Modular Portable Housing
February 13, 2008, 4:15 am
Filed under: CW Lab Notes, office development, roof | Tags: ,

security booths, ticket booths, toll booths, fork-liftable booths, gaurd towers! 

caroline woolard to Natalie
show details 10:38 PM (40 minutes ago)
Reply

http://www.easyrack.org/portable-buildings-a-335.htmlMOhttp://www.portafab.com/applications_guard_booths.shtmlhttp://www.portafab.com/information_request.aspNJhttp://www.meta-lite.com/booths8.htmhttp://www.meta-lite.com/booths14.htmlhttp://www.meta-lite.com/booths15_1.htmlbulkhead and general NY permit stuffhttp://permitspace.blogspot.com/2007/10/roof-access-for-interior-stairs.html 



Ownership Structures

Q: Why are residencies appealing when they perpetuate a white-cube approach to site and context? A: The residence itself! In NYC, more than half of my income goes to housing and commuter transportation (I make $1,350 a month. I spend $675 on housing and $80 on a subway pass or bike fixes and occasional taxi rides). Many residencies provide little equipment and fly in artists from urban areas for “focused” attention. This model is familiar and therefore, more easily funded. I propose: a residency in anyone’s urban home, office, or studio! Take the money used to buy land/build studios/house artists, and use existing structures (offices, apts) in NY so you can spend the money on a project or artist’s fees. Use it as a tax write off! Find a way for individuals to affiliate with the artists-in-my-residence project or the artists-not-in-residence (a.k.a. keep-the-artist-in-my-city) support project.

Or to simply deal with the housing issue… Stop the boring and traditional industrial gentrification (artists exploited for cultural capital) and find alternative lifestyles in re-imagined urban life. House in a parking lot! House in a graveyard! House on a roof! House in a fire escape. Why can’t we have long term artistic communities in urban environments? How will I ever get to know or trust or age with my neighbors? Will my neighborhood even be distinguishable from the next? Is NY becoming the suburb we fled from? Why won’t the city and the housing department approach artists systems with the same flexibility as the netherlands or germany? And why not allow art projects as “temporary” as the temporary structures of municipal construction?

Q: Why pay for an MFA at grad school? A: Don’t! Simply formalize the conceptual art vocation enough to guarantee standards of quality and legitimacy. For example, classical musicians are certified by a single mentor’s trust to enter the profession and architect’s apprenticeships have a currency towards licensing and public trust. In new programs like the MFA program at Vermont College, students select mentors for an accredited system, allowing “students to incorporate life experience and previous education into self-designed studies.”

Natalie says: read Sexton



Durable Dress
February 5, 2008, 12:25 am
Filed under: CW Lab Notes, Durable Dress | Tags:

I’m developing a durable dress. These dresses will speak to this domestic icon’s functional potential. A dress should be produced with the same research beyond beauty as a firefighter’s uniform. This is just tactical gear for different tactics (or re-defining a woman’s tactics). As Natalie Jeremijenko demonstrates, high heels are good for climbing fences (hook the heel in the holes). What unique benefits can be mined from this gendered form?

stepanova jumpsuitsmockshop

PRECEDENTS

Rodchenko and Stepanova’s outfits of socialist ambition, the recent gallery as store, SmockShop project by Andrea Zittel (flickr set). Ixilab has the most interesting art/design approach to wearable architecture I’ve seen.

tactical vest

Strange examples of specialized outfits and extreme entrepreneurs are: UtiliKilt (worker skirts for men), Adventure Vest, Skillers jumpsuits, Fly fishing outfits, tactical vests, photojournalists vests, etc.

MATERIALS

For the xDesign Environmental Health Clinic, where I am a Specialist employed by Natalie Jeremijenko, I will produce a radiation shield durable dress. The material is called Demron and can be ordered here. Space suit layers can be clicked through here.



Tobias Rehberger

Rauminszenierungentobias rehberger, tree house, Rauminszenierungen



Das Park Hotel by Austrian Andreas Strauss

rethinking utilities: large concrete drain pipes as a hotel… reserve a room
das park hotel andreas straussdas park hotel andreas strauss



Francis Cape
January 13, 2008, 8:52 pm
Filed under: CW Lab Notes, good work | Tags: , , ,


Enough Room for Space show about reimagined public space

Martin Hendrijks show called Enough Room for Space about

“Displacement of residents, whether they are gentrifying artists priced out of Soho or the poor and unemployed excluded from New York altogether, is no random by-product of gentrification but its structural condition. Decay, disinvestment, abandonment . . .prepare the way for profitable reinvestment . . . Like all the social relations that art supposedly transcends, housing is one of the historical circumstances of its existence”. Rosalyn Deutsche, “Alternative Space”

“And howsoever oppositional we architects may be, as long as we fail to challenge basic elements of society, such as the concept of private property, nothing will improve. This is a great paradox for me”. Achim Felz, “IKAS: An Experiment in Extra-Parliamentary Architectural Opposition”



“24 Hour Ghetto Workout” reimagines street furniture
December 29, 2007, 1:45 pm
Filed under: parking public | Tags: , ,

Watch it here



Architecture of Parking Lots
December 29, 2007, 1:44 pm
Filed under: Texts, parking public | Tags: ,

photo book to buy



Roof fooR Me!
December 29, 2007, 4:45 am
Filed under: roof | Tags: , , ,

 incognito roof skylight research

I am researching air rights, roof design, and building code issues related to my rooftop aspirations with skylines of horizonal inspiration.



