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	<title>Location One &#187; Search Results  &#187;  looking</title>
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		<title>It Is My Body</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/it-is-my-body/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/it-is-my-body/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 15 Dec 2012 23:00:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>heather</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[exhibitions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marta jovanovic]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.location1.org/?p=2235</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>An exhibition consisting of new sculptural work by Marta Jovanovi&#263;</p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="/images/marta.jpg"><img src="/images/marta.jpg" width="400<br />
 align="left" alt="Marta Jovanovic: It Is My Body" /></a><br />
<h2>Marta Jovanovic: <em>It Is My Body</em><br />
December 15, 2012–January 31, 2013</h2>
<p>Curated by Claudia Calirman</p>
<p>Location One is proud to present It Is My Body, a solo exhibition by Marta Jovanovic, opening on Saturday, December 15, from 6 to 8pm. The exhibition will be on view until January 31, 2013.</p>
<p>What happens to the body of the artist in the aftermath of the performance? This query is at the core of the sculptures, videos, and photographs by Belgrade-born artist Marta Jovanovic. Much has been said about the difficulty of preserving performance, an ephemeral medium that resists being transformed into a lasting and permanent form. But what about the performer’s body: Can it be suspended in time forever? Can we prevent its aging and ultimately decaying or delay its inevitable mortality?</p>
<p>Jovanovic creates a silicone doll that doubles as an image of herself, an identical replica of the artist from head to toe. At first glance, this phantasmagoric, soulless object appears beautiful; however, upon closer inspection, it becomes slightly repellent, looking more like a funerary corpse than an immortal replication of the artist. As such, its disintegration becomes imminent; the surrogate doll cannot be sustained as an autonomous entity. Jovanovic’s plaster casts, videos, and photographs pose a paradox: how can one’s living body be dismembered and at the same time long for eternity? The fragmented cast pieces evoke surgical intervention and cosmetic surgery, but in this case, instead of beautifying the body, the process seems to have created a grotesque physical appearance through silicone and plaster casts.</p>
<p>Jovanovic’s casts and photographs are the remains of a body that is no longer present; all that is left are the indexical traces and marks of the real. The work emphasizes the gap between performance and its subsequent representation. The disembodied parts are also reminiscent of Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel self-portrait in the sagging skin of San Bartolomeo, who was martyred by being skinned alive. They exist to remind us of the transience of the human body.</p>
<p>Born in 1978, Jovanovic currently lives and works in London, New York, and Rome. She received her BA from Tulane University in 2001 after attending Scuola Lorenzo de Medici in Florence. She has exhibited in venues such as the Museo Pietro Canonica and Museo della Civiltà Romana in Rome. Jovanovic has performed at Location One pieces such as Shoot Me! at the benefit for the Marina Abramović Studio in 2010 and Requiem, in March 2012, a funeral-like performance in which she created a fake wake, symbolically positioning herself inside a replica of the Pazzi Chapel in the Church of Santa Croce in Florence, where the tombs of great artists, writers, architects, and thinkers from the humanist era are located. The work proposed the equality of the sexes, which since the Renaissance has been proscribed by the church.</p>
<p>Jovanovic’s six-and-half-foot-tall transparent resin sculpture LjubavSrecaIstina (LoveFortuneTruth) was permanently installed in the garden of the Museum of Yugoslav History in 2011. In 2012, she received the Roma Capitale from the City of Rome, an award for the highest artistic achievement in representing Serbian culture in Italy.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Hiraku Suzuki Live Drawing Performance</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/hiraku-suzuki-live-drawing-performance/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/hiraku-suzuki-live-drawing-performance/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 09 Dec 2011 01:00:53 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>heather</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Default Category]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[music]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[performance]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.location1.org/?p=1673</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>A live drawing performance by Japanese artist Hiraku Suzuki. With live music by composer / producer Raz Mesinai.</p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src= http://www.location1.org/images/hiraku.jpeg  alt= hiraku suzuki  hspace= 20 vspace=10   border= 0  align="left" ><br />
</p>
<h2>with Live Music by Raz Mesinai<br />
Thursday, December 8, 2011<br />
8pm. FREE and open to the public<br />
</h2>
<p>&nbsp;</br></p>
<p>Artist Hiraku Suzuki will perform live drawings in collaboration with composer/DJ Raz Mesinai in a duel/duet where hands attack horizontal surfaces:  one artist on paper, the other vinyl, as visual and sonic worlds collide and combine.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</br><br />
<p><a href="http://www.location1.org/hiraku-suzuki-live-drawing-performance/"><em>Click here to view the embedded video.</em></a></p></p>
<p class="sectioned">
<p>&nbsp;</br></p>
<p><strong> Hiraku Suzuki</strong><br />
Born in Miyagi, Japan, 1978.<br />
Lives and works in Tokyo.</p>
<p>Hiraku Suzuki obtained an MFA from Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music. Focusing on ideas of memory and excavation, the work of Hiraku Suzuki centers around an expanded notion of drawing; encompassing works on paper and panels, installation, murals, frottages as well as live drawing performance. Much of his work hinges on the vast library of signs and glyphs he has developed by focusing on the shapes, forms, rhythms and materials of his immediate environment, which can be understood as the base units of the ever-changing hidden language of the city. His recent solo exhibitions include at WIMBLEDON space, London (2011), Galerie du JourAgnes b., Paris (2010) and Tokyo Wonder Site Shibuya, Tokyo (2008). Group exhibitionsinclude Roppongi Crossing, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo (2010); 100 stories of love, The21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa (2009); Between site and space, ARTSPACE, Sydney (2009); Redbull House of Art, Hotel Central, Sao Paulo (2009) and Vision of Contemporary Art, The Ueno Royal Museum, Tokyo (2009). His early works are held in the collection of The 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa. Publications include GENGA, published by Kawade Shobo Shinsha/Agnes b., and Looking For Minerals, published by BEAMS.  <a href="http://www.wordpublic.com/hiraku" target="_blank">http://www.wordpublic.com/hiraku</a><br />
<br />Mr. Suzuki’s residency is made possible by The Asian Cultural<br />
Council</p>
<p><img src= http://www.location1.org/images/raz.jpg  alt="raz mesinai"  hspace= 20 vspace=10   border= 0  align= left ></p>
<p><strong>Raz Mesinai</strong><br />
 is a New-York based composer, producer, DJ and sound alchemist, making music at the intersection of Dub and modern composition. Long considered one of the premier innovators behind the New York school of experimental dub/dance music scene in the early nineties he continues to push the envelope, collaborating with such pioneers in diverse genres from Kode9, Shackleton and Meat Beat Manifesto to John Zorn and The Kronos Quartet. </p>
<p></p>
<p class= sectioned >
<p><center>
<p>Location One is extremely grateful to The NY State Council on the Arts, The New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, The Asian Cultural Council and Location One’s International Committee for making this event possible.</p>
<p><img src= http://www.location1.org/images/nysca-dca-logos.png  alt= Sponsor logos  hspace= 6  border= 0 ></p>
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		<item>
		<title>Hiraku Suzuki</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/hiraku-suzuki/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/hiraku-suzuki/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 02 Aug 2011 01:44:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>heather</dc:creator>
		
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.location1.org/?page_id=1331</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Hiraku Suzuki (Japan) Asian Cultural Council Born in Miyagi, Japan, 1978. Lives and works in Tokyo. Hiraku Suzuki obtained an MFA from Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music. Focusing on ideas of memory and excavation, the work of Hiraku Suzuki centers around an expanded notion of drawing; encompassing works on paper and panels, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Hiraku Suzuki (Japan)<br />
Asian Cultural Council</h2>
<p><img src="/images/hiraku.jpeg" alt="Hiraku Suzuki" align="left" /><br />
<strong>Born in Miyagi, Japan, 1978. Lives and works in Tokyo. </strong></p>
<p><P>Hiraku Suzuki obtained an MFA from Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music. Focusing on ideas of memory and excavation, the work of Hiraku Suzuki centers around an expanded notion of drawing; encompassing works on paper and panels, installation, murals, frottages as well as live drawing performance. Much of his work hinges on the vast library of signs and glyphs he has developed by focusing on the shapes, forms, rhythms and materials of his immediate environment, which can be understood as the base units of the ever-changing hidden language of the city.</p>
<p>His recent solo exhibitions include at WIMBLEDON space, London (2011), Galerie du JourAgnes b., Paris (2010) and Tokyo Wonder Site Shibuya, Tokyo (2008). Group exhibitionsinclude Roppongi Crossing, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo (2010); 100 stories of love, The21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa (2009); Between site and space, ARTSPACE, Sydney (2009); Redbull House of Art, Hotel Central, Sao Paulo (2009)and Vision of Contemporary Art, The Ueno Royal Museum, Tokyo (2009). His early works are held in thecollection of The 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa. Publications include GENGA, published by Kawade Shobo Shinsha/Agnes b., and Looking For Minerals, published by BEAMS.http://www.wordpublic.com/hiraku</p>
<p>Mr. Suzuki&#8217;s residency is made possible by The Asian Cultural Council </p>
<p><a href="/residency" target="_blank"><< current residents<br />
</a></p>
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		<item>
		<title>Well-Tempered Call</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/well-tempered-call/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/well-tempered-call/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Aug 2011 21:07:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>heather</dc:creator>
		
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.location1.org/?page_id=1306</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Call for participation Collaborative performance workshop For emerging performance artists, actors, singers and musicians Pablo Helguera: The Well-Tempered Exposition A project for Location One Part One of a year-long experimental performance project by Mexican artist Pablo Helguera. Using Bach’s famous keyboard exercises The Well-Tempered Clavier as a starting point, Helguera will organize a series of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="/images/well-tempered.jpg" alt="Well Tempered Exposition" border="1" width="550"></p>
<h2>Call for participation<br />
Collaborative performance workshop<br />
For emerging performance artists, actors, singers and musicians</h2>
<h1>Pablo Helguera: <em>The Well-Tempered Exposition</em><br />
A project for Location One</h1>
<blockquote>
<p>Part One of a year-long experimental performance project by Mexican artist Pablo Helguera. Using Bach’s famous keyboard exercises <em>The Well-Tempered Clavier</em> as a starting point, Helguera will organize a series of performance workshops that explore the formal elements of the score.<br />
Interested participants should submit a letter of interest and resume to <a href="mailto:well-tempered@location1.org">well-tempered@location1.org</a><br />
by September 1, 2011.  </p>
</blockquote>
<p class="sectioned">
<p><font color="#543"><br />
<h3>Workshop Schedule<br />
Preliminary orientation: Friday, September 16th, 5:30-6:30pm<br />
Workshops: Monday and Tuesday Sept 19-20, 5:30-9pm<br />
Performance: September 21, 2011, 7pm</h3>
<p></font></p>
<p class="sectioned">
<p>Location One and artist Pablo Helguera are in search of 10 emerging performing artists, actors, singers or musicians interested in participating in a 2-day intensive performance workshop culminating in a public showcase on September 21, 2011. </p>
<p><em>The Well-Tempered Exposition</em> is a methodical investigation on the formal components of the performance art practice.  The project will be developed as a series of scores that will be developed and performed in a series of public experimental workshops at Location One. Upon its completion, The Well-Tempered Exposition will exist as a collection of scores to better understand the rhetoric and compositional structure of performance art as we understand it today.</p>
<p>In this initial workshop participants will collaborate in the interpretation and construction of the first set of scores, to be presented on September 21st, 2011 at Location One.</p>
<blockquote><p>We are looking for participants with one or more of the following:</p>
<ul>
<li>Verbal/public speaking skills</li>
<li>Musical knowledge/skills</li>
<li>Acting skills</li>
<li>Movement skills</li>
<li>Interest in the history of performance art</li>
<li>Interest and/or experience in collaborative/ensemble work</li>
</ul>
</blockquote>
<p>Interested participants should submit a letter of interest and resume to <a href="mailto:well-tempered@location1.org">well-tempered@location1.org</a><br />
by September 1, 2011. </p>
<p>About this project at Location One, the artist has written: “To create a group of scores that also serve as a taxonomy of the formal elements of visual performance art would be contradictory, as the notion of performance is so fluid that it escapes any attempt to dissect its components.  However, the project proposes that there is a recurrent conceptual vocabulary derived from a shared history, sets of references, and appropriated formats that allow performance art to constantly reinvent itself while at the same time remain identifiable as a meta-discipline of art. The goal of this project is to originate a textbook in the form of 48 scores that examine these different components.”</p>
<p>The project is structured around the existing forms in Johann Sebastian Bach’s <em>The Well-Tempered Clavier</em> (1722), a collection of keyboard exercises composed in all 24 major and minor keys “for the profit and use of musical youth desirous of learning, and especially for the pastime of those already skilled in this study.” Bach’s compositions will serve as a guide to construct each one of the 48 scores. Each score will be rehearsed and developed through public workshops and presented in performance evenings.  Workshops will be presented free of charge.</p>
<p><strong>About Pablo Helguera</strong></p>
<p>Pablo Helguera (Mexico City, 1971) is a visual and performance artist living in New York. He works in the fields of pedagogy, literature, musical composition, and theater.  His projects have included performance lectures, scripted symposia, and panel discussions with or without the knowledge of the audience, as well as a variety of experimental formats of verbal presentation.</p>
<p>Helguera’s works have been presented in many venues such as the Liverpool Biennial, Performa 05, Museo Reina Sofia in Madrid, ICA in Boston, MoMA, among others. His play The Juvenal Players, produced by Grand Arts in Kansas City, was presented at The Kitchen in 2010. His orchestral work Endingness was performed by the Detroit Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Leonard Slatkin. He is the author of more than 10 books including Theatrum Anatomicum (and other performance lectures), a collection of performative works. His social practice project The School of Panamerican Unrest (2006) consisted in the creation of a nomadic schoolhouse that traveled by land throughout the Americas from Alaska to Chile, presenting collaborative performance and civic events in over 26 cities. He has been recipient of the Guggenheim Fellowship, the Creative Capital Grant; and in 2011 was named the first winner of the International Award for Participatory Art of the Regione Emilia Romagna in Italy.  As educator, Helguera has worked in museums for over two decades, currently  working as Director of Adult and Academic Programs at The Museum of Modern Art.  He is the Pedagogical Curator of the 8th Mercosul Biennial, opening in September 2011.</p>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>CURRENT ARTISTS IN RESIDENCE</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/current-artists/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/current-artists/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Dec 2010 21:50:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>heather</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[residency]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.location1.org/current-artists/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Artists 2012-2013 André Feliciano (Brazil) Brazilian Cultural Office and Location One International Committee André Feliciano considers himself an art gardener. His utopian view of the world can be better understood by his concept of “Floraissance Art,” which mixes the words “flora” and “renaissance” and calls for a postmodern return to arcadia. Feliciano uses words like [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Artists 2012-2013</h2>
<h2>André Feliciano (Brazil)<br />
Brazilian Cultural Office and Location One International Committee</h2>
<p><a href="/images/andre-feliciano.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="/images/andre-feliciano.jpg" alt="Jardiniere" width="250" border="0" align="left" /></a></p>
<p>André Feliciano considers himself an art gardener. His utopian view of the world can be better understood by his concept of “Floraissance Art,” which mixes the words “flora” and “renaissance” and calls for a postmodern return to arcadia. Feliciano uses words like sprouting, cultivating, and gardening in his artistic practice. His colorful, artificial garden made out of resin-based flowers and dirt is majestically beautiful and leads us to an inner state of calm and contentment. Why not extend these feelings to our present condition so that we can start building a better future?</p>
<p>Feliciano, born in 1984, in São Paulo (Brazil), has exhibited at Photoville (New York, 2012), Bonni Benrubi Gallery (New York, 2011), and the Museum of Modern Art of São Paulo (2010), among other venues. His work has been featured in the New York Times online, Time magazine’s photography blog, and the blog of the International Center of Photography. He is part of the upcoming exhibition Festival of Art and Gastronomy at the Museum of Modern Art of São Paulo (November 2012). More information can be found at his blog, <a href="http://blog.natureza.art.br">blog.natureza.art.br</a>.</p>
<p>Feliciano&#8217;s Residency is made possible by Location One&#8217;s International Committee and by the Brazilian Cultural Office.</p>
<p><img src="/images/andre-logo.jpg" alt="x" height="100" /></p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h2>Artists 2011-2012</h2>
<h2>Pablo Helguera (Mexico)<br />
Location One International Committee</h2>
<p><a href="/images/pablo-helguera.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="/images/pablo-helguera.jpg" alt="Pablo Helguera" width="150" border="0" align="left" /></a></p>
<p><strong>Born in Mexico City, 1971. Lives and works in New York</strong></p>
<p>Pablo Helguera (based in New York, born in Mexico City, 1971) works in the fields of pedagogy, literature, musical composition, and theater. His projects have included performance lectures, scripted symposia, and panel discussions (with or without the knowledge of the audience) as well as a variety of experimental formats of verbal presentation.</p>
<p>Helguera’s works have been presented in many venues including the Liverpool Biennial, Performa 05, Museo Reina Sofia in Madrid, ICA in Boston, MoMA, and many others. His play, The Juvenal Players, produced by Grand Arts in Kansas City, was presented at The Kitchen in 2010. His orchestral work Endingness was performed by the Detroit Symphony Orchestra under the direction of Leonard Slatkin. He is the author of more than 10 books including Theatrum Anatomicum (and other performance lectures), a collection of performative works. His social practice project, The School of Panamerican Unrest (2006), consisted of the creation of a nomadic schoolhouse that traveled by land throughout the Americas from Alaska to Chile, presenting collaborative performance and civic events in over 26 cities. He is a recipient of the Guggenheim Fellowship, the Creative Capital Grant; and in 2011 was named the first winner of the International Award for Participatory Art of the Regione Emilia Romagna in Italy. As an educator, Helguera has worked in museums for over two decades and  currently works as Director of Adult and Academic Programs at The Museum of Modern Art. He is the Pedagogical Curator of the 8th Mercosul Biennial, opening in September 2011.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h2>Jacob Dahl Jürgensen (Denmark)<br />
Danish Arts Agency </h2>
<p><a href="/images/jurgensen.jpg" title="Jacob Dahl Jurgensen"><img src="/images/jurgensen.jpg" alt="Jacob Dahl Jurgensen" width="175" align="left" /></a><br />
<strong>Born in Copenhagen, 1975. Lives and works in London.</strong></p>
<p>Jacob Dahl Jürgensen’s sculptures pose as fictive relics; the possible artifacts of a future archaeology unearthing the ethnological debris of today. Influenced by early 20th century Modernism, Jurgensen often quotes from art history by intertwining recognizable forms and ideologies with fragments of popular culture to create ritualistic monuments divining a contemporary spirituality. His Folly, The Mystical’s Sphere, nods to the futuristic architecture of Tatlin and Fuller; the sparse copper structure standing as a theatrical oracle, emanating a primitive occultism from the power of low-watt light bulbs.<br />
website: <a href="http://www.jacob-dahl-jurgensen.com/" target="_blank">http://www.jacob-dahl-jurgensen.com/</a></p>
<p>Jacob Dahl Jürgensen&#8217;s residency is made possible by The Danish Arts Agency. </p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h2>Maria José Arjona (Colombia)<br />
Location One International Committee</h2>
<p><a href="/images/maria-jose.jpg" title="Maria Jose Arjona"><img src="/images/maria-jose.jpg" alt="Maria Jose Arjona" width="200" align="left" /></a><br />
<strong>Born in Bogotà, Colombia in 1973. She lives and works in New York</strong><br />
Ms. Arjona graduated from The Higher Academy Of Art Of Bogota (ASAB) in 2000 and her practice is exclusively focused on long duration performance.</p>
<p>She has been part of numerous exhibitions in different museums, galleries, and instituions in South America, The United States, Europe and China. Her work is a permanent part of many relevant collections around world.</p>
<p></p>
<p class="sectioned"></p>
<p>
&nbsp;</p>
<h2>Hiraku Suzuki (Japan)<br />
Asian Cultural Council</h2>
<p><img src="/images/hiraku.jpeg" alt="Hiraku Suzuki" align="left" /><br />
<strong>Born in Miyagi, Japan, 1978. Lives and works in Tokyo. </strong></p>
<p>Hiraku Suzuki obtained an MFA from Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music. Focusing on ideas of memory and excavation, his work centers on an expanded notion of drawing which encompasses works on paper and panels, installation, murals, frottages, and live performance drawing. Much of his work hinges on the vast library of signs and glyphs he has developed by focusing on the shapes, forms, rhythms, and materials of his immediate environment (which can be understood as the base units of the ever-changing hidden language of the city).</p>
<p>His recent solo exhibitions include WIMBLEDON space, London (2011); Galerie du JourAgnes b., Paris (2010); and Tokyo Wonder Site Shibuya, Tokyo (2008). Group exhibitions include Roppongi Crossing, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo (2010); 100 stories of love, The21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa (2009); Between site and space, ARTSPACE, Sydney (2009); Redbull House of Art, Hotel Central, Sao Paulo (2009); and Vision of Contemporary Art, The Ueno Royal Museum, Tokyo (2009). His early works are held in the collection of The 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa, Japan. </p>
<p>Publications include GENGA, published by Kawade Shobo Shinsha/Agnes b., and Looking For Minerals, published by BEAMS.<br />
<a href="http://www.wordpublic.com/hiraku" target="_blank">http://www.wordpublic.com/hiraku<br />
</a></p>
<p>Mr. Suzuki&#8217;s residency is made possible by The Asian Cultural Council </p>
<p class="sectioned">
<p><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/michaela_mueller.jpg" align="left" width="300" alt="" /></p>
<h2>Michaela Müller<br />
Location One International Committee</h2>
<p>Born in St.Gallen, Switzerland. She lives and works in Switzerland and in Zagreb, Croatia.<br />
Michaela is in love with paint and film, and through the process of animation she has found a perfect means of combination. She is currently researching and exploring the borders between narrative and abstract experimental film, based on rhythm and choreography via animation.<br />
