
Nathalie spotted 'my' book in Zurich! I've got to start poking around for it in bookstores. Now available. 'The Map as Art: Contemporary Artists Explore Cartography by Katherine Harmon. keep an eye out! and maybe snap a pic if/where you spot it?- it was a treat that she sent me this from her travels.! thanks, Nathalie!

NYC Contemporary Art Fairs 2008
Apr. 1st, 2008 05:14 pmpictures and snippets from 2 daytrips running about the many art fairs this March 27-30 in NYC. We got to check out PulseNY, Volta , ArtNow, LA Art, Pool, and ScopeNY. Never made it to the Armory, Diva, Red Dot, or anything else. Luckily I only had to pay for Art LA and Volta and had free rides in and out of nyc. I was of course overloaded after just one fair and wanted to just sit in a cafe and write. whew. But I'm glad I got to see as much as I did. You'll probably notice a theme to the things that drew me this time around...I'm just obsessed with trash, development and the intersections of wild and manmade.

I'm as mesmerized by the views as the art. Pulse NY fair 2008. view from Pier 40....can't shake this waking dream feeling...it is the anniversary of when I had the Pier10 dreamvision on March 25th 1999.
and as I gaze out this window I can somehow see the Pier10 Dome...?

ok..back to this dimension....one of my favorite finds at Pulse was artist Tara Tucker's work at Rena Bransten Gallery.:

( see/read more )

I'm as mesmerized by the views as the art. Pulse NY fair 2008. view from Pier 40....can't shake this waking dream feeling...it is the anniversary of when I had the Pier10 dreamvision on March 25th 1999.
and as I gaze out this window I can somehow see the Pier10 Dome...?

ok..back to this dimension....one of my favorite finds at Pulse was artist Tara Tucker's work at Rena Bransten Gallery.:

( see/read more )
La Esquina, 1000 West 25th St, www.urbancultureprject.org
Feb 1- March 22, 2008, Hours Thurs & Saturdays 12-5

Artists: Corrie Baldauf, Darlene Charneco, Brian Collier, Matt Dehaemers Andrea Flamini, Jorge Garcia, Adriane Herman, Mike Hill, Wopo Holup, Timothy Hutchings, Anne Lindberg, Justin Newhall, Garry Noland, Anne Pearce, Dana Sperry, VxPxC, James Woodfill, and Matt Wycoff.
Curator: Kate Hackman
exerpts from the pdf essays accompanying the exhibition:
"In 2008, we are in the midst of a mapping revolution. Thanks to the personal computer, the Internet, space satellites for data collection, and an expansive array of related technological tools, the scope of information available for mapping has exploded; we simply choose how we would like to select, filter, manipulate, magnify. Tracked by GPS, our physical locations and motions may be mapped in real time (never to be lost again), while at the same time we navigate through a vast virtual network, locating and relocating ourselves perpetually. Using Google Earth to view one's own neighborhood or childhood home; routinely linking Mapquest directions to e-mailed party invites, building networks of Myspace friends: we have become habitual mapmakers as well as blips on a vast array of other people's maps.
...With thick, slick, clear resin surfaces coating colorful, glittery, minutely detailed aerial maps of imaginary interlocking architectures and lawns, Darlene Charneco's sculptural paintings have a terrific physical presence. Yet her appealingly homespun approach is in fact significantly inspired by aspects of cyberspace, particularly its potential for empowering "social, interactive and collaboratively built spaces." Like aerial views, which provide an instant glimpse of patterns and connections not so easily discerned from the ground, so do virtual worlds collectively constructed through games like SimCity and Second Life reveal, more rapidly than in "real life" a vivid picture of societal tendencies and desires." Rather than overly discouraged by what these virtual worlds currently suggest, Charneco is "inspired by the thought that with the continued progress and eventual integration of mapping tools such as geographic information systems with computer gaming technologies, we just may be able to evolve the needed feedback to recover from what seems to be a dangerous myopia." Her work communicates this hopeful sense of a humanitarian re-mapping.
Charneco's Sitemap generates specifically from the concept of a memory palace: "a mentally constructed architecture or location which has been used since ancient times as a mnemonic device for the recollection of intentionally embedded information," she explains; and from that of a sitemap: "typically used in web-based information architecture to enable a more thorough exploration of a website's content by search engines." Seeing potential for merging the two types of structures, her Sitemap, with its interlocking parts, meandering passageways, and mushroom-like nodes projecting from various chambers functions as a sort of imagined prototypical structure for storing information to be later accessed/recalled..." and armature for a theoretically infinite number of different exercises."..
Photos from the show
Complete essays for parts 1 and 2 available in pdf form (16pages!), email me if you want em!:)
Feb 1- March 22, 2008, Hours Thurs & Saturdays 12-5