Urs Fischer, Paul McCarthy, New Museum, Anthony Dunne, Mark Manders, MASK show

I just finished the 1999 Anthony Dunne’s 1999 Hertzian Tales, with his “aesthetics of functionality” which allows critical, imaginative discussion around the values embodied in objects. If designers are “providers of new behavioral opportunities,” these critical objects of use certainly do “challenge the monopoly of established reality.” (marcuse)

mask show james cohen

The MASK show approaches a functional typology in the gallery context, leaving room for speculation about the entire production of a “museum” show, with it’s labels (this time referencing context rather than material). The oldest working smoke mask next to a matthew barney pushes the line between pragmatic utility and tools for mood in a surrealist narrative.

Tanya Bonakdar’s obsession with designed objects and complex visual language produced a group show called Office, but I was more impressed by the individual artists’ catalogs than the mash up of their works sitting side by side. Mark Manders, for example, is my new favorite! His visual language is so nuanced (and luckily he can articulate it with spoken language as well) that he created his own newspaper for his papeir mache objects. He says about one piece:
“I purposely arranged the rugged still life in a typically Dutch, linear, stern manner. It’s a very rhythmic arrangement, one that, fictionally, was made on a warm Sunday afternoon, after which it was abandoned and then appropriated by the night….
Finally, could you talk briefly about how you decided to become an artist?
It was a convergence of several aspects, of course. First of all, it’s fantastic to live and to be able to zoom in on a piece of wood that might be lying in your garden. I can’t allow myself to leave this world without first having said something. When I was eighteen, I realized that I had an affinity with the language of the visual arts, and I immediately felt a great sense of obligation to use it with care and in a concentrated way. At that time, I was also extremely fascinated by the fact that I wore shoes and that my feet had become so weak after undergoing such a long evolutionary process and that they could no longer do without the protection afforded by my shoes. I was extremely fascinated then by how humanity had arrived at the human world through innumerable decisions and how the human body related to this. I wanted to add a self-portrait to this – not a personal self-portrait in the literal sense, but more the idea of a self-portrait, the idea of a construction, a fictional self-portrait. A construction found outside the body, like shoes. I still believe that art is the language to work in. It’s ultimately closer than science. After all, what am I? A human being who unfolds into a horrifying amount of language and material by means of very precise conceptual constructions.
How does writing relate to your visual work?
It is a part of it, of course, and it’s also something practical. For some works, it’s good that they exist only in language, and sometimes sculptures don’t seem feasible at first from a practical point of view.
Could you give us an example?
One example of such a image is the night that yearns for space and immediately creeps into your shoe when you take it off in a meadow at night. This type of image seems difficult to translate into a spatial object; that’s why it’s found its way into my collection of poems. Later, I realized that the night always enters the shoe by the same entrance when you take the shoe off. This has been happening in the same way since the very first shoe was made. But if you glue the shoe completely shut, make a new opening at the toe, and then attach a funnel-like construction to the opening, you’ve easily created a new entrance for the night.”

paul mccarthy

Paul McCarthy’s chocolate factory literally cut a hole in the wall of the factory to make production visible. But rather than adopting the entire system for a simple re-contextualization, he pushes consumption and production to excess, pouring chocolate in large bags and producing life sized santa clauses. The over abundance proves critical distance.

urs fischer gallery floor removed

Urs Fischer creates a foyer at 80% of the space it opens into, making a double experience in model.

Also, the psychosocial connotations of sculptures in living spaces is taken to its full potential in the uterus sculptures, shown in living context, history and all. Spoons are just as strange and absurd as this.

unmonumental new museum

Oh, and the New Museum “unmonumental show” in their new bowery monument is truly unmonumental. We don’t need the old white cube in order to look at quick, cheap sculptures… re-think the viewing mechanism with the approach to object making!



Workplaces at Night by Anja Hertenberger / Anja Steidinger
December 29, 2007, 4:08 am
Filed under: office development | Tags: , ,

“Workplaces at night” is a three-part project combining performance, investigative research techniques,
and creative imaginings. We are exploring evidence of labour during the absence of the workers.