She likes to work on social topics of public concern. Her 8 minute animation, “Miramare” (2009), (paint on glass), is an impressive encounter between tourists and immigrants shown from a children’s perspective. It has been shown at more than 70 film festivals all over the world including Cannes, Annecy, London, Melbourne, Sarajevo, Rio de Janeiro and St. Petersburg. “Miramare” won more than 15 awards includion the Swiss Film Prize Quartz, the Centaur for Best Debut Film at Message to Man Film Festival, St. Petersburg, the Grand Prix at Animateka Film Festival, Ljubljana etc.<br />
Michaela studied animated film and New Media at the Academy of Fine Arts in Zagreb, Croatia. Miramare is her diploma film. She likes to collaborate on theatre and dance projects, where she contributes animated scenographic elements.<br />
Michaela Müller’s residency is made possible by Pierre Nussbaumer and the Location One International Committee.<br />
website: www.triboje.com</p>
<p><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/na.jpg" align="left" width="300" alt="" /></p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h2>Na Yingyu (China)<br />
Lijiang Studio<br />
Location One International Committee</h2>
<p>Na Yingyu is a Chinese artist, born in 1973 in Yichun, Heilongjiang, China, he lives and works in Beijing. Na Yingyu has exhibited extensively in China, Brazil and Israel. Our Homeland! Gone Just Like That will be Na Yingyu’s first solo show in the United States.</p>
<p> Na Yingyu&#8217;s residency made possible by Location One&#8217;s International Committee and Lijiang Studio, Lashihai, China. </p>
<p></p>
<p class="sectioned"></p>
<p></p>
<h2>Andrea Yugoslavia Chirinos (Mexico)<br />
Location One International Committee</h2>
<p><img src="/images/yugo.jpg" width="175" align="left" alt="Yugo" /></p>
<p>Andrea Yugoslavia Chirinos Brown was born in Mexico, where she studied dance, theater and art history. There she began to dance professionally and also to experiment with choreography. In 1994 she moved first to Boston and then to New York to achieve a Bachelor in Fine Arts (Dance major) at the Boston Conservatory and in Mary Mount Manhattan College. Around that time she danced with the Stanley Love Performance Group and with Anime Dance Japan, at the same time showing her own work in venues around the city of New York. </p>
<p>In 2000 she moved back to Mexico City where she was assigned as the director of the students company of the university Instituto Politécnico Nacional where she did several choreography and toured in all the campuses of this important public Nacional University. She also began her own company called Mitrovica Dance. Since the moment of its creation, Chirino´s Dance Company has performed in museums, schools and theaters. Her pieces, like the Faith Line, Restaurant Tesuyo, Tangled, Familiar Environment, Second Life and Ritual de lo Habitual have made the company to be named the Best Artistic Project of the City, an annual price voted by the people. In 2009 she won the first prize in the prestigious Mexican Contemporary Dance Award with the piece Tangled, for its originality and its use of space. This price is issued by the INBA, the Institute National of Bellas Artes, a pivotal institution in Mexican culture. </p>
<p>In March of 2011, she presented and installation called Hotel Irina, with more than 15 dancers, sponsored by Universidad National Autónoma de Mexico (UNAM). The company also tour in museums with the last project called Corridor Shadows Exterior Evening. In May 2011 Andrea Yugoslavia Chirinos move back to New York City.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<p></p>
<h2>Tommy Støckel (Denmark)<br />
Danish Arts Council</h2>
<p><img src="/images/tommy-stockel.jpg" alt="Tommy Stockel" align="left" width="200" /><br />
</p>
<p>Born in 1972 in Copenhagen, Denmark. Lives and works in Berlin, Germany.</p>
<p>
Tommy Støckel uses computer-generated calculations to create elaborate and intricate sculptural installations that resemble fractal-like architecture. Geometry, scale and perspective are essentials in the work of Tommy Støckel. His fascination of cool modernism and science fictions novels from both the 19th and 20th centuries is reflected in collages and installations that represent a constructed future seen in miniature worlds and deserted sci-fi landscapes. With a precise mathematic technique Støckel creates collages using figures cut out from catalogues and sculptures showing different layers and the inevitable decay of time. The use of materials as paper, cardboard and foam contrasts the sophisticated themes as deconstruction and chaos theory.</p>
<p></p>
<p class="sectioned">
<p></p>
<h2>Monica Baptista (Portugal)<br />
Gulbenkian Foundation</h2>
<p><a href="/images/monica-baptista.jpg"><img src="/images/monica-baptista.jpg" align="left" width="200" alt="Monica Baptista" /></a></p>
<p><strong>Born in S. Paio de Oleiros, Portugal, 1984. Lives and works in Portugal. </strong></p>
<p>Monica Baptista is a painter-turned-documentary filmmaker who has created several films on topics ranging from Chechnyan soldiers on the TransSiberian Express, to tracts on herbal tea, to experimental investigations of architectural structures. Present in all of her work is a focus on the perception of space and time in relation to the particular community or subject matter of her films.</p>
<p>Monica Baptista&#8217;s residency is made possible by The Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation and the Luso American Foundation</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h2>Agnieszka Kurant (Poland)<br />
Polish Cultural Institute<br />
Trust for Mutual Understanding</h2>
<p><img src="/images/agnieszka-kurant.jpg" align="left" width="200" alt="Agnieszka Kurant" /></p>
<p><strong>Born in Łodz, 1978. Lives and works in Warsaw.</strong></p>
<p>Agnieszka Kurant is an artist based in Warsaw. She represented Poland at the Polish Pavilion at Venice Biennale 2010 (collaboration with the architect Aleksandra Wasilkowska). She is interested in the ways in which trying to interpret the world logically results in a fictional version of reality. Her works explore how things created as fictions, rumors, paranormal phenomena as well as objects not existing materially, enter into economy and politics of contemporary world. She is interested in virtual capital, imaginary property, immaterial labour, hybrid authorship, changes of aura, value and status of objects in cognitive capitalism. Many of her works are related to the existence of the future in the present. Her works have been shown in art institutions including: Witte de With, Rotterdam (2011); Palais de Tokyo, Paris (2004); Tate Modern, London (2006); Yvon Lambert Gallery, New York (2005) and Museum of Modern Art, Zachęta National Gallery of Art, Centre for Contemporary Art Ujazdowski Castle, Warsaw. Kurant has participated in international contemporary art exhibitions including: Performa Biennial, New York (2009), Athens Biennale (2009), Moscow Biennale (2007) and Bucharest Biennale (2008). In 2008 she was commissioned to realize Frieze Projects at Frieze Art Fair, London. In 2009 she was shortlisted for the International Henkel Art Award (MUMOK, Vienna). Kurant was an artist in residence at Palais de Tokyo, Paris in 2004; ISCP, New York in 2005; Konstfak, Stockholm in 2007 and at the Paul Klee Center (Sommerakademie) in Bern, 2009. Sternberg Press published Kurant’s monograph “Unknown Unknown” in 2008 and the Venice Biennale catalogue “Emergency Exit” in 2010. Her solo show is currently on view at Montehermoso Cultural Center in Spain.</p>
<p>Agnieszka Kurant’s residency is presented in association with the Polish Cultural Institute in New York within its Poland-U.S. Artists-In-Residence Exchange Program, organized by a-i-r laboratory at the Centre for Contemporary Art Ujazdowski Castle in Warsaw, Poland and Location One in New York, with generous support of the Trust for Mutual Understanding.</p>
<p></p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h2>Ana Freitas Machado (Brazil)<br />
Location One International Committee</h2>
<p>Ana Freitas Machado is an artist who lives and works in Rio de Janiero, Brazil. Many of her works are the result of a conceptual and visual theme. Time, geometry, nature and morphology of the creative process are part of its research universe in different media such as drawing, photography, artist book, printmaking and sculpture.<br />
</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h2>Atsushi Kaga (Ireland)<br />
The Arts Council / An Chomhairle Ealaíon</h2>
<p><img src="/images/atsushi-kaga.jpg" width="250" align="left" alt="Atsushi Kaga" /></p>
<p><strong>Born in Tokyo, Japan, 1978. Lives and works in Dublin, Ireland. </strong></p>
<p>Atsushi Kaga’s work depicts a fictional world inhabited by a cast of invented characters. Through his alternative reality, Kaga explores personal and cultural identity, as well as complex social issues faced in daily life. His mixed media work, which includes paintings, animations and wall drawings, attest to his keen sensibility and sense of intimacy. His work is whimsical and playful but with a dark and biting sense of humor underlying deceptively &#8216;kawaii&#8217; imagery. website: <a href="http://www.atsushikaga.com/" target="_blank">http://www.atsushikaga.com/</a></p>
<p><a href="http://www.location1.org/current-artists/"><em>Click here to view the embedded video.</em></a></p>
<p>Atsushi Kaga&#8217;s residency is made possible by The Arts Council / An Chomhairle Ealaíon</p>
<p><a href="/residency" target="_blank"><< current residents</a></p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h2>David Molander (Sweden)<br />
Hasselblad Foundation</h2>
<p><img src="/images/david-molander.jpg" width="180" align="left" alt="David Molander" /></p>
<p><strong>Born in Stockholm, Sweden 1983. </strong></p>
<p>In the project <em>An Urban Anatomy</em> visual artist David Molander is in pursuit of the essence of the urban centers. By the use of digital photography and animation, he collects a documentary material of hundreds of photos and film clips that he dissects and reconstruct into large still- or moving images that can be placed between document and fiction. He cut open interiors, sample streetlights, stitch together pavement and gather parts of the city that although closely linked, seldom meet. Molanders work put emphasis on new relationships between architecture, social environment, living memory and the humans within it. David Molander has been studying photography and film at Harvard University and has a BA in Rhetoric and a BA in Art history from Uppsala University. He graduated 2010 with a MFA from School of Photography in Gothenburg/Sweden. Website: <a href="http://www.davidmolander.com" target="_blank">http://www.davidmolander.com</a></p>
<p>David Molander&#8217;s residency is made possible by The Hasselblad Foundation</p>
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		<title>Rudy Shepherd (USA)</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/rudy-shepherd/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/rudy-shepherd/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 14 Jul 2008 20:20:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>irp</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[2008-2009]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[residency]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.location1.org/rudy-shepherd/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Rudy Shepherd (USA) &#8211; Black Rock in Winter Rudy Shepherd’s latest work explores the nature of evil through the mediums of painting and sculpture.  This exploration involves investigations into the lives of criminals and victims of crime.  He explores the complexity of these stories and the grey areas between innocence and guilt in a series [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/black-rock-in-winter.jpg" alt="Rudy Shepherd (USA) - Black Rock in Winter" /><br />
Rudy Shepherd (USA) &#8211; Black Rock in Winter</p>
<p>Rudy Shepherd’s latest work explores the nature of evil through the mediums of painting and sculpture.  This exploration involves investigations into the lives of criminals and victims of crime.  He explores the complexity of these stories and the grey areas between innocence and guilt in a series of paintings and drawings of both the criminals and the victims, making no visual distinctions between the two.  By presenting the people first and the stories second a space is created for humanity to be reinstilled into the lives of people who have been reduced to mere headlines by the popular press.</p>
<p>Going along with these portraits is a series of sculptures called the Black Rock Negative Energy Absorbers.  They are a group of sculptures meant to remove negative energy from people allowing them to respond to life with the more positive aspects of their personality.  It is on one hand a response to living in New York City for the last seven years and witnessing the madness that take place on the subway system, and an approach to political art that hopes to push the dialogue started in the late 80’s/early 90’s forward into 2008 by looking at the problems of society in a more comprehensive way, incorporating the rhetoric of new age mythology, and ancient religions.</p>
<p>Based in Harlem, NY, Rudy Shepherd received a BS in Biology and Studio Art from Wake Forest University and an MFA in Sculpture from the School of Art Institute of Chicago.  He has been in group exhibitions at P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, NY, The Studio Museum of Harlem, NY, Bronx Museum of Art, NY, Art in General, NY, Triple Candie, NY, Socrates Sculpture Park, NY,  Cheekwood Museum of Art, TN, Contemporary Museum, Baltimore, MD, Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, CT, Southeastern Center of Contemporary Art, NC, Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago, IL, Tart Gallery, San Francisco, CA, Analix Forever Gallery, Geneva, Switzerland and solo exhibitions at Mixed Greens Gallery, NY, Regina Miller Gallery, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA.  He has been awarded Artist in Residence at PS1 National/International Studio Program, PS1 Contemporary Art Center, Long Island City, NY, Artist in Residence Visual + Harlem, Jacob Lawrence Institute for the Visual Arts, New York, NY and Emerging Artist Fellowship, Socrates Sculpture Park, Long Island City, NY.<br />
He is currently represented by Mixed Greens Gallery, NY and has an upcoming two person exhibition at Paperwork Gallery, Baltimore, MD.</p>
<p><a href="http://rudyshepherd.blogspot.com" target="_blank">rudyshepherd.blogspot.com</a><br />
<a href="http://mixedgreens.com">mixedgreens.com</a><br />
<a href="http://onedayover.blogspot.com" target="_blank">onedayover.blogspot.com</a></p>
<p>Rudy’s residency at Location One is supported by the <a href="http://www.rbf.org/" target="_blank">Rockefeller Brothers Fund</a>.</p>
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		<title>IXTLAN STOP by Yoon-Young Park</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/ixtlan-stop-by-yoon-young-park/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/ixtlan-stop-by-yoon-young-park/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 20 Oct 2007 14:49:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>irp</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Artists News]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.location1.org/ixtlan-stop-by-yoon-young-park/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Sep. 11th to November 4th, 2007 Arario Gallery www.arariogallery.co.kr #354-1 Shinbu-dong, Cheonan-si, Chungcheongnam-do, Korea Tel : 82 41 551 5100,5101 Fax : 82 41 551 5102 PRESS RELEASE &#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211; IXTLAN STOP Her work is a restructuring of a mysterious event that unfolds in a dreamlike manner, the way a mystery novel develops as the investigator [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/ixtlan_stop.jpg" alt="ixtlan_stop.jpg" height="263" width="610" />Sep. 11th  to November 4th, 2007</p>
<p>Arario Gallery<br />
www.arariogallery.co.kr<br />
#354-1<br />
Shinbu-dong, Cheonan-si,<br />
Chungcheongnam-do, Korea<br />
Tel : 82 41 551 5100,5101<br />
Fax : 82 41 551 5102<br />
PRESS RELEASE</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211;<br />
IXTLAN  STOP<br />
Her work is a restructuring of a mysterious event that unfolds in a dreamlike manner, the way a mystery novel develops as the investigator patches together the pieces of evidence found.</p>
<p>1. The Story</p>
<p>&#8220;I think the best way to describe my work is that I am inspired by things that peak my &#8216;interest&#8217;.  Therein lies the back story and the evidence behind these unsolved mysteries.&#8221;                                            -Among the artist notes</p>
<p>The above statement is artist Yoon-Young Park&#8217;s self-professed central idea surrounding her work.  And it is true that Park is drawn by events that stir her curiosity which in turn lead her to conduct her own set of research to get to the bottom of it.  The Pickton murder, the Virginia Tech Shooting, the Logheed Highway incident, the Riverview Mental Hospital, Vancouver&#8217;s downtown east side, Martin Luther King Jr., the Mt. Baker, Exxon Valdez oil spill, etc. were all events and cases that peaked Park&#8217;s interest.  Park&#8217;s work is researching the evidence found in these cases, so as to reach her own interpretation of what had happened.  Not only does she explore a variety of media to find such evidence, she even goes as far as to visit those very locations where the mysterious events took place.  Park went to the actual location of the Pickton farm where the serial murders took place, making a video of her visit there.  Not only that, she recorded her visit to the Riverview Mental Hospital on her own camcorder as well as to Vancouver&#8217;s downtown east side where she interviewed the homeless.  Such discoveries of evidence surrounding existing cases and their scenery get complicated and mixed up within the context of Yoon-Young Park&#8217;s own story in a dreamlike manner. Her stories are her work.</p>
<p>The following three cases were used as motifs for the pieces that are being shown in the current exhibition:</p>
<p>The Pickton Farm serial murder case, Canada:  A shocking murder takes place in a pig farm owned by a man named William Pickton in Vancouver, Canada, a beautiful place which is often considered heaven on earth.  A total of 69 women either were killed or went missing, with many of the missing women&#8217;s DNAs found in the farm&#8217;s pig feed, etc..  A series of surreal and unbelievable events had taken place at the Pickton farm.</p>
<p>Exxon Valdez Oil Spill:  In 1989, an Exxon Valdez supertanker was crossing the ocean nearby Alaska when an error by the captain led the ship to run aground causing an oil spill of some 11 million gallons of gasoline.  The spill caused the worst environmental disaster in the history of the United States and hundreds of thousands of ocean creatures were killed as a result.  Today, almost 20 years later, the ocean has yet to fully recover from the disaster.</p>
<p>Martin Luther King Jr. murder case: On April 4th, 6pm in 1968, while standing on the balcony of his motel, Martin Luther King Jr. was shot. He was shot by 30-06 Remington rifle. James Earl Ray was arrested for this case and sentenced to ninety-nine years in prison.</p>
<p>Yoon-Young Park&#8217;s works draw from such incidents and she presents the various pieces of evidence she finds in her work, especially in a special space she calls Ixtlan, where Park rearranges the details of the events to tell a brand new story.  The story that Park tells is a completely different kind than that which we read or hear through the media.</p>
<p>For this exhibition, Park has completed two full mystery novels.  One is the story she wrote while preparing for &#8220;Pickton Lake&#8221; entitled The Blue Pillar that Appears for a Moment, then Disappears and the other is The Dark and Unlit Logheed Highway.  Both novels are fantasy pieces which include her own experiences in the setting, i.e. place, characters, as well as various imagined elements.  Her stories are dreamlike and mysterious in that she combines elements of events from the above incidents with other mysterious objects and characters.  On one level, her novels are her installation pieces, only in a different form, the only difference being that the materials are words and that the words are the various pieces of the installation.</p>
<p>2. The Space</p>
<p>&#8220;IXTLAN is the space you can reach right before death, after you have given up all your desires and the things that you love.&#8221;</p>
<p>-Among the artist notes</p>
<p>Ixtlan, the title of this exhibition, is a place that is described in Carlos Casteneda&#8217;s book &#8220;Journey to Ixtlan&#8221;. The Ixtlan that Casteneda describes in his book is an imaginary space that is somehow connected to the real world, but can only be reached after having given up all of one&#8217;s worldly desires and loves etc.. Casteneda describes three types of plants that help one to reach Ixtlan, namely peyote (a kind of cactus), jimson weed (white datura stramonium), and psilocybe (a hallucinogenic mushroom).  These plants are natural plant substances which cause a kind of hallucination.</p>
<p>In this exhibition, Yoon-Young Park has in a way re-imagined the place of Ixtlan into a place where violence, murder, disasters etc. are non-existent, in other words, a place where such unfortunate events can be prevented from happening.</p>
<p>The various incidents and cases that have interested Yoon-Young Park, such as the Virginia Tech shooting, the murder of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., the Pickton serial murders etc., are here re-presented and restructured in &#8216;Downtwon Eastside&#8217;. The physical &#8216;triggers&#8217; involved in these incidents were the gun that was used in the murder of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., the Exxon Valdez supertanker itself and the Walther P22 used in Cho, Seung Hee&#8217;s Virginia Tech shooting.  Park sketches these three objects on the surface of a screen then uses these parts to create an equipment made to prevent tragic acts and/or incidents from taking place.  The above-mentioned three hallucinogenic plants, i.e. peyote, jimsonweed and psilocybe, are then drawn over the equipment, growing all around it.  The three plants in nature cover and therefore prevent these equipment from enacting the kinds of tragic events that they do, and by doing so, Ixtlan is imagined as a place where life and death have come to a stop, i.e. a new place with the potential for a new life and healing.  In conclusion, Ixtlan Stop is a place where all the tragedies created by man&#8217;s desires and selfishness, are healed by the cleansing power of nature.</p>
<p>3. The Story within the Space</p>
<p>Reading and understanding the stories within Yoon-Young Park&#8217;s space of Ixtlan is an indispensable aspect of experiencing Park&#8217;s work.</p>
<p>Investigators, on the site of a crime, look around for pieces of evidence which, when put together, help them to come up with a believable story of what may have taken place. And as such, Yoon-Young Park&#8217;s exhibition invites us to participate in experiencing the space of Ixtlan where she has re-structured the &#8216;crime scene&#8217; so to speak.</p>
<p>So what are the stories within Yoon-Young Park&#8217;s space? Park approaches the question of life and death and the vague separation between them by comparing the real against the surreal, past against the present, reality against the world of dreams etc.. The artist presents such a blurred and mysterious border between life and death in her depiction of &#8216;Downtown Eastside&#8217;, a mysterious looking installation piece made of a white screen, a large-scale mirror and bright orange paint. The mirror placed below the screen and the large pipe placed over the screen seems to make reference to the act of inhaling the smoke from the use of drugs. The pipe is a symbol of the straw used to inhale cocaine and the sheep skin and screen are also the drug itself. The mirror and the newspaper is each the mirror and razor (tools used in the process of measuring the amount of cocaine in preparation for inhalation). Within such a setting, Park casts the victims of the Pickton case as women living in New York&#8217;s downtown eastside and connects the two events by depicting the women as inhaling the drugs. Here, Park juxtaposes death and the act of inhaling drugs while simultaneously exhibiting the correlation between the two, as well as revealing the dream-like state brought on by the drugs.</p>
<p>Since the beginning of her career, Yoon-Young Park has always explored death and the disappearance of people upon death, about all those that die and the naturalness of it, even when it was caused by some other force. However, her obsession is not in death itself. Rather, Park is interested in that which causes death and the event of unexplained deaths. The deaths involved in those incidents that Park explores in her work are not simple incidences which occur as a result of some physical force or even by the tools that are used. These incidents are mired in mystery. Park takes these mysterious incidences and tries to understand and undo the mystery, either through her imagination or with the help of common sense and logic. The stories that Park unravels seem very personal and lyrical but these stories in the end ask the deep question of life and the common angst of living on earth.</p>
<p>We always tend to remain somewhere in-between. Whether it is the beginning or the end, getting on or off, matriculating or graduating, meeting or saying good-bye, and/or living or dying, etc. we are always somewhere in-between something that begins and will eventually end. Yoon-Young Park&#8217;s works too are located somewhere between as she searches for a certain world, place. Ixtlan stop or the Journey to Akeldama is all located in an in-between space, somewhere between the real and surreal, reality and imagination, etc., and where Park hopes to go might be a place where she dreams of, a place where bad things can self-heal, or the kind of world that Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. dreamed of, a place where the strong protects the weak.  However, in the end, the place she is searching for is where nature brings unity.</p>
<p>Yoon-Young Park&#8217;s exhibition is a very special place, an opportunity to meet Park&#8217;s works in the midst of her long journey as an artist. Reading her stories in her work in an imagined space that is created by Park is sure to be a special occasion in our own journeys as well. After our meeting, we will all be on our own ways, but let us stop for a moment at Ixtlan Stop and read her works.</p>
