sure to explore the area and related photos.

How does this relate to the Walker, other than the fact that we have Smithson’s work in our collection? The annual pumpkin carving contest is coming up, and I was perusing previous pumpkins. Phil Docken created a mash-up of the Spiral Jetty, a pumpkin, and the WAC:

[Phil] Docken addresses the Walker’s recently completed expansion through land art, a combination of Spiral Jetty and the excavation of the Walker site.

[Pumpkin photo: Cameron Wittig, Screenshot: Flickr Blog, Jetty Photo: blurb]


 
by Paul Schmelzer at 3:30 pm 2006-10-20
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After several weeks building Thomas Hirschhorn’s Cavemanman, Walker carpenter/installation technician Doc Czypinski says he occasionally forgets he’s not in a real cave. The packing tape-and-cardboard structure isn’t necessarily convincing in its materials, but its winding corridors and arched ceilings capture a compelling kind of cave-ness: labyrinthine, embracing, immersive. Part of the show Heart of Darkness, opening in just a few hours, the piece’s construction transformed a museum gallery where only weeks ago Diane Arbus’ photos were displayed into a subterranean cavern of consumption and philosophy.

The installation, which is a mirror image of Cavemanman as it appeared in New York’s Barbara Gladstone Gallery in 2002, started out as an outline in tape on the floor. Fire-resistant (and therefore pink) 2×4s spaced a foot or so apart were bolted to the gallery walls, and traditional wall structures were erected to provide the exterior support for the cave. Additional 2×4s were bolted at angles to create the archways and walls. Shipping pallets stacked underfoot created the uneven elevations that simulate a cavern’s rocky floor, and plywood bolted over them, sometimes bent before bolting so they flex when visitors walk over them, make it a safe, but–befitting a cave–unsteady path.

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Over this entire structure, pre-taped cardboard panels, the same ones used in the Gladstone installation, were set into place and seamed with brown packing tape (How much? Czypinski can only say that Hirschhorn shipped eight cases of the stuff here from his home base in France). While bookshelves were screwed into place, everything else in the gallery is adhered to the walls and ceilings with tape. The place is cluttered: tin cans on the floor; posters of Che Guevara, Bob Marley, Snoop Dogg and others plastered as if on a teenager’s bedroom ceiling; Xeroxed tracts from philosophy textbooks taped on walls; a tinfoil-covered family of mannequins stand near oversized (but blank) replica books and a fortlike assemblage of brown-tape boxes. Embedded in the walls are several TV monitors showing video loops of prehistoric caves.

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Having been a virtual cave dweller for two weeks, Czypinski has his own interpretation of what Hirschhorn might be saying with the piece. “He’s taking Lascaux and putting it in a contemporary setting, and [just as those prehistoric caves bore images deemed important at the time] he’s asking ‘What’s important to our culture?’” He points out the many posters on the walls–Janet Jackson, two versions of Pamela Anderson in various states of undress–then focuses on a metallic trash can overflowing with soda and beer cans (visible at center, above). “The only thing wrapped in gold is this trash can,” he says, noting that while there are shelves filled with philosophy books, they’re mounted so close to the ceiling they’re entirely out of reach.

Exhibition previews: Minnesota Daily, Star Tribune, Minnesota Public Radio.

Coming soon: An audio interview with Hirschhorn on Cavemanman. In the meantime, watch Hirschhorn’s artist talk from October 12 at the Walker Channel.


 
by Paul Schmelzer at 9:53 am 2006-10-13
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French Toast: To a CV that already includes Chevalier of the Order of Arts and Letters, chief curator, and Whitney Biennial co-curator, our own Philippe Vergne can add another: “Hottie.” Mpls.St.Paul magazine included the “French Fox” in its new rundown of “High-Profile Hotties.”

Tate tracks: Tate Modern has launched a cool new project in which they ask musicians to respond musically to art on view. A new track will be posted each month (so far, only one project has been completed, the Chemical Brothers’ soundtrack to Jacob Epstein’s 1913-1914 sculpture Torso in Metal from ‘The Rock Drill), and bands including Klaxons, the Landscapers, and Roll Deep will participate in coming months.