Is representation of work/labour possible?
While researching we visit workplaces at night with flashlights. We do photographic and video
documentation of the left-over, or unfinished tasks resulting from daytime operations.
What do we learn about work processes by exploring workplaces after the employees have left?
What is production? What are the conditions?
Do we find spaces that are not connected with the context of production?
What is the state “of being productive”?
What does the term “creation” mean within the so-called cultural production? Do we find evidence of “cultural industry” within workplaces that are not connected with cultural production?

The project consists of three parts
action > visits to different workplaces at night with flashlights and cameras:
lawyer’s office, medical practice, multimedia studio, theater, airport, toy factory, architectural office,
candle factory, barbershop, artist’s studio

publication > presenting recorded material in a catalog and a blog
(text archive and images attempting to define “WORK” and “PRODUCTION”)
installation > establishing a space to present the material (installation, video, photography, text)




christian hasucha
December 26, 2007, 10:31 pm
Filed under: parking public | Tags: ,

portable bench



Christian Hasucha

christian hasuchachristian hasucha



Public Seats 2007



Slowly, the new seats arrive. For Conflux, they are mysterious. For a noPARK with the xDesign Clinic run by Natalie Jeremijenko, one moved from Roebling in Williamsburg to the East Village.



public interventions
September 10, 2007, 4:55 pm
Filed under: CW Lab Notes

Brooklyn parking lot field research

pedestrian street mobility retrofit innovation

mobile structures compilation

surveilance manhattan

mocking public signage



Recent Experiments
June 9, 2007, 2:23 pm
Filed under: CW Lab Notes

climbingpost.jpg



Itziar Okariz
June 2, 2007, 10:20 pm
Filed under: CW Lab Notes

itziarOkariz.jpg



Eelko Moorer
June 2, 2007, 10:14 pm
Filed under: CW Lab Notes

Balconyseatw.jpg
My thoughts exactly… objects for action, mood, and film. BirdPeople by EelkoMoorer
The urgent yet confident vulnerability that this tool/prosthetic proposes…



Joost Conijn
April 7, 2007, 10:21 pm
Filed under: CW Lab Notes


Joost Conijn, Iron and Video
The motto is: do it. Go for it completely: a plan, a journey, a film. Inspired, deliberately uninhibited. Joost Conijn sets up a gate in the desert that opens automatically. Takes off in a plane that he built himself. Travels through Russia in a wood-powered car made of wood, all the way to the Chernobyl zone. Films the neighbourhood kids for a year, capturing their life on the fringes of society. Improves his plane and then crashes it. Cycles through the Moroccan Rif Mountains with two friends; they use their hands to communicate with one another about what’s going on in the world. He moves through life with an independent attitude and plays the big game of art. With bravura, and yet totally straight.
http://www.joostconijn.org/index2.php



Marie Lorenz seal in the East River
April 7, 2007, 10:20 pm
Filed under: CW Lab Notes



Andrea Blum
April 7, 2007, 10:19 pm
Filed under: CW Lab Notes


We bring our coffee to the park to make it our living room, we open a newspaper to make a wall…



Jun Nguyen Hatsushiba
April 7, 2007, 10:19 pm
Filed under: CW Lab Notes


lessening the force of gravity… soon I too will live underwater



Ere Liis Semper
April 7, 2007, 10:18 pm
Filed under: CW Lab Notes


misrecognized function



Gabriel Orozco My Heart is My Hands
April 7, 2007, 10:18 pm
Filed under: CW Lab Notes



Gordon Matta Clark
April 7, 2007, 10:17 pm
Filed under: CW Lab Notes


Nothing Works Best
Nothing Words Beast
Beast of the North World
-from his sketchbook (misrecognize, fragment words like architecture)



Francis Alys
April 7, 2007, 10:16 pm
Filed under: CW Lab Notes


represented by David Zwirner



Welcome to this blog
April 7, 2007, 10:08 pm
Filed under: CW Lab Notes

test



Henri Lefebvre
March 8, 2007, 2:50 am
Filed under: Texts | Tags: , , ,

Lefebvre says his “Critique of Everyday Life was written to create an architecture that would itself instigate the creation of new situations.”

K.R.: Did the Situationist theory of constructing situations have a direct relationship with your theory of “moments”?

H.L.: Yes, that was the basis of our understanding. They more or less said to me during discussions — discussions that lasted whole nights — “What you call ‘moments,’ we call ’situations,’ but we’re taking it farther than you. You accept as ‘moments’ everything that has occurred in the course of history (love, poetry, thought). We want to create new moments.”

K.R.: How did they propose to make the transition from a “moment” to a conscious construction?

H.L.: The idea of a new moment, of a new situation, was already there in Constant’s text from 1953. Because the architecture of situation is a Utopian architecture that supposes a new society, Constant’s idea was that society must be transformed not in order to continue a boring, uneventful life, but in order to create something absolutely new: situations.