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		<title>MAIN GALLERY EXHIBITIONS</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/exhibitions/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/exhibitions/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Jun 2007 21:21:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Default Category]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://test.location1.org/exhibitions/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We exhibit artists&#8217; work in our main gallery eleven months a year, and often in our two other public spaces as well. All of the work we exhibit is developed at Location One, much of it by artists in our residency program. While Location One seeks to nurture a critical awareness of the implications of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We exhibit artists&#8217; work in our main gallery eleven months a year, and often in our two other public spaces as well. All of the work we exhibit is developed at Location One, much of it by artists in our residency program. While Location One seeks to nurture a critical awareness of the implications of technology for contemporary society in both our artists-in-residence and our audiences, and on a practical level, to introduce artists to the possibilities of new media in their art practice, the work we exhibit covers a full spectrum: painting, sculpture, video, digital, audio, installation and performance. It is the convergence of artists working in all these areas which is of paramount interest to us. We believe that collaborations across multiple disciplines, and conversations from many perspectives, produce rich insights and raise critical questions.</p>
<h2>SELECTED PAST EXHIBITIONS:</h2>
<h3><img src="http://blast.location1.org/our-homeland.jpg" width="225" align="right" alt="Na Yingyu" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/our-homeland-gone-just-like-that/"> <strong>Na Yingyu: <em>Our Homeland! Gone Just Like That</em></strong></a></h3>
<p>7 March &#8211; 6 May 2012<br />
Curated by Jay Brown<br />
Shot in the highland villages of the Jade Dragon Naxi Autonomous<br />
Prefecture of Lijiang, Yunnan, China in 2006 and 2007, this composite of video, sound,<br />
and still images chronicles the encounters of the Manchurian video artist Na Yingyu among the Naxi<br />
people in the sandy pines at the foothills of the Himalaya. This area of the world hosts a richness<br />
of land, family, music, ritual and the natural beauty that someone in the video describes as<br />
“home”. The massive new video installation, consisting of of 59 video “chapters” is arranged as<br />
constellations in a starry night sky. </p>
<p class="sectioned">
<p><a href="http://www.location1.org/residency/exhibits/">Project Gallery Events / Exhibitions&gt;&gt;  </a></p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img src="/images/jacob.jpg" width="225"  border="0" align="right" alt="Jacob Dahl Jurgensen" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/one-and-many/"><br />
<strong><em>One And Many</em></strong></a></h3>
<p>11 January &#8211; 15 February 2012<br />
Location One is proud to present One and Many, a group show featuring works by Monica Baptista, Jacob Dahl Jürgensen, Atsushi Kaga, Agnieszka Kurant, David Molander, and Hiraku Suzuki. These artists engage a variety of mediums, from digital film and photography to the traditional art of sewing, transforming one piece into many as they channel possible meta-narratives in their work.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img src="/images/lilibeth-eagle.jpg" alt="lilibeth cuenca rasmussen" width="225"  border="0" align="right"><a href="http://www.location1.org/afghan-hound/"><Strong>Lilibeth Cuenca Rasmussen: <em>Afghan Hound</em></strong></a></h3>
<p>29 October &#8211; 23 December 2011<br />
Through photographs. sculpture, video, song, costume and performance, Cuenca explores the fragile structure of political hegemony and patriarchal domination. Her premise: When sexuality is repressed, new constructions of gender develop.The title refers both to the long-haired dog breed (the artist uses hair in extreme exaggeration throughout the work) and to Afghanistan (the male-dominated culture from which her characters are drawn).</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img src="http://blast.location1.org/aslanidis.jpg" alt="John Aslanidis" width="225"  border="0" align="right"><a href="http://www.location1.org/sounds-good"><Strong><em>Sounds Good</em></strong></a></h3>
<p>15 June &#8211; 29 July 2011<br />
Curated by Claudia Calirman<br />
Sounds Good, features visual responses to a collaborative sound piece by artists John Aslanidis, Katy Dove, Phoebe Hui, Sophie Hunter, Miler Lagos, John O’Connell, Gonzalo Puch, and Zane Saunders. The pieces relate to movement, rhythm, vibration, energy, and the expanding visual field.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img src='http://www.location1.org/images/invite-likeasharkinthegrass.jpg' width='250'  align='right' alt='John O’Connell Like A Shark in The Grass' /><a href="http://www.location1.org/like-a-shark-in-the-grass/"><br />
<strong>John O&#8217;Connell: </strong><em>Like a Shark in the Grass</em></h3>
<p></a><br />
14 April &#8211; 27 May 2011</p>
<p>The gallery space is transformed with floor-to-ceiling cardboard tubes, a large hand-painted mural, a series of drawings, and a huge papier-mâché structure, creating the sense of a forest that the viewer is invited to explore. This imaginary landscape—in which bizarre and unfamiliar narratives seem to unfold before the viewer’s eyes—is loosely inspired by an earlier drawing by O’Connell, Like a Shark in the Grass (2009), which depicts a ghostly white shark uncannily drifting inside a forest.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img src="http://blast.location1.org/balliano-postcard-image.jpg" alt="Davide Balliano" hspace="12" width="175" height="250" border="o" align="right"><a href="http://www.location1.org/giving-my-back-to-the-night/">Davide Balliano: <em>Giving My Back To The Night I Heard You Lying To A Giant</em><br />
<span style="text-decoration: line-through;">First Giant</span></a></h3>
<p>10 February &#8211; 19 March 2011</p>
<p>In the exhibition “Giving My Back to the Night I Heard You Lying to a Giant (<span style="text-decoration: line-through;">First Giant</span>)” Davide Balliano uses the myth of Ulysses blinding the Cyclops Polyphemus as a starting point for his representation of the five phases of sleep which he calls the “ancestral fight against the obscure void that blinds us every night”.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img src="/images/zina-blood-tears.jpg" alt="Sharon Stone in Abuja" height="200" align="right" border="0" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/sharon-stone-in-abuja" target="_blank"><em><strong>Sharon Stone in Abuja</strong></em><br />
Co-Curated by Zina Saro-Wiwa and James Lindon</a></h3>
<p>5 November 2010 &#8211; 22 January 2011</p>
<p>Location One is proud to present <em>SHARON STONE IN ABUJA</em> an exhibition conceived by Zina Saro-Wiwa, British-Nigerian film-maker and founder of AfricaLab, an organisation dedicated to re-imagining Africa. Includes work by Saro-Wiwa, Pieter Hugo, Wangechi Mutu, Mickalene Thomas, and Andrew Esiebo.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img src="http://blast.location1.org/lucy-image.jpg" alt="Lucy Skaer" height="150" align="right" /><a href="/new-work-by-lucy-skaer"><strong>Rachel, Peter, Caitlin, John</strong><br />
A Project by Lucy Skaer</a></h3>
<p><strong>16 September &#8211; 16 October, 2010</strong><br />
<strong>Experimental new work from acclaimed Turner Prize finalist. </strong><br />
Location One is proud to present important new work in 16mm film and sculpture from Lucy Skaer, the young Scottish artist shortlisted for the 2009 Turner Prize and recently featured at the Venice Biennale and the Berlin Biennial<br />
Artist Talk: Friday, Sept 24, 2010, 7pm<br />
with Chrissie Iles, Anne and Joel Ehrenkranz Curator, Whitney Museum</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/im-sorry.jpg" alt="" width="281" height="121" align="right" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/im-sorry/"><strong>Adel Abidin: <em>I&#8217;m Sorry</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>20 May &#8211; 31 July 2010</strong><br />
The piece that gives the exhibition its title-a light box including a sound installation- comes from his experience as an Iraqi traveling in the U.S. In one of his trips, Abidin encountered people from diverse social backgrounds. Yet, surprisingly, every time he mentioned his nationality, the answer was invariably the same: I&#8217;m Sorry. Of course, this reply comes as a double entendre: Are people sorry for themselves, for feeling guilty for the infringements imposed by the U.S. on Iraq during the war, or are they sorry for the artist&#8217;s fate of being born in such place? The shift of position between audience and self is constantly present in his work.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img src="http://blast.location1.org/double-lunar-dogs-blast.jpg" alt="" width="227" height="187" align="right" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/joan-jonas-drawing/"><strong>Joan Jonas:</strong></a></h3>
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/joan-jonas-drawing/"><strong><em>Drawing/Performance/Video</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>20 March &#8211; 8 May 2010</strong><br />
Drawing is an underlying practice and ongoing concern that Jonas has pursued<br />
throughout her life. All of Jonas&#8217;s performance drawings retain a working relationship to her individual video and installation projects. For Jonas, drawings can be lasting and autonomous objects or they may be ephemeral and destroyed during a performance.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/muniz-minotaur206.jpg" alt="" width="206" height="138" align="right" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/yes-but/"><strong><em>Yes, But&#8230;</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>14 Jan &#8211; 6 Mar 2010</strong><br />
Yes, But&#8230;explores works that dwell in the borderline between real and fictional, process-based and result-oriented, temporal and permanent, literal and metaphorical, orderly and undisciplined. Within the fabric of these works lies an array of artistic choices that emphasize contradictions and ambiguities, playing games upon the viewer at every turn.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img title="bell1.jpg" src="http://www.location1.org/images/bell1.jpg" alt="bell1.jpg" width="206" height="138" align="right" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/richard-bell-i-am-not-sorry/"><strong>Richard Bell: <em>I Am Not Sorry</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>8 Oct &#8211; 25 Nov 2009</strong></p>
<p>Brisbane-based Richard Bell is one of Australia&#8217;s most talked-about artists. Bell&#8217;s works address&#8211;and protest&#8211;the commodification of indigeneity in the western art market. They draw attention to frustrations and grievances brought about through the European colonization of Australia. His paintings play with the practice of appropriation, often mining the Pop Art styles of Roy Lichtenstein and Jasper Johns, the paint drips of Jackson Pollock, or the dot matrix style of Aboriginal painter Emily Kngwarreye while including texts that complicate the way we think about racism and race politics.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/levels-of-undo/"><strong>Virtual Residency 2.0: <em>Levels of Undo</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>9 Sept &#8211; 30 Oct 2009</strong><br />
Location One Virtual Residency Project 2.0: &#8220;Levels of Undo&#8221; Four artists from 4 different cities, who have never met&#8211;and were forbidden to do so during the three months of their &#8220;residency&#8221;&#8211;collaborate on a topic that they had no say in developing. Is this ethical? Are the parameters unnecessarily rigid? Were they able to produce anything worthwhile under such oddly stringent rules?</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img title="p522320" src="http://www.location1.org/images/p5220320.JPG" alt="p522320" width="206" height="138" align="right" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/conrad-shawcross-control/"><br />
<strong>Conrad Shawcross: <em>Control</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>20 May &#8211; 1 Aug 2009 </strong></p>
<p><strong>Extended! 9-26 Sept 2009 </strong></p>
<p>Shawcross is known for his multi-media, kinetic sculptures and mysterious structures that are imbued with an appearance of scientific rationality yet beneath the surface are also haunted by the search for the unobtainable and inexpressible. In this new work the artist continues the series of investigations that started with Slow Arc Inside a Cube (2008), which was initially inspired by the late British chemist Dorothy Hodgkin, who said deciphering the structure of pig insulin &#8216;was like trying to work out the structure of a tree from seeing only its shadow&#8217;.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/10-year-anniversary/"><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/benefit.gif" alt="10-year anniversary benefit gala" width="595" height="85" border="0" /></a></h3>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/nicolas-grospierre-and-kaeko-mizukoshi/"><strong>Nicolas Grospierre &amp; Kaeko Mizukoshi: <em>Safe and Hymn</em></strong>.</a></h3>
<p><strong>28 Apr &#8211; 9 May 2009</strong><br />
Location One is pleased to present the first of its summer 2009 International Residency Program Exhibitions featuring the work of two outstanding emerging artists, <a href="http://www.location1.org/nicolas-grospierre/"> Nicolas Grospierre (Poland)</a> and <a href="http://www.location1.org/kaeko-mizukoshi/"> Kaeko Mizukoshi (Japan)</a>. Artist Grospierre will present a photographic installation exploring the intricacies of NYC bank vaults, well timed in light of the global financial crisis. Artist Mizukoshi presents a video installation ste at a Los Angeles bus stop and focused on the dialog between a man, who rants indecipherably, and an awaiting passenger who responds with unrelated religious exclamations.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/from-the-air/"><strong>Laurie Anderson: <em>From the Air: Two Installations</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>5 March &#8211; 2 May 2009</strong><br />
Fostered by the experimental art scene of downtown New York in the early 1970s, Laurie Anderson created her earliest performances in Soho, where Location One is based. In addition to continuing her acclaimed performance work, she has gone on to broaden her artistic practice to include music, video, digital art, and sculpture. Her Location One installation features a duet of video and sound.Location One will organize its inaugural Benefit Gala in celebration of its 10th Anniversary on Thursday, March 5, 2009. Honoring Laurie Anderson and her contributions to the downtown New York art world and beyond, the gala will feature a preview of the exhibition and a special performance that the artist will reveal.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img title="Blake_untitled" src="http://www.location1.org/images/p2120076.JPG" alt="Blake_untitled" width="226" height="170" align="right" border="0" hspace="8" /><a href="/nayland-blake-behavior" target="nayland_blake"><strong>Nayland Blake: <em>Behavior</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>2 Dec 2008 &#8211; 14 Feb 2009</strong><br />
With a surprising dearth of bunnies, Nayland Blake&#8217;s: <em>Behavior</em>, a 25-year survey of the renowned artist&#8217;s work, will feature some thirty pieces from every aspect of Blake&#8217;s career as a painter, sculptor, illustrator, performer, and gorgeinstallation artist. They include the iconic Magic (1991), Heavenly Bunny Suit (1994), a restraint piece, Jim (2000), as well as a generous selection of works never before exhibited in NYC. Nayland Blake: Behavior will be accompanied by a magiccatalogue, as well as by a series of artist-curated performance nights, one of which will include a re-staging of Blake&#8217;s &#8220;Gorge&#8221; (1998).</p>
<p><a href="http://www.location1.org/behavior-catalogue/">Catalog availiable.</a></p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img title="pull172" src="http://www.location1.org/images/pull72.jpg" alt="pull172" width="226" height="153" align="right" border="0" hspace="8" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/jane-philbrick-pull/"><strong>Jane Philbrick: <em>PULL</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>10 Sept &#8211; 8 Nov 2008</strong>PULL confronts an America seemingly crippled by fear and uncertainty. Developed in collaboration with 18 engineers from Honeywell&#8217;s Fire Systems Group, PULL urges viewers to realize their hidden desire to sound the alarm, here in the form of an historic fire call box situated in the center of the gallery space. Once triggered, the work blossomsinto a flourish of lights, words and deafening sirens&#8211;a wake up call. Philbrick utilizes 502 fire alarms, strobes, smoke detectors, siren horns, control panels&#8211;and one customized vintage fire pull station to sound the alarm and remind us to question our notions of security and it&#8217;s sources.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/missionaccomplished/"><strong>Virtual Residency Project: <em>Mission Accomplished</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>10 Sept &#8211; 8 Nov 2008</strong><br />
Can three complete strangers &#8211; from different continents, cultures and creative disciplines &#8211; collaborate from afar to create a forceful artistic statement about a political event? They can, they have! Their work, prepared without ever meeting face-to-face, uses Google Earth, Second Life, wikis and blog technologies &#8211; not to mention old-fashioned hand-printed Agitprop posters &#8211; to address the forthcoming U.S. Presidential election. The three artists all speak English, and all are fluent in Internet media. They were given no restrictions other than not meeting in person, and no directions other than the topic of the forthcoming Presidential election. Heather Wagner, director of online exhibitions, coordinated the project for Location One.Mission Accomplished?The chosen three:  <a href="http://www.berkenheger.de/index_english.html">Susanne Berkenheger (Berlin)</a>, <a href="http://andydeck.com">Andy Deck(NYC)</a>, and <a href="http://mapping.jp/index_en.html">Hidenori Watanave (Tokyo)</a></p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/jean-shin-and-we-move/"><strong>Jean Shin: <em>And We Move</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>19 Jun &#8211; 26 Jul 2008</strong><br />
Conceived as a site-specific installation, And we move continues Jean Shin&#8217;s investigation into the nature of music and its production. The installation utilizes the display of clothing, a video projection on fabric, unwound audio tape, embroidery, and compositional scores on prints, to explore how music is visualized and expressed through movement of the body, and how sound can be imprinted onto a surface.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img title="aoife" src="http://www.location1.org/images/aoife.jpg" alt="aoife" width="152" height="153" align="right" border="0" hspace="8" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/aoife-collins-wet-eye"><strong>Aoife Collins: <em>Wet Eye</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>24 Apr &#8211; 14 Jun 2008</strong>Aoife&#8217;s interdisciplinary practice is shaped by recurrent themes of permutation, multiplicity, cultural paraphernalia and mass identification. She utilizes collage, found object and the reinterpretation of prefabricated forms to communicate new ideas and the mutability of image over context.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/nina-sobell-internal-message-search/"><strong>Nina Sobell: <em>Internal Message Search</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>18 &#8211; 26 Apr 2008</strong>Nina Sobell pioneered the use of video, computers, and interactivity in art, as well as performance on the Web. Since 1969, when she first used video to document participants&#8217; undirected interactions with her sculptures, she investigates the extent to which video enables her to manipulate the relation between time and space, and to create a vortex for human experience, in which the mediated event coincides with public experience, memory, and relationships.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img title="moffatt_doomed" src="http://www.location1.org/images/moffatt-doomed.jpg" alt="moffatt_doomed" width="205" height="206" align="right" border="0" hspace="8" /><a title="Permanent Link to TRACEY MOFFATT:  Social Edit" href="http://www.location1.org/tracey-moffatt-social-edit/" rel="bookmark"><strong>Tracey Moffatt: <em> Social Edit</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>26 Feb &#8211; 19 Apr 2008</strong><br />
Curated by Eric C. Shiner<br />
Moffatt&#8217;s narrative films offer the viewer a penetrative gaze into the realities and implicit fantasies that subjugation based on race and gender churns out. In her dual role as cultural critic and maker of art, Moffatt combines hard-edged life experiences with the technologies of video and photography to seam together pastiche-like vignettes that open a window onto the lives of her characters, whether that be an Australian aborigine or an African-American woman.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a title="Xu Tan:  Searching for Keywords" href="http://location1.org/xutan-keywords"><strong>Xu Tan: <em>Searching for Keywords</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>28 Nov 2007 &#8211; 9 Feb 2008</strong><br />
Xu Tan&#8217;s work deals with the hidden motivations and intentions of individuals through a high-tech analysis of their vocabulary. &#8220;Searching with Keywords&#8221; is the New York leg of an ongoing project which the artist launched in 2005. The project will be unfolding simultaneously in Beijing, China, in Sittard, Holland, and in New York, through a website created specifically for this happening. Gallery audiences in New York will be invited to interact with the keywords, which are presented by means of four video projections and four computer stations equipped with laptops, video cameras, and Internet connections. The goal is to have gallery visitors pronounce the keywords as illustrated in drawings and video clips, to ask questions of the artist thorough an on-line forum and message board, and to leave comments. Their reactions and input will be immediately transmitted through the website to the other venues where the installation is present.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="/what-we-saw-upon-awakening"><strong>Lida Abdul: <em>What We Saw Upon Awakening</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>4 Oct &#8211; 17 Nov 2007</strong><br />
Location One presents the first New York exhibition by Afghan artist Lida Abdul whose work is rooted in the devastation of war and in a sublimation of healing. In her videos, Afghani ruins appear as images from a dreamscape-both real and surreal-steeped in forgotten histories and mystery.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://location1.org/crater-ny"><strong>Nora Ligorano and Marshall Reese: <em>Crater New York: A Lunar Drawing Contest</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>6 &#8211; 26 Sept 2007</strong><br />
On September 26th, Location One was proud to give away three deeds to land on the moon. All you had to do to enter the contest and vie for a chance to own extra-planetary property was show up, draw an image of a moon model that had been installed in the gallery, and then hope the judges liked it! Next stop, NASA &#8211; to purchase a de-comissioned space shuttle of course!</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img title="cliff_full" src="http://www.location1.org/images/cliff_full.jpg" alt="cliff_full" width="153" height="216" align="right" border="0" hspace="8" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/nine-international-artists-exhibit/"><strong>IRP Exhibition: <em>Summer 2007</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>June 2 &#8211; July 28, 2007</strong><br />
Location One presents the second IRP group show of the 2006-2007 season, featuring new work developed by our resident artists. The exhibition represents a diverse range of artistic approaches and many are works in progress.Featuring:<a href="http://www.location1.org/jeanette-doyle/">Jeanette Doyle (Ireland)</a>,<a href="http://www.location1.org/cliff-evans/"> Cliff Evans (USA)</a>,<a href="http://www.location1.org/krist-gruijthuijsen/"> Krist Gruijthuijsen (The Netherlands)</a>,<a href="http://www.location1.org/ruey-hsiaan-hsu/"> Ruey-Hsiaan Hsu (Taiwan</a>,<a href="http://www.location1.org/miguel-palma/"> Miguel Palma (Portugal)</a>,<a href="http://www.location1.org/bundith-phunsombatlert/"> Bundith Phunsombatlert (Thailand)</a>,<a href="http://www.location1.org/jani-ruscica/"> Jani Ruscica (Finland)</a>, and<a href="http://www.location1.org/eric-van-hove/"> Eric Van Hove (Belgium).</a></p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/martha-rosler-virtual-minefield/"><strong>Martha Rosler: <em>Virtual Minefield</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>13 Apr &#8211; 25 May 2007</strong><br />
Location One is pleased to present Virtual Minefield, an installation by Martha Rosler which features two elements: a burlesque of a minefield, as a reminder of current combat zones and as a metaphor of the world political situation, and a mockup of a <a href="http://www.trnmag.com/Stories/2003/121703/PDA_translates_speech_121703.html">&#8220;phrasealator&#8221;</a>, a two-way speech-to-speech device developed by the Defense Department to provide a mechanical translation of set phrases in situations where personnel are unable to speak the local language.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/jeanette-doyle-starline-tours/"><strong>Jeanette Doyle: <em>StarLine Tours</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>13 Apr &#8211; 25 May 2007</strong>Location One is proud to present new work by the recipient of the 2006-07 Irish Fellowship award. Ms. Doyle&#8217;s practice is primarily concerned with picture making, specifically painting and its relationship to lens-based technologies. The artist manipulates the various media she employs in order to generate very particular effects, questioning the notion of representation and creating a metaphor of what we think we are seeing versus what we actually see or what is given to be seen.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img title="an_comingsoon" src="http://www.location1.org/images/irp/an_comingsoon.jpg" alt="an_comingsoon" width="296" height="182" align="right" border="0" hspace="8" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/irp-exhibition-winter-2007/"><strong>IRP Exhibition: <em>Winter 2007</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>13 Feb &#8211; 31 Mar 2007</strong><br />
