Off Center

Outside Ideas from Inside the Walker Art Center

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Author: Justin Heideman


Email: justin.heideman@walkerart.org
My Website: http://newmedia.walkerart.org/


by Justin Heideman at 1:03 pm 2008-05-04
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Flak Radio Podcast

Last week I was interviewed on Flak Radio, the weekly podcast for Flak Magazine. I sat down with James Norton and Taylor Carik to discuss The UnConvention. If you’re confused about what that is, the podcast is a good way to find out.

Also discussed: Taylor Carik as the Twin Cities best Twin Cities blogger, mnspeak as the best local website, presidential trivia, agricultural land masses, GTA IV, and the only bird can fly backwards (hint: not a pelican).


 
by Justin Heideman at 8:00 am 2008-05-02
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holzertwitter.jpg Lifestraw Family johan-lorbeer.jpg Mulletboy
  • Art 21 Trio: A slew of recent things that caught my eye on Art 21 lately. First, they noted that Jenny Holzer is using twitter. I maintain that Holzer is perhaps the only user who’s tweets are actually worth caring about. I love that the only person she’s following is an impostor Guy Debrod, notable French Marxist. The site was practically designed for her w. Secondly, they note an “interview” with Barry McGee on VBS.TV. And there is an update on Mel Chin’s Fundred Dollar Bill Project. Congrats on all the awards, too.
  • Sponsor a Lifestraw: Treehugger points out you can chip in to put a family version of the Lifestraw in more homes that need them. Lifestraw is a really slick, inexpensive (at least for rich Westerners) device that filters almost any water into drinkable. The family version turns it into a drinking source suitable for a home. The Lifestraw is one of many objects and tools designed for improving the quality of life in impoverished parts of the world and part of the exhibition Design for the other 90%, coming to the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden this summer. I don’t think the Family version is part of the show, so it is interesting to note it’s development.
  • Reminds me of Trisha: Neatorma links up German artists Johan Lorbeer and photos of his rather amazing performances. The headline photo is awfully reminiscent of some of Trisha Brown’s Man Walking Down the Side of a Building, which will be presented again at the Walker this summer. (Photo by fotoburra.)
  • Not related to anything, but somehow appropriate: Mullets. [via] (Photo courtesy of Cody Buckalew/Republican Eagle.)

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    by Justin Heideman at 4:03 pm 2008-04-01
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    Tyvek Jacket by mauThe Walker Shop always has unique and interesting merchandise, and often has special items related to current exhibitions. For Worlds Away, Walker shop Director Nancy Gross came across some clothing that makes use of Tyvek, a common building wrapping material. Since the exhibition deals with sprawl and construction, and the same time there is a focus on re-use and green design these days, the work is an obvious fit. I asked the designer, Marian Schoettle (a.k.a. mau) to write a bit about the Tyvek jacket and Tyvek bag:

    My name is Marian Schoettle and my work has recently been included in the store - clothing and bags out of Yyvek® a featherweight non-woven material with the label post industrial folk wear by mau. It looks like paper but it's not so perishable. The material is made by Dupont and it is known primarily as a house insulating material and the material of post office envelopes. (tough, right?) It is comprised of 25%recycled HDPE 2 and is recyclable.

    This work is part of a twofold project. The work at the Walker consists of modern featherweight clothing and bags (none weighing more that 500 grams) that challenge some of our ideas about 'suitability'. The Walker has white jackets, coats and bags that are made with hard structure tyvek. They also have jackets that are actually made from house insulating tyvek (with the advertising writing all cut up). Ironically the house insulating material is not as abrasion resistant as the hard structure tyvek, I guess because it's supposed to be covered over with vinyl siding!

    The other part of post industrial folk wear is a global psycho-geography project in which volunteers create interactive scenarios while walking around cities, wearing my jackets (drawing or writing on them). Under the auspices of Chashama and the New York Foundation for the Arts this project will occur in NYC May 18 - 24, 2008.

    Tyvek Bag by mauIn the past I've collaborated with the weather to create storm dresses, devised sound and image installations in abandoned monasteries in Eastern Europe, built tepee space modules in the National Building Museum in Washington, designed performance clothing and art wear, as well as taught in art and design academies in Western Europe.

    This collection is sewn in the New York City garment district, the tyvek material is made in the USA, and the surplus materials are gathered from local computer, snowboard and automotive industries. All cutting room scraps are recycled via DuPont's in-house recycling.


     
    by Justin Heideman at 11:55 am 2008-03-26
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    Centerpoints 9.4

    • “I’ve heard its very unique:” Vbs.tv has a four part interview with Richard Prince, discussing the way he works at his his studio in upstate New York. Prince’s show, Spiritual America, opened here last weekend.
    • Maiden & Moonflower: Art21 lets us know that Kiki Smith has just produced a collection of hand-screened wallpaper for part of her new exhibition, Kiki Smith: Her Home. According to Art21, “Her Home spans a woman's life from birth to death. Using domestic existence as a starting point, Kiki Smith revisits her own history rooted in protestant New England.” No word if there are temporary tattoos available.
    • Paydirt: Mel Chin, who completed a residency at the Walker in 1991, has a lengthy two part interview up on Art21. The interview covers his new project, Fundred Dollar Bill, a public generated art project on a national scale. I have a feeling that as the US dollar declines, Chin’s bills will hold their value.
    • Reap what you sew: Kara Waker was also featured in the latest issue of Flaunt Magazine. Walker’s Walker organized show, Kara Walker: My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love recently opened at the Hammer Museum in LA. [via]
    • Invented a Toy? Just Print It. Wired has an interview with the creators of Q-BA-MAZE profiled by Matt in a video blog last month, currently featured in the Walker Shop window. Wired asks them about how rapid-prototyping assisted their product development process: “Rapid-prototyping made it possible to physically test each new generation of the cubes by building with them and rolling balls through. The design evolved in response to the lessons of each RP generation.”

     
    by Justin Heideman at 3:35 pm 2008-03-20
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    Centerpoints 9.3


     
    by Justin Heideman at 2:47 pm 2008-03-07
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    Witt in the Guthrie TheaterHow would you spend a perfect day in Minneapolis? This is a question Walker Teen Programs Manager Witt Siasoco answered in a two-page spread in Giant Robot, the fantastic Asian pop culture magazine. Like any good day, it starts with coffee and breakfast, followed by a mysteriously short one-hour workday. There are scans of the article up here: page 1, page 2.


     
    by Justin Heideman at 1:14 pm 2008-03-03
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    Centerpoints 9.1

    photo credit: Robo Phones (Yoshikazu Tsuno / AFP/Getty)


     
    by Justin Heideman at 2:34 pm 2008-01-24
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    Our open call for video submissions to Worlds Away: New Suburban Landscapes was extended a week to allow would be video-makers extra time. And whew, was the extra week worth it! We added several new submissions. Even though I’m not judging them or curating them, I do have a favorite: West St. Paul, a music video about the suburb that exemplifies the river-skewed geography in the Twin Cities.

    More on the exhibition as the opening approaches. Here’s all 31 submitted videos:


     
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