Artists: Corrie Baldauf, Darlene Charneco, Brian Collier, Matt Dehaemers Andrea Flamini, Jorge Garcia, Adriane Herman, Mike Hill, Wopo Holup, Timothy Hutchings, Anne Lindberg, Justin Newhall, Garry Noland, Anne Pearce, Dana Sperry, VxPxC, James Woodfill, and Matt Wycoff.
Curator: Kate Hackman
exerpts from the pdf essays accompanying the exhibition:
"In 2008, we are in the midst of a mapping revolution. Thanks to the personal computer, the Internet, space satellites for data collection, and an expansive array of related technological tools, the scope of information available for mapping has exploded; we simply choose how we would like to select, filter, manipulate, magnify. Tracked by GPS, our physical locations and motions may be mapped in real time (never to be lost again), while at the same time we navigate through a vast virtual network, locating and relocating ourselves perpetually. Using Google Earth to view one's own neighborhood or childhood home; routinely linking Mapquest directions to e-mailed party invites, building networks of Myspace friends: we have become habitual mapmakers as well as blips on a vast array of other people's maps.
...With thick, slick, clear resin surfaces coating colorful, glittery, minutely detailed aerial maps of imaginary interlocking architectures and lawns, Darlene Charneco's sculptural paintings have a terrific physical presence. Yet her appealingly homespun approach is in fact significantly inspired by aspects of cyberspace, particularly its potential for empowering "social, interactive and collaboratively built spaces." Like aerial views, which provide an instant glimpse of patterns and connections not so easily discerned from the ground, so do virtual worlds collectively constructed through games like SimCity and Second Life reveal, more rapidly than in "real life" a vivid picture of societal tendencies and desires." Rather than overly discouraged by what these virtual worlds currently suggest, Charneco is "inspired by the thought that with the continued progress and eventual integration of mapping tools such as geographic information systems with computer gaming technologies, we just may be able to evolve the needed feedback to recover from what seems to be a dangerous myopia." Her work communicates this hopeful sense of a humanitarian re-mapping.
Charneco's Sitemap generates specifically from the concept of a memory palace: "a mentally constructed architecture or location which has been used since ancient times as a mnemonic device for the recollection of intentionally embedded information," she explains; and from that of a sitemap: "typically used in web-based information architecture to enable a more thorough exploration of a website's content by search engines." Seeing potential for merging the two types of structures, her Sitemap, with its interlocking parts, meandering passageways, and mushroom-like nodes projecting from various chambers functions as a sort of imagined prototypical structure for storing information to be later accessed/recalled..." and armature for a theoretically infinite number of different exercises."..
Photos from the show
Complete essays for parts 1 and 2 available in pdf form (16pages!), email me if you want em!:)
Locate | Navigate – exercises in mapping
Jan. 30th, 2008 10:01 pmLocate | Navigate – exercises in mapping (part 2)

‘Sitemap (memory palace), Darlene Charneco, resin, nails, enamel
flocking, glitter, acrylic on wood
Artists in this exhibition:
Catherine Archias, Corrie Baldauf, Darlene Charneco, Brian Collier, Matt Dehaemers, Andrea Flamini,Jorge Garcia, Adriane Herman, Mike Hill, Wopo Holup, Timothy Hutchings, Beniah Leuschke,Anne Lindberg, Justin Newhall, Garry Noland, Anne Pearce, Dana Sperry, VxPxC, James Woodfill, Matt Wycoff
curated by Kate Hackman
Opening Reception: Friday February 1, 6-9 pm
La Esquina | 1000 West 25th Street Kansas City MO | 816.221.5115
Gallery hours: Thursdays & Saturdays, 12-5 pm
Exhibition runs February 1-March 22
read more about this project/exhibition at:
re-title.com/exhibitions/UrbanCultureLaESQUINA.asp
urbancultureproject.org