Location One presents the first of two exhibitions showcasing new work developed by eight artists participating in the 2006-2007 International Residency Program. Featured works, some of which are exhibited as work-in-progress, represent a diverse range of artistic approaches.Featuring:<a href="http://www.location1.org/natalie-bewernitz-marek-goldowski/">Natalie Berwernitz &amp; Marek Goldowski (Germany)</a>, <a href="http://www.location1.org/teresa-henriques/">Teresa Henriques (Portugal)</a>, <a href="http://www.location1.org/agnieszka-kalinowska/">Agnieszka Kalinowska (Poland)</a>, <a href="http://www.location1.org/nina-katchadourian/">Nina Katchadourian (U.S.A.)</a>, <a href="http://www.location1.org/rie-kawakami/">Rie Kawakami (Japan)</a>, <a href="http://www.location1.org/alessandro-nassiri/">Alessandro Nassiri (Italy)</a>, <a href="http://www.location1.org/kaori-tazoe/">Kaori Tazoe (Japan)</a>, and <a href="http://www.location1.org/virginie-yassef/">Virginie Yassef (France)</a>.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/leesa-nicole-abahuni-in-the-sky/"><strong>Lisa and Nicole Abahuni: <em>In the Sky</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>21 Nov 2006 &#8211; 27 Jan 2007</strong><br />
<em>In the Sky</em> was a multimedia installation, commissioned by Location One, and developed into an exploration into the sharing of the senses and the interconnectedness between perception and sensation as experienced through visual, aural, and physical realms by populating the gallery with strands of metallic beads, a six-channel audio component and a video installation depicting repetitious images that speak to the weaving and unweaving of time and memory.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img title="artbots" src="http://www.location1.org/images/artbots2006.jpg" alt="artbots" width="267" height="200" align="right" border="0" hspace="8" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/artbots-the-robot-talent-show/"><strong>Artbots: <em>The Robot Talent Show</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>10-12 Nov 2006</strong><br />
Curated by Douglas Irving Repetto.ArtBots was an international art exhibition for robotic art and art-making robots. Featuring artists Jason Van Anden, Brett Doar, Yoav Bergner and LoVid, Bob Huott &amp; Eric Singer, Mark Esper, Ranjit Bhatnagar, James Powderly and Jonah Brucker-Cohen.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/cliff-evans-the-road-to-mount-weather/"><strong>Cliff Evans: <em>The Road to Mount Weather</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>14 Sep &#8211; 4 Nov 2006</strong><br />
Curated by Pieranna Cavalchini, curator of contemporary art, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum<br />
A grand, three-channel moving image installation/projection (15 minute loop) by Cliff Evans. &#8220;Mount Weather&#8221; is a personal artifice assembled from ideas and images found across the socio-environment of the Internet. Its form is reminiscent of historic epics as represented in cinema and in grand panoramic paintings, while also mimicking the ubiquitous technology used for website banner advertisements.Catalog is available.Sponsored by Location One and the Peter Norton Family Foundation.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img title="lukasz skapski, machines" src="http://www.location1.org/images/skapski.jpg" alt="lukasz skapski, machines" width="266" height="208" align="right" hspace="25" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/lukasz-skapski-recent-video-works-and-photographs/"><strong>Lukasz Skapski: <em>Video and Photographic Works</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>11 Apr &#8211; 20 May 2006</strong><br />
Debut solo show in New York of Polish artist whose work concerns cultural and political issues common to many national groups: the emotional ambivalence of women and nursing mothers, people&#8217;s views of the environment in which they live, the legacy of Communist practices in farming communities, as well as the practice and tradition of film itself. In all his work, the artist demonstrates an uncanny ability for capturing people&#8217;s circumstances on film and video. Installation sponsored by Location One and the Trust for Mutual Understanding.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/carlos-amorales-javier-viver-video-installations/"><strong>Carlos Amorales and Javier Viver: <em>Manimal</em> and <em>The Audience</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>8 Mar &#8211; 1 Apr 2006</strong>Mexican artist Carlos Amorales and former artist-in-residence Javier Viver and exhibit video works &#8220;Manimal&#8221; and &#8220;The Audience.&#8221; &#8220;Manimal&#8221; (2005, 6 mins.) is a black and white video animation about the transformation of animal emotions into human rationality. &#8220;The Audience&#8221; (2005, video and theater chairs, 4.5 minutes) is a three-channel video installation based on El Grand Teatro del Mundo. Sponsored by Location One. Javier Viver&#8217;s installation was supported in part by Consulate General of Spain in New York.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img title="douglas repetto, slowscan soundwave III" src="http://www.location1.org/images/slowscansoundwave.jpg" alt="douglas repetto, slowscan soundwave III" width="156" height="208" align="right" hspace="8" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/slowscan-soundave-iii-the-tel%c3%a6sthetic-finger/"><strong>Collaborative Exhibition:<em> Slowscan Soundwave (III)</em> and <em>The Telaesthetic Finger</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>11 Oct &#8211; 26 Nov 2005</strong>Curated by Heather Wagner&#8221;Slowscan Soundwave (III)&#8221; was an immense, interactive sound sculpture by artist and dorkbot instigator Douglas Repetto, consisting of enormous strips of sound-sensitive transparent mylar strewn from the ceiling, motors, and custom electronics. &#8220;The Telæsthetic Finger&#8221;, a selection of works by Kevin Centanni, Atsushi Nishijima and Heather Wagner, function as acoustic crab traps, devices that are cast out and reeled back in, filled with booty&#8230;or not. Sponsored by Location One.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/open-stitch/"><strong>Creative Atelier: <em>Open Stitch</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>7 Sep &#8211; 1 Oct 2005</strong><br />
Co-Curated by Claire Montgomery and Sebastien Sanz de Santamaria15 artists spent seven days at Location One working intensely and in restricted conditions to produce wearable creations with only the tools and materials provided to them. A cross between art and fashion, the project temporarily removed the gallery from the appointed function of &#8220;showing&#8221; and moved it to the world of artistic production, raising questions about the circumstances, both physical and mental, of the creative process. Participating artists: Ayah Bdeir, Jessie Cohan, Barry Doss, Stefany Anne Golberg, George Hudacko, Selma Karaca, Ryan Kennedy, Miranti Kisdarjono, Katherine Moriwaki, David Quinn, Chris Sanders, Davina Semo, and Wikiwikicorp, a collective that includes Jean Barberis, Aya Kakeda and Sebastien Sanz de Santamaria.Commissioned by Location One.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img title="csikszentmihalyi" src="http://www.location1.org/images/skin_control.jpg" alt="csikszentmihalyi" width="305" height="250" align="right" border="0" hspace="8" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/chris-csikszentmihalyi-skin-control/"><strong>Chris Csikszentmihalyi: <em>Skin &amp; Control</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>22 Sep 2004 &#8211; 26 Feb 2005</strong><br />
Rising out of the gallery floor and disappearing into the walls, two large-scale installations by MIT artist Chris Csikszentmihalyi explores two central technologies of our late industrial society: the airplane and the control panel, rehearsing our dependence on complex technologies and the vulnerability they engender. &#8220;Skin&#8221; was an aluminum cylinder, the fuselage of a Boeing 737 that emerges from the gallery floor, stopped in the act of flying. &#8220;Control&#8221; was composed of panels, roughly modeled on those used in Chernobyl, that wend their way through the gallery.Catalogue is available.Commissioned by Location One.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/victoria-vesna-nano-mandala/"><strong>Victoria Vesna: <em>Nano Mandala</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>15 Dec 2004 &#8211; 29 Jan 2005</strong><br />
An installation by media artist Victoria Vesna, with nanoscience pioneer James Gimzewski. It consisted of a video projected onto a disk of sand, 8 feet in diameter. Visitors could touch the sand as images were projected in evolving scale from the molecular structure of a single grain of sand to the recognizable image of the complete mandala, and then back again. This coming together of art, science and technology is a modern interpretation of an ancient tradition that consecrates the planet and its inhabitants to bring about purification and healing. The sand mandala seen in this installation was created by Tibetan Buddhist monks from the Gaden Lhopa Khangtsen Monastery in India. Sound artist Anne Niemetz developed the soundscape derived from sounds recorded during the creative process of making the sand mandala.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/creative-intelligence-new-work-from-the-mit-visual-arts-program/"><strong>Group Exhibition:<em> Creative Intelligence</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>20 &#8211; 27 May 2004</strong><br />
New work from the MIT Visual Arts Program featuring work by Carrie Bodle, Ross Cisneros, Clementine Cummer, Lukasz Lysakowski, and Hiroharu Mori.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/on-translation-on-view/"><strong>Muntadas: <em>On Translation: On View</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>30 Mar &#8211; 15 May 2004</strong><br />
<em>On View</em>, a new work from the <em>On Translation Series</em>, conceived and shot in Japan, post-produced in New York at Location One, is about viewing, looking&#8230; waiting&#8230; as contemporary rituals. &#8220;On Translation&#8221;, a series of work begun in Helsinki in 1995, groups a set of thirty works reflecting on the concept of translation and interpretation from a perspective that encompasses cultural, linguistic, political and economic issues produced and presented in different contexts and mediums.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img title="closky" src="http://www.location1.org/images/closky.gif" alt="closky" height="250" align="right" border="0" hspace="8" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/television"><strong>Claude Closky: <em>Television</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>12 Sep &#8211; 30 Dec 2003</strong><br />
Curated by Nathalie Anglès<br />
The first US solo installation by French artist Claude Closky. <em>Television</em> focused on the production of signs and systems that articulate the world in a society driven by consumerism. <em>Television</em> was a caricatured reflection of the web and television networks that questioned their rapid and continuous growth, regardless of the information they broadcast. Sponsored by Location One. This exhibition was made possible through the generous additional support of Étant donnés, The French-American Fund for Contemporary Art; Cultural Services of the French Embassy (US); and DICREAM-CNC, Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication, France.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/poetic-spectrum-images-objects-and-words-of-gozo-yoshimasu/"><strong>Gozo Yoshimasu: <em>Poetic Spectrum: Images, Objects and Words of Gozo Yoshimasu</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>3-23 Sep 2003</strong><br />
The New York debut exhibition and special performance reading by renowned Japanese poet Gozo Yoshimasu, recent recipient of the Purple Ribbon Award from the Japanese Government for his significant cultural contributions. &#8220;Poetic Spectrum&#8221; presented Yoshimasu&#8217;s photographs and copperplate calligraphies for the first time to a New York audience, and brought the legendary poet to New York to perform after a ten-year absence. Sponsored by Location One with generous support from The Japan Foundation.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img title="mechanism2" src="http://www.location1.org/images/mechanism2.jpg" alt="mechanism2" width="250" height="190" align="right" border="0" hspace="8" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/mechanism-no1-war/"><strong>Saoirse Higgins &amp; Simon Schiessl: <em>Mechanism No. 1: War &amp; The Doom_Machine</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>9 Jul &#8211; 2 Aug 2003</strong><br />
Two new interactive works by Saoirse Higgins and Simon Schiessl addressing our concerns and fears in the world as we embrace technology and its powers, both good and bad. &#8220;Mechanism No. 1&#8243; is an interactive video projection examining the critical moments leading to war. &#8220;The Doom_Machine&#8221; takes a daily measure of how close we are to a possible end to the world via related sites on the Internet and a doom voting website.Sponsored by Location One.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/signal-to-noise/"><strong>Group Exhibition:<em> Signal to Noise</em></strong></a></strong></h3>
<p><strong>10 Sep &#8211; 19 Oct 2002</strong><br />
Curated by Heather Wagner A group exhibition featuring works that explored the relationship of sound and light waves. Not merely illustrations of audio-visual synaesthesia, several of the pieces act literally as transducers, that is, devices that convert input energy of one form into output energy of another. Work exhibited by Atsushi Nishijima, Erwin Redl, Laurie Spiegel, and Heather Wagner.Sponsored by Location One.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img title="xu tan" src="http://www.location1.org/images/xutan.jpg" alt="xu tan" width="222" height="203" align="right" border="0" hspace="8" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/qing-hua-porcelain-blue-white/"><strong>Xu Tan: <em>Qing Hua Porcelain (Blue &amp; White)</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>29 May &#8211; 29 Jun 2002</strong><br />
Xu Tan&#8217;s debut solo exhibition in New York City. &#8220;Qing Hua Porcelain (Blue &amp; White)&#8221; was a new video/sound installation in which Xu Tan explored the differences in American and Chinese cultural interpretations of what is &#8220;real&#8221; and what is &#8220;fake&#8221;. Although each culture distinguishes and classifies &#8220;real&#8221; from &#8220;fake&#8221;, neither clearly defines these terms.Commissioned by Location One.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/white-balance/"><strong>François Bucher: <em>White Balance (to think is to forget differences)</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>10 Jan-2 Mar 2002</strong><br />
&#8220;White Balance (to think is to forget differences)&#8221; by Columbian artist François Bucher, is a meditation after 9-11 and an effort to uncover the geographies of power, the frontiers of privilege. It revisits this problem from different angles, creating short circuits of meaning which are hosted by improbable audiovisual matches. Media and internet footage is intermixed with images shot in downtown Manhattan before and after the September 11th attacks.Underwritten by Location One.Additional funding was provided by The New York City Media Arts Grant of The Jerome Foundation.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><a href="http://www.location1.org/o2o3-fractured-oxygenozone/"><strong>Keith Sonnier: <em>O2 = O3; Fractured Oxygen = Ozone</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>20 Sep &#8211; 28 Nov 2001</strong><br />
Exhibition by internationally celebrated artist Keith Sonnier comprised of six pieces that resulted from Sonnier&#8217;s investigations into the work of Nikola Tesla during the period 1990-1997.The Tesla series &#8220;captures&#8221; raw electricity in its most spectacular form by stringing copper wires and causing the current to flow and spark between them.Sponsored by Location One.</p>
<p class="sectioned">
<h3><img title="squirrel" src="http://www.location1.org/images/squirrel_sketch.jpg" alt="squirrel" width="350" height="240" align="right" border="0" hspace="8" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/life-after-the-squirrel/"><strong>Inagural Exhibition:<em> Life After the Squirrel</em></strong></a></h3>
<p><strong>9 Sep-8 Oct 2000</strong><br />
Location One&#8217;s first exhibition featured many European and American artists including Janet Cardiff, Mason Cooley, Filipe Miguel, Aernout Mik, John Neff, Vincent Pruden, relax (Marie-Antoinette Chiarenza, Daniel Hauser, Daniel Croptier), Pipilotti Rist, Ugo Rondinone, Greg Simsic, Kirsten Stoltman, Tony Tasset and Pia Wergius. Sponsored by Location One with additional generous support by The Mondriaan Foundation.</p>
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		<title>Project Gallery Events &amp; Exhibitions</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/residency/exhibits/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/residency/exhibits/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 18 May 2007 16:58:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>irp</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Default Category]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://test.location1.org/residency/exhibits/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[SELECTED PAST EXHIBITIONS: Main Gallery Exhibitions&#62;&#62; Rudy Shepherd: Portraits July 8-31, 2009 In “Portraits,” American Artist-in-Residence Rudy Shepherd presents a series of recent works that challenge and transcend traditional notions of who and what is a worthy subject of high-art portraiture, e.g., criminals, anonymous Taliban members, black heroes, or houses.The painted portraits in Shepherd’s “Criminal/Victim” [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.location1.org/exhibitions/"> </a></p>
<h2>SELECTED PAST EXHIBITIONS:</h2>
<p><a href="http://www.location1.org/exhibitions/">Main Gallery Exhibitions&gt;&gt;</a></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/R.%20Shepherd%20-%20Portrraits.JPG" alt="R. Shepherd - Portrraits.JPG" align="right" height="175" width="301" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/rudy-shepherd-portraits/"><strong>Rudy Shepherd:  Portraits</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>July 8-31, 2009</strong><br />
In “Portraits,” American Artist-in-Residence Rudy Shepherd presents a series of recent works that challenge and transcend traditional notions of who and what is a worthy subject of high-art portraiture, e.g., criminals, anonymous Taliban members, black heroes, or houses.The painted portraits in Shepherd’s “Criminal/Victim” series from 2009 depict both perpetrators and victims of the same crime side-by-side, visually blurring the line between innocence and guilt. By presenting the people first and the stories second a space is created for humanity to be re-instilled into the lives of people who have been reduced to mere headlines by the popular press (e.g. Timothy McVeigh).</p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/kaeko-hymn.jpg" alt="kaeko-hymm.jpg" align="right" height="169" width="302" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/nicolas-grospierre-and-kaeko-mizukoshi/"><strong>Nicolas Grospierre &amp; Kaeko Mizukoshi: Safe and Hymn</strong>.</a></h2>
<p><strong>28 Apr &#8211; 9 May 2009</strong><br />
Location One is pleased to present the first of its summer 2009 International Residency Program Exhibitions featuring the work of two outstanding emerging artists, <a href="http://www.location1.org/nicolas-grospierre/"> Nicolas Grospierre (Poland)</a> and <a href="http://www.location1.org/kaeko-mizukoshi/"> Kaeko Mizukoshi (Japan)</a>. Artist Grospierre will present a photographic installation exploring the intricacies of NYC bank vaults, well timed in light of the global financial crisis. Artist Mizukoshi presents a video installation ste at a Los Angeles bus stop and focused on the dialog between a man, who rants indecipherably, and an awaiting passenger who responds with unrelated religious exclamations.</p>
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</strong></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/robkennedy_balderash.jpg" alt="Balderdash" align="right" border="0" height="126" width="299" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/rob-kennedy-balderdash/" rel="bookmark" title="Link to Rob Kennedy: I Relish Your Balderdash"><strong>Rob Kennedy: I Relish Your Balderdash</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>June 25th, 2008</strong><br />
A video screening of <em><strong>Hapless, Helpless and Hopeless</strong></em>, by Rob Kennedy and Peter Dowling, 2008, (34 mins), with film screenings of <strong><em>Secondary Currents</em></strong> (1983, 17 mins) and <strong><em>The Gift</em></strong> (1994, 6 mins), by Peter Rose plus spoken texts, sounds and other paraphernaliaA screening/talk/reading presented by Rob Kennedy and Peter Rose concerning the absurdities, problems and possibilities of language, as affected by image, text, time, sense and nonsense.</p>
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</strong></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/rashaadnewsome_banjicunt400.jpg" alt="Rashaad Newsome - Shade Compositions" align="right" height="113" width="300" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/rashaad-newsome-compositions/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent Link to Rashaad Newsome: Compositions"><strong>Rashaad Newsome: Compositions</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>June 19 &#8211; July 26 2008</strong><br />
Have pop culture and globalization co-opted the wonderfully expressive gestures of the black America female? This is the question that Rashaad Newsome explores in video and photography in Shade Compositions, one of two new works in an exhibition opening on Thursday June 19th at Location One.</p>
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</strong></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/daniel_tseng_thumb.jpg" alt="Daniel Andersson &amp; Tseng Yu-chin" align="right" height="113" width="299" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/daniel-andersson-tseng-yu-chin/"><strong>Daniel Andersson &amp; Tseng Yu-chin: IRP Exhibition 2008</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>June 4-18, 2008</strong><br />
Location One is pleased to present new work by Daniel Andersson (Finland) and by Tseng Yu-chin (Taiwan), participants of the International Residency Program this year.  The exhibited work was made at Location One as part of their residency and features multi-layered ink photographs and drawings.</p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/ericluis_thumb.jpg" alt="Eric Siu and Luis Nobre" align="right" height="115" width="302" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/eric-siu-and-luis-nobre/"><strong>Eric Siu &amp; Luis Nobre</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>May 21, 2008</strong><br />
<em>Optical Handlers</em> – eeyee is a new interactive media project that consists of an optical goggle device constructed by the artist, which splits the vision into four channels.  <em>Hold It!</em> is an installation that creates a fantastical, sometimes hallucinatory vision of nature, the city and the artist’s studio. Visual play is generated by overlapping layers of drawings, ephemeral sculptures made of paper and cardboard, light wire objects, all constructed by Nobre in-situ.</p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/nina-sobell-ims-400.jpg" alt="Nina Sobell: Internal Message Search" align="right" height="105" width="300" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/nina-sobell-internal-message-search/"><strong>Nina Sobell: Internal Message Search &#8211; A Performative Installation</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>April 18-April 30, 2008</strong><br />
Nina Sobell will install her studio in Location One’s Project Gallery, which includes recent wax<br />
sculptures, drawings, keyboard, guitar and mic.<br />
Visitors to the gallery will be able to engage in a dialogue with the artist about this work, and may bring their own instruments to improvise with her live on the web.</p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/Santos_Hergenhahn.jpg" alt="Hermelinde Hergnhahn and Mafalda Santos" align="right" height="104" width="301" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/hermelinde-hergnhahn-and-mafalda-santos-in-project-space/" rel="bookmark"><strong>Hermelinde Hergenhahn &amp; Mafalda Santos:  In the Location One Project Space</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>January 30th -February 9th, 2008</strong><br />
Hergenhahn’s installation will consist of a series of pencil drawings gathered from experiences of quotidian life, and a video projection and wall etching in the gallery. Santos plays with the architecture of the exhibition space to reflect on the particular conditions of being an artist temporarily displaced from her customary work space, while she also considers the evolution of her work in a hand-drawn map for a new website.</p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/2068890631_c82fd4f2c8_o.jpg" alt="2068890631_c82fd4f2c8_o.jpg" align="right" height="153" width="301" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/hung-nguyen-mahn-special-performance-at-20-greene-street/" rel="bookmark"><strong>Hung Nguyen Manh:  Special Sound Performance</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>Jan 11th, 2008, 7pm </strong><br />
“From Cricket to Airplane”, an experimental performance by Hung Nguyen Manh followed by 2 other short pieces.  3 solo pieces that transports the audience into hi-frequency (cricket) to lo-frequency (airplane) sound effects. Realized with an electric guitar, e-bow and effects Boss DS1 + PS5 + DD6.</p>
