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View fullsize 07Cosmos.jpg
View fullsize 07 Text Message.jpg

Sigh. Observe whether anyone noticed. Repeat. (COSMOS 1536)

January 31, 2018

SENT VIA SATELLITE TRIGGERED TEXT MESSAGE on 1/31/17 at 8:58am. 

FACT: COSMOS 1536-Zenit was a series of military spy satellites launched by the Soviet Union between 1961 and 1994. To conceal their nature, all flights were given the public Kosmos (Cosmos) designation. Dozen's of spy satellites orbit overhead daily.

*FEATURED IMAGE is of COSMOS 122: Maquette du satellite météorologique russe (1966), Musée de l'Air et de l'Espace, Paris Le Bourget (France). Obtained on Wikipedia Media Commons

 

Do you find meaning in these actions?

The week following our Orbiting Together project launch at the SAM Olympic Sculpture Park has been a... learning process. Recently, I heard a colleague say, "The aim is to make a project seem so simple and accessible that it appears as if it could have been pulled off overnight. Yet, the truth of the matter is that the behind the scenes work for these socially engaged projects is belabored." I have been feeling that labor. And because the timeline for this project is breakneck, that labor is exhausting and has taken an emotional toll; maintaining conceptual rigor while maintaining simplicity and clarity has almost been an out of body experience. Given the subject matter and content of the project as a whole, I find that ironic. 

All that said, when today's text appeared, I experienced the magic of this project for the first time. I felt as if the words arrived serendipitously, from the cosmos, ESPECIALLY FOR ME.  It was personal and intimate. I happened to be standing across from artist and director, Jessica Cerullo, in her vocalization class. She received the text at the same moment, a huge grin filled her face.  For some time we sighed as if passing the sigh back and forth in call and response.  In between each exhale we slyly looked around the room at the students filing in, carefully observing them. In-the-moment-ness filled our bodies.  And then, without saying a word we both went to sit at the circle forming in the middle of the room. 

Today, I needed those words.  And, based on the participation and feedback, it seems that others needed today's instruction too.

Today, the project felt complete and successful just for what it was.  

 

MORE: ACTIONS (from THE LAB)
or find posts from all categories of THE LAB below.

In Actions Tags Scores, Orbiting Together, Social Practice, Socially Engaged Performance, Social Choreography
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Follow behind someone you don’t know

January 22, 2018

Can technology help us feel more connected and less alienated?


Eric John Olson, Tamin Totzke and I are less than week away from our first participatory performance and project launch at the SAM Olympic Sculpture Park. Up until this point, the idea of guiding a group of strangers through space via text message felt curious, novel even... and perhaps interesting but we had NO IDEA if it would a.) affectively work or b.) serve as a meaningful experience for the participants. This second aim was particularly important to us and especially ambiguous. During our residency hours this weekend, we put this framework to the test. 

At the beginning of our residency, Eric, Tamin, my sweetheart Tim, and I decided that I would only travel to Seattle two weekends a month throughout the project. I have a young toddler and traveling more than that felt unsustainable; even this much would be a strain on our family but felt necessary and worth it. Consequently, my experience of this weekend's participatory "TESTS" were mediated via video chat.  Although I mourned the limitation, I also found beauty in the circumstance. Sitting in my studio on the other side of the state, I directed 20 participants, sending text messages to our small collective whom enacted the instructions one by one. Together, the group flocked through the room, laid their heads on strangers shoulders and envisioned change for the world. From 274 miles away I witnessed. 

We ran the "big score" once, met as collaborators, altered it and then ran it again. The feedback was unanimous and enthusiastic...they wanted more. As I watched them through a computer screen, individually reading text messages to move through space together and somehow still creating honest connections with each other, I found myself contemplating an F. Scott Fitzgerald quote I recently read in Rebecca Solnit book Hope in the Dark.  "The test of a first-rate intelligences is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function."  Technology isolates us and connects us.  In this project, that concept manifests in layers.  

Get free tickets to the first ART ENCOUNTER!  January 26 at 7-9pm at the SAM Olympic Sculpture Park.

Photograph by Allison Rowe.

Photograph by Allison Rowe.

 

MORE: TESTS (from THE LAB)
or find posts from all categories of THE LAB below.

In Tests Tags Text Message Systems, Orbiting Together, Participatory, Performance, Socially Engaged Performance, Social Choreography, Social Practice