Filed under: CW Lab Notes, office development, roof | Tags: personal architecture, portable housing booths
security booths, ticket booths, toll booths, fork-liftable booths, gaurd towers! 



caroline woolard to Natalie


Filed under: CW Lab Notes, Ownership Structures, office development, roof | Tags: housing, mfa, Ownership Structures, residency
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
Filed under: CW Lab Notes, good work, office development | Tags: architecture, Rauminszenierungen, tobias rehberger, tree house
Filed under: CW Lab Notes, good work, office development, roof | Tags: andreas strauss, austria, das park hotel, industrial architecutre, re-use
rethinking utilities: large concrete drain pipes as a hotel… reserve a room
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Filed under: office development | Tags: labor without workers, office development, workspaces at night
“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)
Filed under: office development, parking public | Tags: antimonument, christian hasucha, cutting, scaffolding, street mash-up, temporary architecture