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</strong></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/hung_moira.jpg" alt="Hung Nguyen Manh &amp; Moira Ricci in Location One’s Project Space" align="right" height="121" width="302" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/hung-nguyen-manh-and-moira-ricci-project-space/" rel="bookmark"><strong>Hung Nguyen Manh &amp; Moira Ricci:  In Location One’s Project Space</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>9th -19th January 2008</strong><br />
Central to Moira Ricci’s work is the world of the family home as the natural arena in which relationships are played out. Putting aside her own emotions, Ricci turns her personal narrative into fertile ground for thinking about the world we live in.</p>
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</strong></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/kuba_katia.jpg" alt="Katia Kameli &amp; Kuba Bakowski in Location One’s Project Space - 13-22 December 2007" align="right" height="114" width="303" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/katia-kameli-and-kuba-bakowski-project-space/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent Link to Katia Kameli &amp; Kuba Bakowski"><strong>Katia Kameli &amp; Kuba Bakowski:  In Location One’s Project Space</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>December 13-22, 2007</strong><br />
With “Draft“, Katia Kameli continues her investigation into key issues that drive her film, video and installation practice, namely the construction of intersecting identities in a globalized world, hybridization, the notion of intercultural spaces and awareness of psychogeographical effects.</p>
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</strong></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/irp_07_2007_thumb.jpg" alt="irp_07_2007_thumb.jpg" align="right" height="79" width="302" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/nine-international-artists-exhibit/"><strong>Nine International Artists Exhibit</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>June 2nd – July 28th, 2007</strong><br />
Location One presents the second IRP group show of the 2006-2007 season, featuring new work developed by our resident artists. The exhibition represents a diverse range of artistic approaches and many are works in progress.</p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/20070312_doyle.jpg" align="right" height="112" width="300" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/jeanette-doyle-starline-tours/" id="post-152"><strong>Jeanette Doyle:  StarLine Tours</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>April 13-May 25, 2007</strong><br />
Jeanette Doyle’s practice is primarily concerned with picture making. She is particularly interested in painting and its relationship to lens-based technologies. Her work is driven by conceptual concerns but is deeply engaged with the processes and mechanics of making, especially the production of images. Her works express a desire to crystalise complexity for a moment in an image which, on closer inspection, allows the fiction of coherence to dissolve. Disjunction between the image and text is a hint of this. This disjunction between word and image is a feature of the ‘StarLine Tours’ exhibition at Location One.</p>
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</strong></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/index/irp2007.jpg" align="right" height="114" width="302" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/irp-exhibition-winter-2007/" id="post-134"><strong>IRP Exhibition, Winter 2007</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>February 13-March 31st, 2007</strong><br />
Featuring:  Natalie Bewernitz &amp; Marek Goldowski, Teresa Henriques, Agnieszka Kalinowska,<br />
Nina Katchadourian, Rie Kawakami, Alessandro Nassiri, Kaori Tazoe, Virginie Yassef<br />
Location One presents the first of two exhibitions showcasing new work developed during their residencies by eight artists participating in the 2006-2007 International Residency Program. Featured works, some of which are exhibited as work-in-progress, represent a diverse range of artistic approaches.</p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/abahuni.jpg" alt="in the sky" align="right" height="96" width="301" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/leesa-nicole-abahuni-in-the-sky/" id="post-103"><strong>Leesa &amp; Nicole Abahuni:  In the Sky</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>November 21, 2006 &#8211; January 27, 2007</strong><br />
An opening reception and performance will be held on Wednesday, November 29th from 6 to 8 pm.<br />
The multimedia installation, which was commissioned by Location One, is entitled In the Sky, is an exploration into the sharing of the senses and the interconnectedness between perception and sensation as experienced through visual, aural, and physical realms.</p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/irp/t_nedreaas.jpg" align="right" height="149" width="297" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/international-residency-program-2005-2006-group-show-ii/" id="post-100"><strong> International Residency Program 2005-2006 &#8211; Group Show II</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>June 1st &#8211; July 29th, 2006</strong><br />
Featuring:  Leesa &amp; Nicole Abahuni, Simo Alitalo, Andrew Duggan, Mayumi Nakazaki, Trine Nedreaas, Yuki Okumura, Lydia Venieri, Wang Ya-Hui.<br />
On Thursday, June 1st, Location One opens its Summer exhibition, showcasing new work developed by resident artists from the USA, Finland, Ireland, The Netherlands, Norway, Japan, Greece, and Taiwan who are participating in the Location One 2005-2006 International Residency Program. The show will be open to the public through Saturday, July 29th, 2006.</p>
<p><strong><br />
</strong></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/irp/20060518_echo.gif" align="right" height="170" width="300" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/andrew-duggan-echo/" id="post-99"><strong>Andrew Duggan:  ECHO</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>Thursday, May 18, 2006 &#8211; 6:30-8:30pm</strong><br />
Location One presents ECHO, a collaborative project created by visual/media artist Andrew Duggan and dancers Jonathan Kelliher and Joanne Barry of Siamsa Tíre, the National Folk Theatre of Ireland. For one-night only traditional Irish dance will be transported from the South West coast of Ireland to Location One’s Gallery space in New York City. Impromptu street performances and filming will take place in NYC at undisclosed locations leading up to the event. The resulting project will be presented at Location One.</p>
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</strong></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/g_heinke_strip.jpg" alt="Residency Program Show 2005-2006" align="right" height="133" width="301" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/international-residency-program-2005-2006-group-show-i/" id="post-97"><strong>International Residency Program 2005-2006 &#8211; Group Show I</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>February 9th &#8211; March 4th, 2006</strong><br />
Featuring:  Paololuca Barbieri, Isabelle Ferreira, Geka Heinke, Yoon-Young Park, Mariana Viegas.<br />
On Thursday, February 9th, Location One presents the first of two Spring exhibitions showcasing new work developed by artists from Italy, France, Germany, Korea, and Portugal who are participating in the 2005-2006 International Residency Program. Featured works represent a diverse range of artistic approaches.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/alterazione_strip.jpg" alt="alterazione_strip.jpg" align="right" height="114" width="300" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/light-waves-live-in-new-york/" id="post-98"><strong>Paololuca Barbieri and art collective, ALTERAZIONI VIDEO:  LIGHT WAVES live in NEW YORK</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>Wednesday February 15th &#8211; 7:00 PM</strong><br />
A concert-performance conceived as a one-night audio-video event. The project explores the relationship between light and sound, looking for the natural correspondence between these two elements, between visible and invisible, playing with their frequencies.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/somnambulic_1.jpg" align="right" height="199" width="301" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/somnambulic/" id="post-96"><strong>Martin Beauregard:  Somnambulic</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>7 December 2005 &#8211; 4 February 2006</strong><br />
Location One is pleased to present Somnambulic, the first New York solo exhibition by Canadian artist Martin Beauregard. This new body of work highlights persistent themes for the artist revolving around the relation between dream, illusion, and reality. It also produces a “fantastical strangeness” that is characteristic of Beauregard’s work, as he explores modes of perception through play and creation.</p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/irp-exhibition-spring-2005-iii/" id="post-95"><strong>Yumiko Furukawa, Kenny Hunter, Wu Ta-Kun, and Mariana Viegas:  IRP Exhibition Spring 2005 III</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>June 4th &#8211; July 30th, 2005</strong><br />
Tent for Poet (2005) (multimedia installation with tent, furnishings, video &amp; DVD) is a work dedicated by the artist to a poet living in New York.  Citizen Firefighter (2001) (resin sculpture), was conceived primarily to celebrate the men and women of Strathclyde Brigade in Scotland.  The driving force behind Wu Ta-Kun’s varied body of work is expanding “ideas of sensibility”.  Landscape is an entity –or a body– which is transformed by our presence and which, in turn, transforms us.</strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/irp-exhibition-spring-2005-ii/" id="post-94"><strong>Martin Beauregard &amp; Marlena Kudlicka:  IRP Exhibition Spring 2005 II</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>April 28th &#8211; May 28th, 2005</strong><br />
Location One is pleased to present the second of three Spring exhibitions showcasing the work of artists participating in its 2004-2005 International Residency Program. The two installations by Canadian artist Martin Beauregard, and Polish artist Marlena Kudlicka were developed during their residencies at Location One.</strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/irp-exhibition-spring-2005/" id="post-93"><strong>Nayda Collazo-Llorens and Santeri Tuori:  IRP Exhibition Spring 2005</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>March 18 &#8211; April 23, 2005</strong><br />
Artists-in-Residence Nayda Collazo-Llorens (USA) and Santeri Tuori (Finland) will present video installations in Location One’s main gallery. With special thanks to NYSCA (New York State Council on the Arts) and FRAME (Finnish Fund for Art Exchange)</strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/3-videos-and-3-songs/" id="post-92"><strong>Cécile Paris:  3 videos and 3 songs</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>Dec 15 2004 &#8211; Jan 29, 2005</strong><br />
Each video presents a singular character performing a simple action: a figure on a skateboard filmed from the back in a car, a young girl playing guitar on a traffic circle in the suburbs of Paris, a swimmer, a New York doorman as he progresses through the city at night.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/passed-for-export/" id="post-91"><strong>Mark Themann:  PASSED for EXPORT: an installation.</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>July 8 &#8211; July 31, 2004</strong><br />
<em>PASSED for EXPORT</em>, a site-specific installation by Mark Themann, raises questions about the American Landscape, the Constitution and the Bill of Rights in times of political crisis. Two videos of monumental US landscapes are projected in unnervingly slow and steady takes on opposite walls. Any potential romanticism is forestalled by the cacophonous clashing of two audio tracks in which the narrators are each reading from the Amendments to the Bill of Rights and the Constitution, reciting with an extreme stutter.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/irp-exhibition-2004/" id="post-90"><strong>IRP Exhibition 2004</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>May 28 &#8211; June 30, 2004</strong><br />
Featuring:Koki Tanaka, Hsiao Sheng Chien, Mark Themann, Federico Muelas, Miguel Soares, Alexandra do Carmo, Vincent Lamouroux.<br />
On Thursday, May 27, Location One presents its third annual artist-in-residence group exhibition. Eight works ranging from video, to sculpture, to robotic structures, to interactive installations were developed by emerging international artists during their stay. Featured in the main gallery, the show will be open to the public through Wednesday, June 30th, 2004.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/re-mapping-4-dimensions-three-new-works/" id="post-89"><strong>Kurt Ralske:  Re-Mapping 4 Dimensions: Three New Works</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>January-February, 2004</strong><br />
These three works explore time, and our perception of time. For me, one of the most interesting qualities of video is that it is in reality only a collection of still images. At 30 video frames per second, any 10 seconds of fluid movement can alternately be considered as a static collection of 300 related still images. Working in the digital realm in a real-time manner, there are endless possibilies for instantly treating a new video recording as a library of stills, then deriving new material by analyzing or modifying this library: reordering entries, comparing similarity or difference between entries, deriving a single image from multiple entries, etc.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/casual-friday-by-vesna-pavlovic/" id="post-88"><strong>Vesna Pavlovic:  Casual Friday</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>December 10-30, 2003</strong><br />
Casual Friday will consist of several layers, only one of which will be photographic. Audio interviews, drawings and writings will constitute the other layers.<br />
Collaborator and architect Srdjan Weiss, will address these themes through drawings of the layout and contents of the “perfect” office. He will do so through drawings, and will integrate into his work research on the history of the subject building, as well as information related to the taste and design of the architects who originally worked on the building.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><br />
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/gustavo1.jpg" title="gustavo1.jpg" alt="gustavo1.jpg" align="right" height="183" width="206" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/red-alert/" id="post-87"><strong> Miguel Soares:  Red Alert</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>November-December, 2003</strong><br />
“Do androids dream of electric sheep?” &#8211; Philip K. Dick<br />
Gustavo is a robot that has been discarded in a black garbage bag. Out of this bag extends Gustavo’s motorized arm, with a laser that is carving a drawing on the wall. Do robots dream of being artists?</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/mechanism-no1-war/" id="post-84"><strong>Saoirse Higgins and Simon Schiessl:  Mechanism no.1: War</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>July 9 &#8211; August 2, 2003</strong><br />
This is an interactive video projection examining the critical moments leading to war. The visitor winds* up the mechanical toy drummer boy with the brass key. The action of the drummer boy correlates to a projected video that shows bombs dropping from the sky. The sound of the bombs keeps exact beat with the drum. The tighter the mechanism is wound the faster the bombs will drop. The visitor controls frequency of the bombing. Where are these bombs being dropped? What are the consequences?</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/irp-exhibition-2003/" id="post-85"><strong>Daniel Blaufuks, Isabelle Jenniches, Dominik Lejman, Javier Viver, and Jiun-Ting Lin:  IRP Exhibition 2003</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>May 22, 2003-June 28, 2003</strong><br />
May 22, Location One, a not-for-profit multimedia arts organization, opened its second artist-in-residence group exhibition with multimedia work developed during their stay.  Included artists: Daniel Blaufuks (Portugal), Isabelle Jenniches (The Netherlands), Dominik Lejman (Poland), Jiun-Ting Lin (Taiwan), and Javier Viver (Spain). This exhibition will be on view in Location One’s gallery through June 28, 2003 and will be streamed live on our website (www.location1.org).</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/signal-to-noise/" id="post-83"><strong>Atsushi Nishijima, Erwin Redl, Laurie Spiegel and Heather Wagner:  Signal to Noise</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>September 10 &#8211; October 19, 2002</strong><br />
Location One is happy to present “Signal to Noise“, a group exhibition featuring works that explore the relationship of sound and light waves. Not merely illustrations of audio-visual synaesthesia, several of the pieces act literally as transducers, that is, devices that convert input energy of one form into output energy of another.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/xutan.jpg" title="xutan.jpg" alt="xutan.jpg" align="right" height="168" width="182" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/qing-hua-porcelain-blue-white/" id="post-82"><strong>Xu Tan:  Qing Hua Porcelain (Blue &amp; White)</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>May 23rd &#8211; June 29th 2002</strong><br />
Xu Tan draws his inspiration from the teachings of philosopher Chuang-Tzu (circa 250 BC). Successor to Lao Tzu and a foremost proponent of Taoism, Chuang-Tzu presumed that no matter how alike two things are, a difference between them can always be found and, conversely, no matter how different two things are, one can find a similarity between them. Objective similarities and differences do not justify any particular way of distinguishing between things.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/white-balance/" id="post-81"><strong>Francois Bucher:  White Balance</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>January 10 &#8211; March 2, 2002</strong><br />
White Balance (to think is to forget differences) is an effort to uncover the geographies of power, the frontiers of privilege. It revisits this problem from different angles, creating short circuits of meaning which are hosted by improbable audiovisual matches. Media and internet footage is intermixed with images shot in downtown Manhattan before and after the September 11th attacks.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/atsushi2.jpg" title="atsushi2.jpg" alt="atsushi2.jpg" align="right" height="138" width="169" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/subtractive-creationvisible-sound/" id="post-72"><strong>Atsushi Nishijima:  Subtractive Creation/Visible Sound</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>December 8th &#8211; 29, 2001</strong><br />
“Sound does not exist without space and space is always filled with sound. Space represents sound as something visible, sound represents space as something audible. Our daily life is made of inevitable factors such as time and space. As for myself, that is a place where contemporary music exists.”  &#8211;Atsushi Nishijima</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/irp-exhibition-2001/" id="post-74"><strong>François Bucher, Marta Deskur, and Ksenija Turcic:  Irp Exhibition 2001</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>June 9-July 28, 2001</strong><br />
Museum of Mankind is a video installation depicting the statues that stand high on the roof of the Museum of Mankind in London.  In a multimedia installation and web site project, New Baby?, Marta Deskur questions the significance of family today and the conflicting issues this question addresses.  Ksenija Turcic presents a new multimedia installation, Phase, where she pursues her investigation of emotional space.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/recorder_icon1.gif" title="recorder_icon1.gif" alt="recorder_icon1.gif" align="right" height="138" width="206" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/recorders/" id="post-73"><strong>Katya Sander and François Bucher:  RECORDERS</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>March 22 &#8211; April 21, 2001</strong><br />
“Recorders is an installation where a rotating camera and video projector interact with the visitor in a game of shadows and projection, images and text, narration and space, focus and blur. A pre-recorded conversation acts as voice-over for the entire set-up which is encompassed by a large image that resembles something like bits of information, white noise or a glittery seascape.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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		<title>Project Gallery Events &amp; Exhibitions</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/residency/exhibits-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/residency/exhibits-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 18 May 2007 16:58:00 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[SELECTED PAST EXHIBITIONS: Main Gallery Exhibitions&#62;&#62; Rudy Shepherd: Portraits July 8-31, 2009 In “Portraits,” American Artist-in-Residence Rudy Shepherd presents a series of recent works that challenge and transcend traditional notions of who and what is a worthy subject of high-art portraiture, e.g., criminals, anonymous Taliban members, black heroes, or houses.The painted portraits in Shepherd’s “Criminal/Victim” [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.location1.org/exhibitions/"> </a></p>
<h2>SELECTED PAST EXHIBITIONS:</h2>
<p><a href="http://www.location1.org/exhibitions/">Main Gallery Exhibitions&gt;&gt;</a></p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/R.%20Shepherd%20-%20Portrraits.JPG" alt="R. Shepherd - Portrraits.JPG" align="right" height="175" width="301" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/rudy-shepherd-portraits/"><strong>Rudy Shepherd:  Portraits</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>July 8-31, 2009</strong><br />
In “Portraits,” American Artist-in-Residence Rudy Shepherd presents a series of recent works that challenge and transcend traditional notions of who and what is a worthy subject of high-art portraiture, e.g., criminals, anonymous Taliban members, black heroes, or houses.The painted portraits in Shepherd’s “Criminal/Victim” series from 2009 depict both perpetrators and victims of the same crime side-by-side, visually blurring the line between innocence and guilt. By presenting the people first and the stories second a space is created for humanity to be re-instilled into the lives of people who have been reduced to mere headlines by the popular press (e.g. Timothy McVeigh).</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/kaeko-hymn.jpg" alt="kaeko-hymm.jpg" align="right" height="169" width="302" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/nicolas-grospierre-and-kaeko-mizukoshi/"><strong>Nicolas Grospierre &amp; Kaeko Mizukoshi: Safe and Hymn</strong>.</a></h2>
<p><strong>28 Apr &#8211; 9 May 2009</strong><br />
Location One is pleased to present the first of its summer 2009 International Residency Program Exhibitions featuring the work of two outstanding emerging artists, <a href="http://www.location1.org/nicolas-grospierre/"> Nicolas Grospierre (Poland)</a> and <a href="http://www.location1.org/kaeko-mizukoshi/"> Kaeko Mizukoshi (Japan)</a>. Artist Grospierre will present a photographic installation exploring the intricacies of NYC bank vaults, well timed in light of the global financial crisis. Artist Mizukoshi presents a video installation ste at a Los Angeles bus stop and focused on the dialog between a man, who rants indecipherably, and an awaiting passenger who responds with unrelated religious exclamations.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/robkennedy_balderash.jpg" alt="Balderdash" align="right" border="0" height="126" width="299" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/rob-kennedy-balderdash/" rel="bookmark" title="Link to Rob Kennedy: I Relish Your Balderdash"><strong>Rob Kennedy: I Relish Your Balderdash</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>June 25th, 2008</strong><br />
A video screening of <em><strong>Hapless, Helpless and Hopeless</strong></em>, by Rob Kennedy and Peter Dowling, 2008, (34 mins), with film screenings of <strong><em>Secondary Currents</em></strong> (1983, 17 mins) and <strong><em>The Gift</em></strong> (1994, 6 mins), by Peter Rose plus spoken texts, sounds and other paraphernaliaA screening/talk/reading presented by Rob Kennedy and Peter Rose concerning the absurdities, problems and possibilities of language, as affected by image, text, time, sense and nonsense.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/rashaadnewsome_banjicunt400.jpg" alt="Rashaad Newsome - Shade Compositions" align="right" height="113" width="300" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/rashaad-newsome-compositions/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent Link to Rashaad Newsome: Compositions"><strong>Rashaad Newsome: Compositions</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>June 19 &#8211; July 26 2008</strong><br />
Have pop culture and globalization co-opted the wonderfully expressive gestures of the black America female? This is the question that Rashaad Newsome explores in video and photography in Shade Compositions, one of two new works in an exhibition opening on Thursday June 19th at Location One.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/daniel_tseng_thumb.jpg" alt="Daniel Andersson &amp; Tseng Yu-chin" align="right" height="113" width="299" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/daniel-andersson-tseng-yu-chin/"><strong>Daniel Andersson &amp; Tseng Yu-chin: IRP Exhibition 2008</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>June 4-18, 2008</strong><br />
Location One is pleased to present new work by Daniel Andersson (Finland) and by Tseng Yu-chin (Taiwan), participants of the International Residency Program this year.  The exhibited work was made at Location One as part of their residency and features multi-layered ink photographs and drawings.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/ericluis_thumb.jpg" alt="Eric Siu and Luis Nobre" align="right" height="115" width="302" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/eric-siu-and-luis-nobre/"><strong>Eric Siu &amp; Luis Nobre</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>May 21, 2008</strong><br />