Land, Art: On December 11 and 12, the Royal Society of Arts and the London School of Economics presents No Way Back?, an interdisciplinary enquiry on the environment by leading artists, philosophers, architects and others. Former Walker visual arts fellow Max Andrews has edited the book, LAND, ART: A Cultural Ecology Reader, to be published in conjunction with the event (and available for sale in December through Cornerhouse). It features contributions by Thomas Hirschhorn, Winona LaDuke, Jimmie Durham, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Nobel Prize-winner Wangari Maathai, Bruce Sterling, former Walker chief curator Richard Flood (who writes on Richard Prince), and others.

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by Andy Beach at 12:16 pm 2006-10-11
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PEDAGOGICAL PROJECT (AVANT-GARDE, CZECH MODERNIST.) Sutnar, Ladislav. Original set of woodblocks for Build the Town. 30 pieces [complete], small wooden building blocks, cones, and triangles painted in red, blue, and yellow, some paint chipping, some a bit soiled. [New York, circa 1942] One of a handful of surviving prototypes; from the Sutnar family collection. Estimate: $7,000.00-10,000.00.

Ladislav Sutnar began his career in his native Czechoslovakia as a toy designer and educator. Between 1922 and 1926 he created Factory Town, a set of children’s blocks designed as an educational toy in the spirit of Friedrich Froebel’s blocks. After emigrating to the states, he tried in earnest to find a manufacturer for the set which he re-named less grimly Build the Town. This is one of only a few prototypes created, entirely at Sutnar’s expense, with the hope that the company Cobos/Builders would produce the set, but it was not to be realized. Another major impediment came from lumber companies that could not stop wartime orders to produce the wooden blocks. Despite his best efforts, Sutnar was forced to abandon the project. Build the Town represents an inventive attempt by Sutnar to introduce children to the basic forms, vibrant primary colors, and the creative freedom of design. [source: Swann Galleries, eBay]

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by Justin Heideman at 2:33 pm 2006-10-09
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I have a feeling this is going to be a very popular installation at the Tate Modern. Pixelsumo says:

German artist Carsten Höller has been commissioned to create this new work, entitled Test Site, for the Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall, part of the Unilever Series. Test Site consists of 5 giant spiralling slides, linking the upper galleries with the Hall!

Giant Slides

More Images © Tate Photography

According to the Tate:

For Carsten Höller, the experience of sliding is best summed up in a phrase by the French writer Roger Caillois as a voluptuous panic upon an otherwise lucid mind’. The slides are impressive sculptures in their own right, and you don’t have to hurtle down them to appreciate this artwork. What interests Höller, however, is both the visual spectacle of watching people sliding and the inner spectacle’ experienced by the sliders themselves, the state of simultaneous delight and anxiety that you enter as you descend.

To date Höller has installed six smaller slides in other galleries and museums, but the cavernous space of the Turbine Hall offers a unique setting in which to extend his vision. Yet, as the title implies, he sees it as a prototype for an even larger enterprise, in which slides could be introduced across London, or indeed, in any city. How might a daily dose of sliding affect the way we perceive the world? Can slides become part of our experiential and architectural life?

The BBC has video, which is well worth the watch. The largest slide is 182ft long and has a 5 story drop. I wish I was going to London soon to see and experience this.


 
by Andy Beach at 2:29 pm 2006-10-04
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These remind me of the boring & non-offensive awesome WACTAC t-shirt.

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MORE: Retro Kid & Retro Teen pools on flickr

Your Children’s Manners by Rhoda W. Bacmeister, 1952. Illustrated by Janet LaSalle.
When Children Start Dating
by Edith G. Neisser, 1951. Illustrated by Janet LaSalle.

[source: wardomatic's photoset on flickr]


 
by Andy Beach at 1:19 pm 2006-10-02
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Breakaway
Above: This is Toni Basil’s excellent and very rare 1966 single on A & M. The A-side is “Breakaway”, a soulful dancer that was the title track to a short film Toni starred in. The B-side is a terrific, moody piece called “I’m 28″, written by Graham Gouldman. The disc’s condition is about VG-, with some light marks, and some wear to the labels. Happy bidding and good luck. [ebay]

Breakaway (1966) by Bruce Conner, with (you’re so fine you blow my mind) Antonia Christina Basilotta.

Also: Mea Culpa, a previously unreleased Bruce Conner film made for Brian Eno and David Byrne’s 1981 album, My Life in the Bush of Ghosts.

2000 BC THE BRUCE CONNER STORY PART II [WAC]


 
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