Evénements artistiques à la maison (ou privé) !
Que du bon...
Un membre de la liste des géographes critiques demande à ses collègues de lui donner des références d’événements artistiques spécifiquement formatés pour être présentés “à la maison”, dans nos foyers, en milieu local.
C’est l’occasion de donner quelques liens sur ce phénomène intéressant :
1.Brighton and Hove’s ‘Artists Open Houses
https://dl.dropbox.com/s/g443hcw6bqegye9/brighton.png
What is Artists Open Houses?
Twice a year artists and makers open their houses and studios, providing art lovers the chance to browse and buy original artwork direct from the artist. With a focus on quality and value for money, the Artists Open Houses festival aims to bring a dynamic mix of arts and crafts to the widest possible audience, providing visitors and viewers with engaging and inspiring experiences.
Signalé par Ian Cook
2. Make-shift
▻http://make-shift.net/how-it-works
make-shift is an intimate networked performance and discussion event that re-imagines the private actions of our domestic lives as multiple, interconnected and with global consequences.
Each event takes place simultaneously in two ordinary houses connected through an online interface, accessible through the Live Stage link on this website to anyone around the world with internet access. Not only telematically connecting artists in two different spaces nor working in a purely online chat/graphic format: make-shift combines the two, creating real-time dialogue between houses and people across the globe.
Signalé (aussi) par Ian Cook
3. This City’s Centre - Your City’s Centre...
▻http://www.thiscityscentre.net/process
Do you live within 10 minutes walk of Cathedral Green We are looking for a diverse group of central Exeter residents (and their views) to work with as part of This City’s Centre.
Participants don’t need any experience at all, just a willingness to share the view from your window as inspiration for different aspects of the project. You can participate in a number of ways.
http://www.thiscityscentre.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/philslider3.jpg http://www.thiscityscentre.net/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/shot0022.jpg This is a window frame from…
This is a window frame from the Sketchup Warehouse imported to my beach near Northampton. Twinity maps not the most convincing.
A Room with a View: An interview with co-author and director of ‘This City’s Centre’ | The Exeter Daily
▻http://www.theexeterdaily.co.uk/news/entertainment-reviews/room-view-interview-co-author-and-director-%E2%80%98-city%E2%80%99
A Room with a View: An interview with co-author and director of ‘This City’s Centre’
The recent project known as This City’s Centre, created by the collective Blind Ditch, has been causing quite a stir in Exeter as it is getting residents to question what lies behind their city centre. The Exeter Daily managed to grab a conversation with the co-author of the project, Paula Crutchlow, to find out more about this fascinating project and how a view from your window can not only be a piece of art but can also trigger a conversation as to what is private and public space.
Hear more about the making process in Private Views and Public Art, a discussion between videographer Volkhardt Müller and Cultural Geographer John Wylie (University of Exeter) held at RAMM, 13 Sept 2013 (running time 1hr 1min).
▻http://www.thiscityscentre.net/installation
4.HOMU: The Homeless Museum of Art
▻http://www.homelessmuseum.org/hmu_pages/homu_cribs_intro.html
HoMu Cribs
In June 2006, HoMu participated in Grand Arts’ event series Urban Test Sites, presenting HoMu Cribs, a museum-for-a-day displayed in private homes, or “cribs”, in Kansas City (MO). Noterdaeme installed several originals and replicas from the Collection of the Homeless Museum in volunteers’ homes and gardens and led a group of visitors through the various “cribs” for a walking tour.
Director Noterdaeme with Florence Coyote,
leading the HoMu Cribs Tour in Kansas City, MO
–— ---
HOMU: The Homeless Museum of Art
▻http://www.homelessmuseum.org/hmu_pages/kansas_city_star.html
Ideas are Key to ’Homeless’ Tour of Art
By ALEX SCHUBERT, special to The Kansas City Star
June 17, 2006
Filip Noterdaeme has been known to welcome visitors to his two-bedroom Brooklyn apartment by playing the fake-bearded director of the Homeless Museum.
The Belgian-born New York artist calls his bathroom the museum’s “Curatorial Department” and has appointed a stuffed coyote its “Director of Public Relations.”
A “Homeless Museum”? It’s not what you think.
Founded by Noterdaeme in 2003, this semi-fictitious museum is simultaneously a send-up of art institutions and a triumph of word play: a museum without a building containing artworks revolving around homelessness.
Sponsored by Grand Arts, the project brings an ironic twist to the MTV show “Cribs,” which tours the homes of celebrities.