<em>Optical Handlers</em> – eeyee is a new interactive media project that consists of an optical goggle device constructed by the artist, which splits the vision into four channels.  <em>Hold It!</em> is an installation that creates a fantastical, sometimes hallucinatory vision of nature, the city and the artist’s studio. Visual play is generated by overlapping layers of drawings, ephemeral sculptures made of paper and cardboard, light wire objects, all constructed by Nobre in-situ.</p>
<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/nina-sobell-ims-400.jpg" alt="Nina Sobell: Internal Message Search" align="right" height="105" width="300" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/nina-sobell-internal-message-search/"><strong>Nina Sobell: Internal Message Search &#8211; A Performative Installation</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>April 18-April 30, 2008</strong><br />
Nina Sobell will install her studio in Location One’s Project Gallery, which includes recent wax<br />
sculptures, drawings, keyboard, guitar and mic.<br />
Visitors to the gallery will be able to engage in a dialogue with the artist about this work, and may bring their own instruments to improvise with her live on the web.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/Santos_Hergenhahn.jpg" alt="Hermelinde Hergnhahn and Mafalda Santos" align="right" height="104" width="301" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/hermelinde-hergnhahn-and-mafalda-santos-in-project-space/" rel="bookmark"><strong>Hermelinde Hergenhahn &amp; Mafalda Santos:  In the Location One Project Space</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>January 30th -February 9th, 2008</strong><br />
Hergenhahn’s installation will consist of a series of pencil drawings gathered from experiences of quotidian life, and a video projection and wall etching in the gallery. Santos plays with the architecture of the exhibition space to reflect on the particular conditions of being an artist temporarily displaced from her customary work space, while she also considers the evolution of her work in a hand-drawn map for a new website.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/2068890631_c82fd4f2c8_o.jpg" alt="2068890631_c82fd4f2c8_o.jpg" align="right" height="153" width="301" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/hung-nguyen-mahn-special-performance-at-20-greene-street/" rel="bookmark"><strong>Hung Nguyen Manh:  Special Sound Performance</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>Jan 11th, 2008, 7pm </strong><br />
“From Cricket to Airplane”, an experimental performance by Hung Nguyen Manh followed by 2 other short pieces.  3 solo pieces that transports the audience into hi-frequency (cricket) to lo-frequency (airplane) sound effects. Realized with an electric guitar, e-bow and effects Boss DS1 + PS5 + DD6.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/hung_moira.jpg" alt="Hung Nguyen Manh &amp; Moira Ricci in Location One’s Project Space" align="right" height="121" width="302" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/hung-nguyen-manh-and-moira-ricci-project-space/" rel="bookmark"><strong>Hung Nguyen Manh &amp; Moira Ricci:  In Location One’s Project Space</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>9th -19th January 2008</strong><br />
Central to Moira Ricci’s work is the world of the family home as the natural arena in which relationships are played out. Putting aside her own emotions, Ricci turns her personal narrative into fertile ground for thinking about the world we live in.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/kuba_katia.jpg" alt="Katia Kameli &amp; Kuba Bakowski in Location One’s Project Space - 13-22 December 2007" align="right" height="114" width="303" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/katia-kameli-and-kuba-bakowski-project-space/" rel="bookmark" title="Permanent Link to Katia Kameli &amp; Kuba Bakowski"><strong>Katia Kameli &amp; Kuba Bakowski:  In Location One’s Project Space</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>December 13-22, 2007</strong><br />
With “Draft“, Katia Kameli continues her investigation into key issues that drive her film, video and installation practice, namely the construction of intersecting identities in a globalized world, hybridization, the notion of intercultural spaces and awareness of psychogeographical effects.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/irp_07_2007_thumb.jpg" alt="irp_07_2007_thumb.jpg" align="right" height="79" width="302" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/nine-international-artists-exhibit/"><strong>Nine International Artists Exhibit</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>June 2nd – July 28th, 2007</strong><br />
Location One presents the second IRP group show of the 2006-2007 season, featuring new work developed by our resident artists. The exhibition represents a diverse range of artistic approaches and many are works in progress.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/20070312_doyle.jpg" align="right" height="112" width="300" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/jeanette-doyle-starline-tours/" id="post-152"><strong>Jeanette Doyle:  StarLine Tours</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>April 13-May 25, 2007</strong><br />
Jeanette Doyle’s practice is primarily concerned with picture making. She is particularly interested in painting and its relationship to lens-based technologies. Her work is driven by conceptual concerns but is deeply engaged with the processes and mechanics of making, especially the production of images. Her works express a desire to crystalise complexity for a moment in an image which, on closer inspection, allows the fiction of coherence to dissolve. Disjunction between the image and text is a hint of this. This disjunction between word and image is a feature of the ‘StarLine Tours’ exhibition at Location One.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/index/irp2007.jpg" align="right" height="114" width="302" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/irp-exhibition-winter-2007/" id="post-134"><strong>IRP Exhibition, Winter 2007</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>February 13-March 31st, 2007</strong><br />
Featuring:  Natalie Bewernitz &amp; Marek Goldowski, Teresa Henriques, Agnieszka Kalinowska,<br />
Nina Katchadourian, Rie Kawakami, Alessandro Nassiri, Kaori Tazoe, Virginie Yassef<br />
Location One presents the first of two exhibitions showcasing new work developed during their residencies by eight artists participating in the 2006-2007 International Residency Program. Featured works, some of which are exhibited as work-in-progress, represent a diverse range of artistic approaches.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/abahuni.jpg" alt="in the sky" align="right" height="96" width="301" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/leesa-nicole-abahuni-in-the-sky/" id="post-103"><strong>Leesa &amp; Nicole Abahuni:  In the Sky</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>November 21, 2006 &#8211; January 27, 2007</strong><br />
An opening reception and performance will be held on Wednesday, November 29th from 6 to 8 pm.<br />
The multimedia installation, which was commissioned by Location One, is entitled In the Sky, is an exploration into the sharing of the senses and the interconnectedness between perception and sensation as experienced through visual, aural, and physical realms.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/irp/t_nedreaas.jpg" align="right" height="149" width="297" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/international-residency-program-2005-2006-group-show-ii/" id="post-100"><strong> International Residency Program 2005-2006 &#8211; Group Show II</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>June 1st &#8211; July 29th, 2006</strong><br />
Featuring:  Leesa &amp; Nicole Abahuni, Simo Alitalo, Andrew Duggan, Mayumi Nakazaki, Trine Nedreaas, Yuki Okumura, Lydia Venieri, Wang Ya-Hui.<br />
On Thursday, June 1st, Location One opens its Summer exhibition, showcasing new work developed by resident artists from the USA, Finland, Ireland, The Netherlands, Norway, Japan, Greece, and Taiwan who are participating in the Location One 2005-2006 International Residency Program. The show will be open to the public through Saturday, July 29th, 2006.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/irp/20060518_echo.gif" align="right" height="170" width="300" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/andrew-duggan-echo/" id="post-99"><strong>Andrew Duggan:  ECHO</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>Thursday, May 18, 2006 &#8211; 6:30-8:30pm</strong><br />
Location One presents ECHO, a collaborative project created by visual/media artist Andrew Duggan and dancers Jonathan Kelliher and Joanne Barry of Siamsa Tíre, the National Folk Theatre of Ireland. For one-night only traditional Irish dance will be transported from the South West coast of Ireland to Location One’s Gallery space in New York City. Impromptu street performances and filming will take place in NYC at undisclosed locations leading up to the event. The resulting project will be presented at Location One.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/g_heinke_strip.jpg" alt="Residency Program Show 2005-2006" align="right" height="133" width="301" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/international-residency-program-2005-2006-group-show-i/" id="post-97"><strong>International Residency Program 2005-2006 &#8211; Group Show I</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>February 9th &#8211; March 4th, 2006</strong><br />
Featuring:  Paololuca Barbieri, Isabelle Ferreira, Geka Heinke, Yoon-Young Park, Mariana Viegas.<br />
On Thursday, February 9th, Location One presents the first of two Spring exhibitions showcasing new work developed by artists from Italy, France, Germany, Korea, and Portugal who are participating in the 2005-2006 International Residency Program. Featured works represent a diverse range of artistic approaches.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/alterazione_strip.jpg" alt="alterazione_strip.jpg" align="right" height="114" width="300" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/light-waves-live-in-new-york/" id="post-98"><strong>Paololuca Barbieri and art collective, ALTERAZIONI VIDEO:  LIGHT WAVES live in NEW YORK</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>Wednesday February 15th &#8211; 7:00 PM</strong><br />
A concert-performance conceived as a one-night audio-video event. The project explores the relationship between light and sound, looking for the natural correspondence between these two elements, between visible and invisible, playing with their frequencies.</p>
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<h2><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/somnambulic_1.jpg" align="right" height="199" width="301" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/somnambulic/" id="post-96"><strong>Martin Beauregard:  Somnambulic</strong></a></h2>
<p><strong>7 December 2005 &#8211; 4 February 2006</strong><br />
Location One is pleased to present Somnambulic, the first New York solo exhibition by Canadian artist Martin Beauregard. This new body of work highlights persistent themes for the artist revolving around the relation between dream, illusion, and reality. It also produces a “fantastical strangeness” that is characteristic of Beauregard’s work, as he explores modes of perception through play and creation.</p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/irp-exhibition-spring-2005-iii/" id="post-95"><strong>Yumiko Furukawa, Kenny Hunter, Wu Ta-Kun, and Mariana Viegas:  IRP Exhibition Spring 2005 III</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>June 4th &#8211; July 30th, 2005</strong><br />
Tent for Poet (2005) (multimedia installation with tent, furnishings, video &amp; DVD) is a work dedicated by the artist to a poet living in New York.  Citizen Firefighter (2001) (resin sculpture), was conceived primarily to celebrate the men and women of Strathclyde Brigade in Scotland.  The driving force behind Wu Ta-Kun’s varied body of work is expanding “ideas of sensibility”.  Landscape is an entity –or a body– which is transformed by our presence and which, in turn, transforms us.</strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/irp-exhibition-spring-2005-ii/" id="post-94"><strong>Martin Beauregard &amp; Marlena Kudlicka:  IRP Exhibition Spring 2005 II</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>April 28th &#8211; May 28th, 2005</strong><br />
Location One is pleased to present the second of three Spring exhibitions showcasing the work of artists participating in its 2004-2005 International Residency Program. The two installations by Canadian artist Martin Beauregard, and Polish artist Marlena Kudlicka were developed during their residencies at Location One.</strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/irp-exhibition-spring-2005/" id="post-93"><strong>Nayda Collazo-Llorens and Santeri Tuori:  IRP Exhibition Spring 2005</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>March 18 &#8211; April 23, 2005</strong><br />
Artists-in-Residence Nayda Collazo-Llorens (USA) and Santeri Tuori (Finland) will present video installations in Location One’s main gallery. With special thanks to NYSCA (New York State Council on the Arts) and FRAME (Finnish Fund for Art Exchange)</strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/3-videos-and-3-songs/" id="post-92"><strong>Cécile Paris:  3 videos and 3 songs</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>Dec 15 2004 &#8211; Jan 29, 2005</strong><br />
Each video presents a singular character performing a simple action: a figure on a skateboard filmed from the back in a car, a young girl playing guitar on a traffic circle in the suburbs of Paris, a swimmer, a New York doorman as he progresses through the city at night.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/passed-for-export/" id="post-91"><strong>Mark Themann:  PASSED for EXPORT: an installation.</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>July 8 &#8211; July 31, 2004</strong><br />
<em>PASSED for EXPORT</em>, a site-specific installation by Mark Themann, raises questions about the American Landscape, the Constitution and the Bill of Rights in times of political crisis. Two videos of monumental US landscapes are projected in unnervingly slow and steady takes on opposite walls. Any potential romanticism is forestalled by the cacophonous clashing of two audio tracks in which the narrators are each reading from the Amendments to the Bill of Rights and the Constitution, reciting with an extreme stutter.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/irp-exhibition-2004/" id="post-90"><strong>IRP Exhibition 2004</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>May 28 &#8211; June 30, 2004</strong><br />
Featuring:Koki Tanaka, Hsiao Sheng Chien, Mark Themann, Federico Muelas, Miguel Soares, Alexandra do Carmo, Vincent Lamouroux.<br />
On Thursday, May 27, Location One presents its third annual artist-in-residence group exhibition. Eight works ranging from video, to sculpture, to robotic structures, to interactive installations were developed by emerging international artists during their stay. Featured in the main gallery, the show will be open to the public through Wednesday, June 30th, 2004.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/re-mapping-4-dimensions-three-new-works/" id="post-89"><strong>Kurt Ralske:  Re-Mapping 4 Dimensions: Three New Works</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>January-February, 2004</strong><br />
These three works explore time, and our perception of time. For me, one of the most interesting qualities of video is that it is in reality only a collection of still images. At 30 video frames per second, any 10 seconds of fluid movement can alternately be considered as a static collection of 300 related still images. Working in the digital realm in a real-time manner, there are endless possibilies for instantly treating a new video recording as a library of stills, then deriving new material by analyzing or modifying this library: reordering entries, comparing similarity or difference between entries, deriving a single image from multiple entries, etc.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/casual-friday-by-vesna-pavlovic/" id="post-88"><strong>Vesna Pavlovic:  Casual Friday</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>December 10-30, 2003</strong><br />
Casual Friday will consist of several layers, only one of which will be photographic. Audio interviews, drawings and writings will constitute the other layers.<br />
Collaborator and architect Srdjan Weiss, will address these themes through drawings of the layout and contents of the “perfect” office. He will do so through drawings, and will integrate into his work research on the history of the subject building, as well as information related to the taste and design of the architects who originally worked on the building.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/gustavo1.jpg" title="gustavo1.jpg" alt="gustavo1.jpg" align="right" height="183" width="206" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/red-alert/" id="post-87"><strong> Miguel Soares:  Red Alert</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>November-December, 2003</strong><br />
“Do androids dream of electric sheep?” &#8211; Philip K. Dick<br />
Gustavo is a robot that has been discarded in a black garbage bag. Out of this bag extends Gustavo’s motorized arm, with a laser that is carving a drawing on the wall. Do robots dream of being artists?</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/mechanism-no1-war/" id="post-84"><strong>Saoirse Higgins and Simon Schiessl:  Mechanism no.1: War</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>July 9 &#8211; August 2, 2003</strong><br />
This is an interactive video projection examining the critical moments leading to war. The visitor winds* up the mechanical toy drummer boy with the brass key. The action of the drummer boy correlates to a projected video that shows bombs dropping from the sky. The sound of the bombs keeps exact beat with the drum. The tighter the mechanism is wound the faster the bombs will drop. The visitor controls frequency of the bombing. Where are these bombs being dropped? What are the consequences?</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/irp-exhibition-2003/" id="post-85"><strong>Daniel Blaufuks, Isabelle Jenniches, Dominik Lejman, Javier Viver, and Jiun-Ting Lin:  IRP Exhibition 2003</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>May 22, 2003-June 28, 2003</strong><br />
May 22, Location One, a not-for-profit multimedia arts organization, opened its second artist-in-residence group exhibition with multimedia work developed during their stay.  Included artists: Daniel Blaufuks (Portugal), Isabelle Jenniches (The Netherlands), Dominik Lejman (Poland), Jiun-Ting Lin (Taiwan), and Javier Viver (Spain). This exhibition will be on view in Location One’s gallery through June 28, 2003 and will be streamed live on our website (www.location1.org).</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/signal-to-noise/" id="post-83"><strong>Atsushi Nishijima, Erwin Redl, Laurie Spiegel and Heather Wagner:  Signal to Noise</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>September 10 &#8211; October 19, 2002</strong><br />
Location One is happy to present “Signal to Noise“, a group exhibition featuring works that explore the relationship of sound and light waves. Not merely illustrations of audio-visual synaesthesia, several of the pieces act literally as transducers, that is, devices that convert input energy of one form into output energy of another.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/xutan.jpg" title="xutan.jpg" alt="xutan.jpg" align="right" height="168" width="182" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/qing-hua-porcelain-blue-white/" id="post-82"><strong>Xu Tan:  Qing Hua Porcelain (Blue &amp; White)</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>May 23rd &#8211; June 29th 2002</strong><br />
Xu Tan draws his inspiration from the teachings of philosopher Chuang-Tzu (circa 250 BC). Successor to Lao Tzu and a foremost proponent of Taoism, Chuang-Tzu presumed that no matter how alike two things are, a difference between them can always be found and, conversely, no matter how different two things are, one can find a similarity between them. Objective similarities and differences do not justify any particular way of distinguishing between things.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/white-balance/" id="post-81"><strong>Francois Bucher:  White Balance</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>January 10 &#8211; March 2, 2002</strong><br />
White Balance (to think is to forget differences) is an effort to uncover the geographies of power, the frontiers of privilege. It revisits this problem from different angles, creating short circuits of meaning which are hosted by improbable audiovisual matches. Media and internet footage is intermixed with images shot in downtown Manhattan before and after the September 11th attacks.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/atsushi2.jpg" title="atsushi2.jpg" alt="atsushi2.jpg" align="right" height="138" width="169" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/subtractive-creationvisible-sound/" id="post-72"><strong>Atsushi Nishijima:  Subtractive Creation/Visible Sound</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>December 8th &#8211; 29, 2001</strong><br />
“Sound does not exist without space and space is always filled with sound. Space represents sound as something visible, sound represents space as something audible. Our daily life is made of inevitable factors such as time and space. As for myself, that is a place where contemporary music exists.”  &#8211;Atsushi Nishijima</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/irp-exhibition-2001/" id="post-74"><strong>François Bucher, Marta Deskur, and Ksenija Turcic:  Irp Exhibition 2001</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>June 9-July 28, 2001</strong><br />
Museum of Mankind is a video installation depicting the statues that stand high on the roof of the Museum of Mankind in London.  In a multimedia installation and web site project, New Baby?, Marta Deskur questions the significance of family today and the conflicting issues this question addresses.  Ksenija Turcic presents a new multimedia installation, Phase, where she pursues her investigation of emotional space.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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<h2><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/recorder_icon1.gif" title="recorder_icon1.gif" alt="recorder_icon1.gif" align="right" height="138" width="206" /><a href="http://www.location1.org/recorders/" id="post-73"><strong>Katya Sander and François Bucher:  RECORDERS</strong></a></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></h2>
<p><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong><strong>March 22 &#8211; April 21, 2001</strong><br />
“Recorders is an installation where a rotating camera and video projector interact with the visitor in a game of shadows and projection, images and text, narration and space, focus and blur. A pre-recorded conversation acts as voice-over for the entire set-up which is encompassed by a large image that resembles something like bits of information, white noise or a glittery seascape.</strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></strong></p>
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		<title>dorkbot NYC &#8211; March 2007</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/dorkbot-nyc-march-2007/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/dorkbot-nyc-march-2007/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 07 Mar 2007 05:01:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[open house wednesdays]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://test.location1.org/events/dorkbot-nyc-march-2007/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The 42147th dorkbot-nyc meeting took place on Wednesday, March 7th, 2007, at 7pm.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>March 7, 2007</strong></p>
<p>The 42147th dorkbot-nyc meeting took place on Wednesday, March 7th, 2007, at 7pm.</p>
<p>It featured the limber and startling:</p>
<blockquote>
<table>
<tr>
<td><img src="http://dorkbot.org/dorkbotnyc/07.march.2007/sanner.jpg" align="left" border="0" hspace="15" width="100" /></td>
<td>Erik Sanner: Rothko shock, the singularity, and painting without paint<br />
&#8220;Rothko shock&#8221; refers to the paralyzing weight of human cultural history.  Has everything  been said and done?  Looking forward to the singularity makes me say not a chance.   Technology enables me to make paintings that move.<br />
<a href="http://eriksanner.com/" class="link"> http://eriksanner.com/</a></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><img src="http://dorkbot.org/dorkbotnyc/07.march.2007/gatti.jpg" aligh="left" border="0" hspace="15" width="100" /></td>
<td>Christine Gatti: 18 project<br />
From late July 2004 through mid-January 2006, I took two photographs &#8211; one of my face and the  other of my surrounding environment &#8211; on the 18th minute of each hour of every day.  The  motivation behind the project was to find a vehicle to become more present in my daily life,  to come out of my head for a moment or two every hour and take note of where I was in the  physical world, to become aware of my feet on the ground.  I saw the project as a  meditation; a ritual; a commitment added to a less committed life; an experiment. This  process, to become mindful for a few moments on the hour, has produced more than 20,000  images.<br />
<a href="http://www.christinegatti.com/" class="link"> http://www.christinegatti.com</a></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><img src="http://dorkbot.org/dorkbotnyc/07.march.2007/derivart.jpg" aligh="left" border="0" hspace="15" width="100" /></td>
<td>derivart: financial art<br />
What do artists make of Wall Street? The financial markets have a big influence over the  people on the street, and artists are beginning to talk about it. We will present a museum  exhibition in Madrid that brought together electronic artists, from Rome to San Francisco,  that engaged, critiqued or re-imagined global capital markets.<br />
<a href="http://www.derivart.info/index.php?s=news&amp;lang=en" class="link"> http://www.derivart.info</a></td>
</tr>
</table>
</blockquote>
<p>Some <a href="http://dorkbot.org/dorkbotnyc/07.march.2007/images" class="link">images</a> from the meeting.<br />
Roberto Tobar&#8217;s <a href="http://dorkbot.org/dorkbotnyc/07.march.2007/roberto_07march2007" class="link">images</a>.</p>
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		<title>Andrew Duggan &#8211; The Interview</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/andrew-duggan-the-interview/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/andrew-duggan-the-interview/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Feb 2007 22:21:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>irp</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Artist Interviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[residency]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Andrew Duggan]]></category>

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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For his interview, Irish artist Andrew Duggan, switched the role of ‘the interviewee’ to that of ‘the interviewer’ shifting the historical focus and legacy of the artist interview genre.</p>
<p>The nature of an interview is to pose a series of questions to clarify, elaborate and provide a verbal description of a certain issue. In this case ‘the certain issue’ is one which has risen out of Andrew Duggan’s encounters with some of the New York art world he has met.</p>
<p>Andrew interviewed a number of persons with whom he has conversations with during his 10 month residency.</p>
<p>These interviews were conducted via e mail. Transcripts were made into a script and were handed to and read by auditioning actors. The recording is presented alongside images of ‘interview props’. The artist and the interviewer have been removed from ‘The Artist Interview.</p>
<p>Special thanks to Claire Montgomery, Diego Fasciati, Drazen Pantic, Dan Cameron, Pieranna Cavalchini, Sebastien Delot, Heather Wagner, Nick Normal, Barry Dunne and Sebastien Sanz de Santamaria.<br />
[display_podcast]</p>
<p><strong>THE SCRIPT</strong></p>
<p><strong>Interviewer</strong> &#8211; Some artists, when they spend time in different places &#8216;relocate&#8217; their practice. That is the &#8216;local&#8217; changes, but not the practice. What do yo think happens when if artist &#8216;dislocates&#8217; themselves in the new local thus working with the language of that local?</p>
<p><strong>Interviewee #1</strong> &#8211; I first mention the much-remarked-upon emergence of a kind of &#8220;international art&#8221; that seems to prevail these days &#8211; a kind of homogenous, global perspective, whereby everyone is trying very hard NOT to be local and end by making blurry references to the same ideas (be they the French theorists or American irony and contingency crowd). Artists develop a method and re-employ that method in whatever locale they arrive- not so interesting.</p>
<p><strong>Interviewee #2</strong> &#8211; I think, nowadays that all artists are &#8216;international&#8217;. We all communicate, because of technology, internationally.  But maybe a new situation is called for, and maybe what is needed is to look at how an artist is &#8216;interlocal&#8217;, in that the local is what becomes important.</p>
<h3></h3>
<p><strong>Interviewer</strong> &#8211; So how do you think the the phrase  &#8220;all politics are local&#8221;, applies to artists&#8217; practice with this idea of all artists being  international but not all being &#8216;interlocal&#8217;?</p>
<p><strong>Interviewee #2</strong> &#8211; More general question about politics and globalization is what is &#8220;local&#8221; now? Any single political issue (however local it is) bounces back to the global discussion, one way or another. And is the re-appropriated by different political groups, for different political purposes. And law of unexpected consequences works every time &#8230;</p>
<p>So, yes all artist are international, some are &#8220;interlocal&#8221; but all issues are global either way. And the less prominent political signifier in their work, the more it might be suitable for reinterpretation and (inverse) contexulization. One consequence of what is that we see now lots of very politically transparent work, using art as a political megaphon. I&#8217;m trying not to put value judgment here, but I kind of like art political agit-prop. Except that it is so often unclear what are the political premises and values brought to the table. If any.</p>
<p><strong>Interviewee #1</strong> &#8211; Most interesting to me is an artist who takes some part of his/her perspective on the world and, looking very carefully at the particular locale, examines the new locale with new eyes.  So, perhaps relocation is simply geographic; dislocation takes you out of both time and space. It is a real letting go, and is truly unnerving, but a brave and important thing to do.</p>
<p><strong>Interviewer</strong> &#8211; I&#8217;d like to move on and discuss the perception of the word �America� and &#8216;the United States of America&#8217; within this context of the building of the wall along the southern border of the United Stated with plans for surveillance web cams.</p>
<p>The United States of America builds a defensive structure along it&#8217;s border, posts a military presence and employs new surveillance technology to maintain that border.</p>
<p>What do you think the legacy of such a structure and action will be on the psychology of America?</p>
<p><strong>Interviewee #2</strong> &#8211; The current hysteria over the US/Mexican border plays to the very worst aspects of our national xenophobia, while revealing how little of the discourse over &#8216;security&#8217; has anything to do with making our borders secure. No terrorist has ever been shown to have entered our country through the US/Mexico border, which is quite amazine if you consider how many undocumented workers, contraband narcotics, etc do slip through every single day. It is also worth pointing out that virtually all of the border territory under discussion was sovereign Mexican territory little more than a hundred years ago. My strong belief is that the Bush administration&#8217;s fear-mongering is almost entirely motivated by the desire to generate enough dread and anxiety in the citizenry that we will submit to their increasingly dictatorial aims. Having said that, I also think there is good reason to hope that the congressional elections this fall will put the brakes on the some of their most extremist policies, and that by the end of 08 they will have so disgraced themselves on every other front that voters will be ready to throw the whole crowd out (and lock a few up for good measure).</p>
<p>So, to answer your question: I believe it is vital that our next president, Al Gore, begin dismantling the border wall immediately after taking office, recall the National Guard, and diarm the Minutemen. The security apparatus, which is probably inseparable from our national objectives in technology and information, would remain.</p>
<p><strong>Interviewee #1</strong> &#8211; It is incredible the Berlin Wall came down in 89 and here we are building new ones.  When I use the &#8220;we&#8221; I am thinking transnationally. Our surveilling exploits have not improved our ability to see or to think critically&#8230;and then there is the very frightening issue of WHO surveils those doing the surveillance.</p>
<p><strong>Interviewer</strong> &#8211; &#8230;and perception of &#8216;America&#8217;?&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Interviewee #2</strong> &#8211; Unfortunately, our national self-image as &#8216;America&#8217; and us as &#8216;Americans&#8217; will most likely never be addressed along the way, and we will probably find soon enough that many of our neighbors no longer wish to have that word associated with their own identities anyway. So, despite my own personal discomfort about using the word &#8216;America&#8217; to describe the USA, when its proper reference belongs to the two continents of North America and South America, getting people in this country to examine that imperialist habit more closely is probably a lost cause.</p>
<p><strong>Interviewee #1</strong> &#8211; Back to your question&#8230;..Will &#8220;to America&#8221; become synonymous with  &#8220;to surveil&#8221;. I most sincerely hope not. The positive thing about an action (no matter how blind and stupid)  is that sooner or later it  brings a reaction.  Nothing stays still no wall can stop the flow.</p>
<p><strong>Interviewer</strong> &#8211; President Bush during a recent speech to the Press at the Rose garden after his surprise visit to Iraq said that the war in Iraq was not THE war on Terror but part of the THEATRE. How do you think this &#8216;theatre&#8217; is perceived</p>
<p><strong>Interviewee #2</strong> &#8211; It seems that politics is a series of &#8220;coup de théâtre!&#8221; and he needs some as he is in a weaker political position. It is interesting to make this connection with terror though the civil war is not  taking place on the american soil and cannot have the same impact as the french terreur. It feels that terror will grow as more and more american will die and public opinion might shake things. Despite growing tensions, scandals nothing has been done and it is amaizing to watch this puppet show going on.</p>
<p>On the other hand the use of the term can be understood as part of Hollywood vocabulary. As America has had actors in strategic position, the star wars was an interesting choice.The axis of evil is an other good title for a science fiction movie. Though the device of &#8220;Theatre&#8221; appears as a way to introduce a necessary distance with the real.  Actors on stage are only performing though here people are dying, anger is growing and shall linger for decades.The cycle of violence is not nearly at an end. The future between western/ arab diplomatic relation has been damaged severely. And here we can  also blame Europe for not finding a way to be an altrenative voice in that concert of discontent and to sink into mediocrity. I wander when the political consciousness awakening in Europe is going to take place.</p>
<p><strong>Interviewer</strong> &#8211; AND how does it relate to the &#8216;theatre&#8217; of the gallery?</p>
<p><strong>Interviewee #2</strong> &#8211; Interestingly enough the use of the word to refer to military operation with President Bush as the cast director. Actors have enterred politics and we have watched already the star wars and amaizing declaration in CA recently. Theatre is away to bring illusion to distort and recreate reality, it is also a way of mastering things since you can control them. It is a way to put things in a space and time frame that you control but in an art gallery you might play with the illusion of the White cube in order to create that spce of wonder and make people feel they enter a sacred space. In real life the theatre can not be that illusion, it is way too unresponsible to act as if there were no difference, politics is about playing with events and issues in such a way that you may bring emphasis or silence them. Here it would not be so much of a white cube theatre but maybe a new concept a red cube theatre.</p>
<p><strong>Interviewer</strong> &#8211; So could the red cube be a shift from say the corporate clean white cube to one which art engages with politics in a gallery context?</p>
<p><strong>Interviewee #2</strong> &#8211; it would be very interesting, as politics can be bloody and the gallery is the prefect stage ou theatre&#8230;Red tape strategies.</p>
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		<title>Andrew Duggan (Ireland)</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/andrew-duggan/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/andrew-duggan/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Jan 2007 06:30:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>irp</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[2005-2006]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[residency]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Andrew Duggan]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://test.location1.org/news/andrew-duggan-ireland/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Andrew Duggan (Ireland)

Andrew’s new media work and installations investigate the space between tradition (fact, folk/lore etc.) and contemporary space and time. He plays with cultural representations and perceptions and has presented many projects in the public domain. In Kerry, the Bán/Blanc series (2004) were projected onto a building reputed to have been prepared for the escape and arrival of Marie Antoinette. Andrew also frequently collaborates with dancers, musicians and cultural institutions.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Andrew’s new media work and installations investigate the space            between tradition (fact, folk/lore etc.) and contemporary space and time.            He plays with cultural representations and perceptions and has presented            many projects in the public domain. In Kerry, the Bán/Blanc series            (2004) were projected onto a building reputed to have been prepared            for the escape and arrival of Marie Antoinette. Andrew also frequently            collaborates with dancers, musicians and cultural institutions. In CentreStage,            he worked with the National Folk Theater of Ireland to create an installation            on the traditional (Irish) crossroads and the nature of looking.</p>
<p class="content">Born in Cork and raised in Dublin, Andrew lives and works in Dingle            (west coast of Ireland). Exhibitions include : Roscommon Arts Centre            (2005); Kerry Film Festival (2004). He studied at the Crawford College            of Art and Design, Cork, The National College of Art and Design, Dublin,            and University of Ulster, Belfast.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.location1.org/irp/events/20060518_echo.gif" /></p>
<p><strong>Projects and Exhibitions at Location One:</strong><br />
<a href="http://www.location1.org/andrew-duggan-echo/"><strong> ECHO</strong></a> video event, May 2006<br />
<a href="http://www.location1.org/international-residency-program-2005-2006-group-show-ii/"><strong>Act </strong></a> video :: Residents&#8217; Exhibition June 2006</p>
<p><strong>Online:<br />
<a href="http://www.location1.org/andrew-duggan-the-interview/"></a><strong><strong>Interview Project </strong></strong></strong></p>
<p><strong><strong> </strong></strong><strong><strong><strong>Andrew’s residency at Location One is supported by <a href="http://www.artscouncil.ie/">The Arts Council            / An Chomhairle Ealaíon</a> (Ireland)</strong></strong></strong></p>
<p><strong><strong> </strong></strong></p>
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		<title>Franck Leibovici: Thinking of Fautrier and Looking at Walls: Around the Notion of Poetic Document</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/franck-leibovici-thinking-of-fautrier-and-looking-at-walls-around-the-notion-of-poetic-document/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/franck-leibovici-thinking-of-fautrier-and-looking-at-walls-around-the-notion-of-poetic-document/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Oct 2006 05:01:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[open house wednesdays]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Franck Leibovici]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[FRANCK LEIBOVICI, Thinking of Fautrier and Looking at Walls: Around the notion of poetic document.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b> October 11, 2006</b><img mce_src="http://blast.location1.org/leb.jpg" title="frank leibovici" alt="frank leibovici" border="0" height="120" width="600" src="http://blast.location1.org/leb.jpg"><font color="#339966" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="3"><b>FRANCK LEIBOVICI</b></font><font color="#339966" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>Thinking of Fautrier and Looking at Walls:</b> Around the notion of poetic document</font><font color="#333333" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Location One is proud to present a special evening with artist Frank Lebovici.</font><font color="#333333" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">This performative event is related to the “Low intensity conflicts” cycle developed by Leibovici over the last few years. His work pursues socio-political, historical, aesthetic and literary investigations into events that lead to relatively small human casualties (when compared to classic warfare), yet at the same time produce massive psychological effects on an international scale due to underlying complex symbolic manipulations.</font><font color="#333333" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Leibovici’s cross disciplinary practice is in large part motivated by the displacement of poetry as a traditional literary genre to its use as “zone of cross-references” whereby fluid modes of circulation are enabled between aesthetic, poetic and scientific disciplines.</font><font color="#333333" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2"><b>Franck Leibovici</b> was born in 1975 and lives in Paris. In 2006, his work was exhibited at <i>Vega</i> and <i>Literaturhaus</i>, Copenhagen; <i>Konsthall</i>, Malmo in Sweden (in collaboration with Ernesto Neto); <i>Menagerie de Verre </i>and<i> Strip Film Festiva</i>l, Paris and in Mexico, at the Colleccion Jumex. His written works are published by Al Dante, Paris, and he contributes regularly to experimental poetry publications and social science writings.</font><font color="#333333" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Leibovici’s current project involves bringing together texts by artists, poets and researchers around the notion of “poetic documents”, with contributors such as Bruno Latour (France), Rosangelo Renno, Maurizio Diaz and Walter Rieweg (Brazil), Armin Linke (Italy), and Christophe Hanna (France).</font><font class="Apple-style-span" color="#333333" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: small;"></span></font><font class="Apple-style-span" color="#333333" face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-size: small;"><p><a href="http://www.location1.org/franck-leibovici-thinking-of-fautrier-and-looking-at-walls-around-the-notion-of-poetic-document/"><em>Click here to view the embedded video.</em></a></p></span></font></p>
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		<title>Andrew Duggan &#8211; ECHO</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/andrew-duggan-echo/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/andrew-duggan-echo/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 18 May 2006 17:41:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>irp</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[performance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[residency]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Andrew Duggan]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://test.location1.org/news/andrew-duggan-echo/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Location One presented ECHO, a collaborative project created by visual/media artist Andrew Duggan and dancers Jonathan Kelliher and Joanne Barry of Siamsa Tíre, the National Folk Theatre of Ireland. For one-night only, traditional Irish dance will be transported from the South West coast of Ireland to Location One’s Gallery space in New York City.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><b>a one-night only dance and video event</b>
<p class="content">Thursday, May 18, 2006 &#8211; 6:30-8:30pm &#8211; FREE</p>
<p><img mce_src="http://www.location1.org/images/irp/20060518_echo.gif" alt="echo - 2006" align="right" hspace="5" vspace="5" src="http://www.location1.org/images/irp/20060518_echo.gif"> Location One presents ECHO, a collaborative project created by visual/media artist <a mce_href="http://www.location1.org/adnrew-duggan" href="http://www.location1.org/adnrew-duggan"><b>Andrew Duggan</b></a><b> and dancers Jonathan Kelliher and Joanne Barry of Siamsa Tíre, the National Folk Theatre of Ireland. </b> For one-night only traditional Irish dance will be transported from the South West coast of Ireland to Location One&#8217;s Gallery space in New York City.  Impromptu street performances and filming will take place in NYC at undisclosed locations leading up to the event.  The resulting project will be presented at Location One.The event will take place on Thursday, May 18, 2006 (6:30-8:30pm).  The video installation will be continuous throughout the presentation, with dance performances at 7pm and 8pm (approximately 10 minutes in length). <b> The event is free and open to the public.</b>ECHO is a multidisciplinary project that examines the creative dialogue between dance and video.  The work explores folk movement vocabulary in an urban context.  With a focus on the complex nature of &#8216;looking&#8217;, it breaks down some of the perceived barriers between art forms.  In keeping with folk tradition, a crossroads becomes a symbolic space through which the dancers have a physical dialogue, questioning the origin of the echo. At its core, ECHO creates crossroads between traditional and contemporary forms, rhythmic structures, the physical dance space, and cultures.Andrew Duggan&#8217;s media and installation work investigates the space between tradition (fact/folk/lore, etc..) and contemporary space and time.  He plays with cultural representations and perceptions and has presented many projects in the public domain.  In Kerry, the Bán/Blane series (2004) were projected on to a building reputed to have been prepared for the escape and arrival of Marie Antoinette.  He frequently collaborates with dancers, musicians and cultural institutions.  In CentreStage, he worked with the National Folk Theatre of Ireland to create an installation on the traditional (Irish) crossroads and the nature of looking.  Born in Cork and raised in Dublin, Duggan lives and works in Dingle (West Coast of Ireland). He studied at the Crawford College of Art and design, Cork; the National College of Arts and Design, Dublin; and the University of Ulster, Belfast.Siamsa Tíre (pronounced shee-am-sah tir-a: enjoyment of the ground), the National Folk Theatre of Ireland was founded in 1974.  Its mission is to reflect Ireland&#8217;s great wealth of music, dance and folk tradition for the stage, through vibrant, colorful theatricality and to continue to create new folk theatre presentations, drawing on their traditions and rich cultural reservoir.  The company has performed their unique brand of folk theater at venues all over Ireland, and in the US, Canada, Brittan, Germany, France, Belgium, Holland, Italy, Spain, South America, and Australia.<a mce_href="http://www.location1.org/adnrew-duggan" href="http://www.location1.org/adnrew-duggan">Andrew Duggan</a> has been an artist-in-residence at Location One since September 2005.  His residency is supported, in part, by The Arts Council/An Chomhairle Ealaíon (Ireland).video documentation:[display_podcast]<p><a href="http://www.location1.org/andrew-duggan-echo/"><em>Click here to view the embedded video.</em></a></p></p>
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		<title>Carlos Amorales &amp; Javier Viver &#8211; video installations</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/carlos-amorales-javier-viver-video-installations/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/carlos-amorales-javier-viver-video-installations/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Mar 2006 05:01:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[exhibitions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Carlos Amorales]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Javier Viver]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[For the month of March, Location One will devote its galleries to two exceptional videos by Mexican artist Carlos Amorales and Spanish artist Javier Viver.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>March 8 &#8211; April 1, 2006</strong></p>
<p><span class="title-white">Location One presents<br />
video installations by Carlos Amorales &amp; Javier Viver</span><br />
<span class="text-white">For the month of March, Location One will devote its galleries to two exceptional videos by Mexican artist Carlos Amorales and Spanish artist Javier Viver.</span></p>
<p>Opening Reception: Wednesday March 8th, 2006, 6-8pm<br />
Open through: April 1st, 2006 (Tue &#8211; Sat, 12 &#8211; 6 pm)</p>
<p><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/amorales_viver_amorales.jpg" title="amorales" alt="amorales" height="128" width="500" /></p>
<p>In the Main Gallery, <strong>&#8220;Manimal&#8221;</strong> by Carlos Amorales, a black and white video animation (2005, 6 minutes). Reminiscent of a tale from the Middle Ages, in this animation narrative a pack of wolves emigrates from the forest into the city, substituting, as they overtake the streets, its human population. The piece was made by combining 3D animation tools with flat two dimensional drawings of silhouettes, in a form that looks like a shadow theatre happening in a virtual environment. The music, an orchestral slow tempo heavy metal sound, keeps in tension the narrative suggested by the drawings; the story of the wolves becomes a dark epic. Manimal is about the transformation of animal emotions into human rationality, it is about how, when the moon disappears, the werewolf returns to people&#8217;s normality.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/amorales_viver_viver.jpg" title="viver" alt="viver" height="133" width="500" /></p>
<p>In the South Gallery an installation by Javier Viver <strong>&#8220;The Audience&#8221;</strong>, (2005, video and theater chairs, 4.5 minutes). The three video channels are projected on contiguous panels while the viewer sits on red theater chairs that are constantly lit. Viver draws an analogy with The Big Theater of the World (El Gran Teatro del Mundo) a masterpiece written by Calderón de la Barca during the Spanish Golden Age. In the video we can see the last minutes of an opera performance: each singer bows and receives the deserved applause from the audience, but the audience is missing. We can hear the clapping, but we can not see where it comes from. The minimalist monotony of the empty theater is broken by three mysterious eyes looking around. Could this be the eye that sees everything?</p>
<p><em>Javier Viver&#8217;s installation is supported in part by Consulate General of Spain in New York.<br />
Carlos Amorales is represented by the Yvon Lambert Gallery in New York and Paris.<br />
Theater seats kindly provided by Poltrona Frau USA.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/amorales_viver_frau_logo.gif" title="frau" alt="frau" /></p>
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		<title>Carlos Amorales &amp; Javier Viver &#8211; video installations</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/carlos-amorales-javier-viver-video-installations-2/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/carlos-amorales-javier-viver-video-installations-2/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 08 Mar 2006 05:01:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[exhibitions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Carlos Amorales]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Javier Viver]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://test.location1.org/exhibitions/video-installations-by-carlos-amorales-javier-viver/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>For the month of March, Location One will devote its galleries to two exceptional videos by Mexican artist Carlos Amorales and Spanish artist Javier Viver.</p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>March 8 &#8211; April 1, 2006</strong></p>
<p><span class="title-white">Location One presents<br />
video installations by Carlos Amorales &amp; Javier Viver</span><br />
<span class="text-white">For the month of March, Location One will devote its galleries to two exceptional videos by Mexican artist Carlos Amorales and Spanish artist Javier Viver.</span></p>
<p>Opening Reception: Wednesday March 8th, 2006, 6-8pm<br />
Open through: April 1st, 2006 (Tue &#8211; Sat, 12 &#8211; 6 pm)</p>
<p><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/amorales_viver_amorales.jpg" title="amorales" alt="amorales" height="128" width="500" /></p>
<p>In the Main Gallery, <strong>&#8220;Manimal&#8221;</strong> by Carlos Amorales, a black and white video animation (2005, 6 minutes). Reminiscent of a tale from the Middle Ages, in this animation narrative a pack of wolves emigrates from the forest into the city, substituting, as they overtake the streets, its human population. The piece was made by combining 3D animation tools with flat two dimensional drawings of silhouettes, in a form that looks like a shadow theatre happening in a virtual environment. The music, an orchestral slow tempo heavy metal sound, keeps in tension the narrative suggested by the drawings; the story of the wolves becomes a dark epic. Manimal is about the transformation of animal emotions into human rationality, it is about how, when the moon disappears, the werewolf returns to people&#8217;s normality.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/amorales_viver_viver.jpg" title="viver" alt="viver" height="133" width="500" /></p>
<p>In the South Gallery an installation by Javier Viver <strong>&#8220;The Audience&#8221;</strong>, (2005, video and theater chairs, 4.5 minutes). The three video channels are projected on contiguous panels while the viewer sits on red theater chairs that are constantly lit. Viver draws an analogy with The Big Theater of the World (El Gran Teatro del Mundo) a masterpiece written by Calderón de la Barca during the Spanish Golden Age. In the video we can see the last minutes of an opera performance: each singer bows and receives the deserved applause from the audience, but the audience is missing. We can hear the clapping, but we can not see where it comes from. The minimalist monotony of the empty theater is broken by three mysterious eyes looking around. Could this be the eye that sees everything?</p>
<p><em>Javier Viver&#8217;s installation is supported in part by Consulate General of Spain in New York.<br />
Carlos Amorales is represented by the Yvon Lambert Gallery in New York and Paris.<br />
Theater seats kindly provided by Poltrona Frau USA.</em></p>
<p><img src="http://www.location1.org/images/amorales_viver_frau_logo.gif" title="frau" alt="frau" /></p>
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		<title>LIGHT WAVES live in NEW YORK</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/light-waves-live-in-new-york/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/light-waves-live-in-new-york/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Feb 2006 17:40:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>irp</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[performance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alterazioni Video]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Paololuca Barbieri]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://test.location1.org/news/light-waves-live-in-new-york/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>A concert-performance conceived as a one-night audio-video event. The project explores the relationship between light and sound, looking for the natural correspondence between these two elements, between visible and invisible, playing with their frequencies.</p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>February 15, 2006 &#8211; 7:00 PM</strong></p>
<p><strong><a href="http://irp.location1.org/barbieri.html">Paololuca Barbieri</a> and art collective, <a href="http://www.alterazionivideo.com/" target="blank"> ALTERAZIONI VIDEO</a>.</strong></p>
<p><img src="http://irp.location1.org/events/sideb_small.jpg" alt="echo - 2006" align="right" hspace="5" vspace="5" /> A concert-performance conceived as a one-night audio-video event. The project explores the relationship between light and sound, looking for the natural correspondence between these two elements, between visible and invisible, playing with their frequencies.</p>
<p>The group takes inspiration from the basic theory of physics that &#8220;light is an undulatory phenomenon&#8221;, and from the empirical discovery that these waves could be converted into sound by a solar panel.</p>
<p>For <a href="http://www.alterazionivideo.com/lightwaves/newyork/" target="blank"><strong>LIGHT WAVES</strong></a>,  the performers will be using different kinds of lights as their &#8220;instruments&#8221;<br />
Small solar panels will function as Òphoto microphonesÓ, capturing light from different kinds of lamps: neon, wood, table lamps, etc., as well as invisible infrared rays from a TV remote-control are used like a globular guitar.</p>
<p>ÊThe end result is a fascinating combination of sounds, lights and video (a live video recording of the ÒconcertÓ will be screened during the performance) which will entirely envelop the audience by bringing the spectators inside a universe of unexpected sounds and frequencies.Ê The entire performance will last approximately 15 minutes and may be repeated during the course of the night.</p>
<p><strong>Special guest: Cheney Thompson</strong></p>
<p><a href="http://www.alterazionivideo.com/" target="blank"><strong>ALTERAZIONI VIDEO</strong></a> is an art collective based in Milan, Italy, that develops video, installation and electronic music projects.Ê Its members are Paololuca Barbieri, Alberto Caffarelli, Andrea Masu, Matteo Erenbourg, Giacomo Porfiri.  Their installation RECLAIM the MEDIA! is included in the <a href="http://irp.location1.org/exhibitions/irp_2006_feb.html">Location One International Residents&#8217; Group Show.</a></p>
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		<title>Melissa Chiu</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/melissa-chiu/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/melissa-chiu/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 19 May 2004 05:01:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[open house wednesdays]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://test.location1.org/open-house-wednesdays/melissa-chiu/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Curator of Contemporary Art Asia Society and Museum gave a talk on issues in Asian contemporary art, looking at transnationalism, and engagement with tradition, new media and market trends.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>May 19, 2004</strong></p>
<p>Curator of Contemporary Art Asia Society and Museum will give a talk on issues in  Asian contemporary art, looking at transnationalism, and engagement with tradition, new  media and market trends.</p>
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		<title>On Translation: On View</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/on-translation-on-view/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/on-translation-on-view/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Mar 2004 22:39:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>irp</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[exhibitions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Antoni Muntadas]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[<p>On View, a new work from On Translation Series, conceived and shot in Japan, post-produced in New York at Location One, is a work about viewing, looking… waiting… as contemporary rituals. Waiting in lines, airport standby, museum audience, tourist photo opportunities… Interrogations on where, when, why, who and what are part of the intention of the work.</p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> <img src="/images/onview.jpg" width="550" /></p>
<h2>MUNTADAS<br />
<em>On Translation:</em> On View</h2>
<p><strong>March 30 to May 15, 2004<br />
</strong><span class="text-white">Opening reception: Tuesday, March          30, 2004 6 &#8211; 8 PM<br />
</span><strong><em>On View</em></strong>, a new work from <em><strong>On Translation</strong></em>            <em>Series</em>, conceived and shot in Japan, post-produced in New York            at Location One, is a work about viewing, looking&#8230; waiting&#8230; as contemporary            rituals. Waiting in lines, airport standby, museum audience, tourist            photo opportunities&#8230; Interrogations on where, when, why, who and what            are part of the intention of the work.</p>
<p><small>
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<p>On Translation, a series of work begun in Helsinki in 1995, groups a            set of thirty works reflecting on the concept of translation and interpretation            from a perspective that encompasses cultural, linguistic, political            and economic issues produced and presented in different contexts and            mediums.<br />
<strong><br />
MUNTADAS</strong><br />
Antoni Muntadas &#8211; born in Barcelona, Spain in 1942 &#8211; has lived and worked            in New York since 1971. His work addresses social, political and communications            issues, the relationship between public and private space within social            frameworks, and investigations of channels of information and the ways            they may be used to censor central information or promulgate ideas.            His projects incorporate different media such as photography, video,            publications, Internet and multi-media installations.</p>
<p>His works have been exhibited throughout the world, including the Venice            Biennale, Documenta VI and X in Kassel, the Sao Paulo Biennal, and The            Museum of Modern Art in New York. During the past year the MACBA in            Barcelona and the Dortmund Museum in Germany presented the on-going            series On Translation (1995-2003) and produced an extensive publication            on these works. His upcoming public works include On Translation: Die            Stadt (Graz/Lille/Barcelona) and On Translation: Tren Urbano (San Juan,            Puerto Rico-Roosevelt Station). Upcoming shows include exhibits at Laboratorio            de la Alameda in Mexico, the Neuen Museum Weserburg-Bremen, and In Site            2005 in San Diego/Tijuana.</p>
<p>MUNTADAS has taught and directed seminars at the San Francisco Art Institute,            the Ecole Nationale des Beaux Arts in Paris, the University of Sao Paulo            in Brazil, Cooper Union and many other institutions. He is currently            a Visiting Professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department            of Architecture, Visual Arts Program.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Saoirse Higgins (Ireland)</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/saoirse-higgins/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/saoirse-higgins/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Sep 2002 08:22:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>irp</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[2002-2003]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[residency]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Saoirse Higgins]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://test.location1.org/news/saoirse-higgins-ireland/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Saoirse Higgins (Ireland)

(pronounced See-er-sssha. It means ‘freedom’in Gaelic)

Mechanism no. 1: War :: Saiorse Higgins, with Simon Schiessl (July 9-August 2, 2003)

Doom Machine doom monitor :: Saiorse Higgins (Feb 2003-November 2005)

http://artists.banff.org/saoirse/
[ you’ll never be the same after this, you were never the same after that] ::
online-offline performance looking at the pull and push of time through Beckett]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(pronounced See-er-sssha. It means &#8216;freedom&#8217;in Gaelic)</p>
<p class="content"><strong>websites :: \</strong></p>
<p class="content"><strong><a href="http://www.location1.org/mechanism-no1-war/">Mechanism              no. 1: War</a></strong> :: Saiorse Higgins, with Simon Schiessl (July 9-August              2, 2003)<strong><a href="http://web.media.mit.edu/%7Esaoirse/doom.html" target="new"></a></strong></p>
<p class="content"><a href="http://alumni.media.mit.edu/~saoirse/doom.html"><strong>Doom Machine</strong></a> doom monitor :: Saiorse Higgins (Feb 2003-November 2005)</p>
<p class="content"><a href="http://artists.banff.org/saoirse/" target="new"><strong>http://artists.banff.org/saoirse/</strong></a><br />
[ you’ll never be the same after this, you were never the same              after that] ::<br />
online-offline performance looking at the pull and push of time through              Beckett</p>
<p>contact address &gt; 70 Pacific Street,# 313, Cambridge, MA 02139,            USA<br />
languages &gt; English, Spanish, Gaelic EDUCATION<br />
Bachelor of Product Design (Hons), NCAD Dublin (1987)<br />
Masters Interactive Multimedia MA IMM, Royal College of Art, London            (1995)</p>
<p>CURRENT POSITION<br />
Research assistant &#8211; Media Lab, MIT,<br />
Computing Culture group, advisor- Chris Csikszentmihalyi</p>
<p>RECENT POSITIONS<br />
Lecturer Interactive Media, University of Dundee, Scotland.<br />
September 2001-August 2002<br />
Artist in residence, Arthouse Centre for Digital Art, Dublin, Ireland.<br />
(residence award &#8211; Arts Council of Ireland) February 2001 &#8211; August 2001<br />
Artist in Residence at the Banff Centre for the Arts, Canada.<br />
(Discovery residency Oct-Dec 2000 &#8211; Travel Award, Arts Council of Ireland)</p>
<p>NEW MEDIA AWARDS/ EXHIBITIONS<br />
&#8216;Sentient Cogs&#8217; group show, Guinness Storehouse 5h Gallery<br />
August 3rd – September 15th 2002<br />
<a href="http://www.5th.ie/html/archive.html" target="new">http://www.5th.ie/html/archive.html<br />
</a>(University of Dundee Arts committee grant)</p>
<p>Online-offline Interactive performance, Atlantic cultural space, Moncton,<br />
New Brunswick, Canada.<br />
May 23rd- 26th 2002<br />
(Arts Council of Ireland Travel Grant)</p>
<p>Online-offline performance – Dundee Contemporary Arts Centre,            Dundee, Scotland.<br />
May 10th &#8211; 12th 2002</p>
<p>Webgallery &#8211; International Day of Time Specific Art : Feb 20th 2002            showing August 02<br />
<a href="http://kunst.no/20022002/index2.html" target="new"><strong>http://kunst.no/20022002/index2.html</strong></a><br />
Online exhibition &#8216;r&gt;emote&#8217;Marks of Omission exhibition, Arthouse,<br />
Dublin &#8211; Sept-Oct 01</p>
<p>Joint exhibition with Inge Van Doorslaar- The other Gallery, Banff,            Canada.<br />
Nov 00<br />
interactive 3D projection onto porcelain dishes</p>
<p>Group exhibition 3D animated projection onto fossil rock &#8216;Inside_out&#8217;The            Other Gallery, Banff Centre for the Arts, Canada, Nov 00<br />
(Arts Council of Ireland Travel grant)</p>
<p>Selected for interactive art gallery exhibition &#8216;Transmediale 2000&#8242;<br />
Berlin, Feb 2000<br />
<a href="http://www.transmediale.de/00/exhib_e/ex2.html" target="new"><strong>http://www.transmediale.de/00/exhib_e/ex2.html</strong></a></p>
<p>Selected for exhibition in SIGGRAPH art gallery &#8216;Touchware&#8217;- July 98<br />
&#8216;Streaming&#8217; interactive installation<br />
(Arts Council of Ireland Arts Flight grant)</p>
<p>Exhibition at Arthouse Multimedia Centre &#8211; Dublin June 98<br />
&#8216;image to sound&#8217; 1.0<br />
Participator in &#8216;Globalbody&#8217; Opening event of ZKM digital Museum &#8211; Karlsruhe,            Germany Oct 97<br />
Shortlisted for ICC BIENNALE New Media Exhibition &#8211; Tokyo Sept 97</p>
<p>&#8216;Streaming&#8217; interactive installation<br />
Exhibition for opening of ArtHouse Multimedia Centre &#8211; Dublin June 96</p>
<p>&#8216;Stardogged Moon&#8217; interactive installation Exhibited at SAGA Contemporary            Art Exhibition &#8211; Paris, April 96</p>
<p>First digital interactive installation piece to be shown at SAGA.</p>
<p>Selected for exhibition at Milia &#8217;96 Multimedia Exhibition -<br />
&#8216;Stardogged Moon&#8217; interactive installation<br />
New Talent Pavilion &#8211; Cannes, Feb 96<br />
(Arts Council of Ireland grant)</p>
<p>Winner of Adobe Innovative Interface design award Circuit show -<br />
Royal College of Art 1995 (Major project on MAIMM course)</p>
<p>PUBLICATIONS<br />
Editor for New Media Notes online magazine for digital arts,<br />
Art Bulletin printed magazine ( from April/May 2000 – June 2002)</p>
<p>Interview with Wired magazine &#8216;Sentient Cogs&#8217; show Nov 2002</p>
<p>Report on Whitney Biennale exhibition New York, New Media Notes, April            2002</p>
<p>Interview Sara Diamond, director of digital arts, Banff Centre for            the Arts</p>
<p>New Media Notes online magazine, Art Bulletin magazine, June/July 01</p>
<p>Interview with Melinda Rackham, new media artist and Leonardo prize            winner</p>
<p>New Media Notes online magazine for digital arts,</p>
<p>Art Bulletin printed magazine, April/May 01</p>
<p>Banff residency New Media Notes online magazine for digital arts,</p>
<p>Art Bulletin printed magazine, November 00</p>
<p>Transmediale and new media today New Media Notes online magazine,<br />
Art Bulletin magazine, April 00 :: <a href="http://www.artistsireland.com/nmn/" target="new"><strong>http://www.artistsireland.com/nmn/</strong></a></p>
<p>Interview with Diane Gromala, chair Siggraph 2000 &#8211; New Media Notes            online magazine, Art Bulletin magazine :: <a href="http://www.artistsireland.com/nmn/articles/Diane00_1.html" target="new"><strong>http://www.artistsireland.com/nmn/articles/Diane00_1.html</strong></a></p>
<p>Artists report Siggraph 98 &#8211; New Media Notes online art magazine ::            <a href="http://www.artistsireland.com/nmn/pdf/oct0198.pdf" target="new"> <strong>www.artistsireland.com/nmn/pdf/oct0198.pdf</strong></a></p>
<p>PROFESSIONAL ORGANISATIONS<br />
Member of the organising committee Art Gallery, New Orleans, Siggraph,            August 00 responsible for the interactive installation artists exhibits            and discussions.</p>
<p>Faces international organization for women engaged in digital media            :: <a href="http://faces.vis-med.ac.at/" target="new"><strong>http://faces.vis-med.ac.at</strong></a><br />
Collision Artists Collective, Boston, 2003 :: <a href="http://www.ai.mit.edu/%7Ejrb/cc/" target="new"><strong>http://www.ai.mit.edu/~jrb/cc/</strong></a></p>
<blockquote></blockquote>
<p><strong><a href="http://www.lab71.org/" target="new"><br />
</a><a href="http://www.lab71.org/" target="new">           </a></strong></p>
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		<title>Atsushi Nishijima with Yuzo Sakuraomoto</title>
		<link>http://www.location1.org/atsushi-nishijima-with-yuzo-sakuraomoto/</link>
		<comments>http://www.location1.org/atsushi-nishijima-with-yuzo-sakuraomoto/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Feb 2002 16:29:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>irp</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Artist Interviews]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[residency]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Atsushi Nishijima]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://test.location1.org/news/atsushi-nishijima-with-yuzo-sakuraomoto/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.location1.org/movs/interviews/2002/nishijima_interview_ref.jpg" height="240" width="320" /></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.location1.org/atsushi-nishijima-with-yuzo-sakuraomoto/"><em>Click here to view the embedded video.</em></a></p>
<p>Transcript:</p>
<p>(this interview was conducted in Japanese on February 9 2002).</p>
<p><strong>YUKO SAKURAMOTO: I&#8217;m with Atsushi Nishijima.  	Atsushi is a sound artist from Kyoto, Japan. His work and activities are diverse,  	including sound installation, he live performance, and research on soundscape.  	He just made an installation at Location One in New York.</strong></p>
<p><strong>So, first please tell us about your installation    at Location One : </strong></p>
<p>ATSUSHI NISHIJIMA: I used TV monitors, video tapes,  	and solar batteries to design the sound system for the installation. For the  	video screening, I used two different types of sequences: one features images  	of natural glimmering from the sun and the moon, the other consists of a man-made  	rhythm resulting from evolving neon signs and the cityscape that I shot at  	Times Square. Sound was produced by the changing lights, and on screen, color  	and movement were transformed into electric signals through the use of solar  	batteries.</p>
<p><strong>YS: Your exhibition was titled, &#8220;Subtractive  	Creation.&#8221; Could you explain the meaning of &#8216;subtractive creation&#8217; , and tell  	us how you came up with the idea? </strong></p>
<p>AN: Usually, when I think of an idea, I tend to  	think of different kinds of things by analogy. For instance, in the case of  	sound and light, they are interesting to me because they are both wave forms.  	We perceive colors when the waves within the sunlight or streetlights are  	reflected on things, so that the waves that could be seen red or blue out  	of all the spectrum of light only reach our eyes. In other words, we simply  	receive something that is subtracted from some existent totality. In this  	sense, I am interested in the relationship of the totality, a thing as its  	part, and myself, and how they interact with each other. Using the earlier  	example, rather than mixing or adding &#8216;red&#8217; and &#8216;blue&#8217; to create something,  	my concern is how something can be subtracted, mediated by my work, and what  	the outcome will look like.</p>
<p><strong>YS: So-called &#8220;Sound Art&#8221; has been gaining popularity  	recently. As new technology or the computer software has become more available,  	it seems that everyone can become musicians. What is your definition of Sound  	Art? </strong></p>
<p>AN: As for the technology, I don&#8217;t make any distinction  	between high and low technology. A friend of mine told me that some people  	still use the terms &#8216;new media&#8217; and &#8216;old media&#8217; for categorization. For me,  	it seems to be a matter of methodology or choice. Some people use a digital  	camera, and others opt for a traditional camera with photographic film. Rather  	than claiming which is good or bad, new or old, it&#8217;s becoming more like a  	matter of one&#8217;s taste. The question is how to utilize them, how to use the  	media ! I heard an interesting story concerning the invention of Hovercrafts.  	A group of ship specialists started the project in an attempt to produce a  	high-speed vehicle on the water. They first tried to elaborate the design  	of the hull, improve the screws, the engine and so on, but failed in their  	attempts. At some point a specialist on aviation technology joined the team  	that was working on this project and proposed to create a &#8220;flying ship&#8221;, which  	is neither a ship nor an airplane. Ship specialists couldn&#8217;t even conceive  	of such an idea. They were only concerned with the idea of updating the qualities  	of the ship, and could not imagine a ship hovering in the air. I found the  	story really interesting. I titled my installation at Location One, &#8220;Subtractive  	Creation&#8221; in a rather symbolic sense, as opposed to the idea of creation by  	addition or mixing. I don&#8217;t think adding or mixing is enough. You need to  	reach a completely different idea in order to create something interesting  	and new. Unless you can create different ways of looking or thinking, or produce  	interesting concepts; if I use the example of the ship, you would end up upgrading  	its performance, efficiency or comfort level. In my case, although I compose  	and perform music, I want to present different ways of listening to music  	through my work, or compose and create in relation to the way in which music  	is listened to. Proposing new ways of listening and hearing, that is my focus.  	As for the definition of Sound Art, it&#8217;s a difficult question. Generally when  	the work utilizes sound as a medium, it&#8217;s often refered to as &#8220;Sound Art&#8221;.  	For me, whether sound is used or not, this is not the issue. What matters  	is whether the work is conceived from &#8220;sound&#8221;. As long as it is conceived  	or designed from the perspective of sound, it can be called &#8220;sound art&#8221;, regardless  	of whether it is painting, sculpture, or photography. Because what we refer  	to as &#8220;sound&#8221; has various aspects. A good example is a musical instrument.  	Like, when we think of a box whose volume is identical to the volume of a  	violin, since the shape is different the box doesn&#8217;t produce the same sound  	as the violin, even though the volume is the same. In other words, shape,  	material, and volume as components of the instrument, the architectural space  	or environment in which these components are found, all these elements can  	relate to sound either as a whole or individually. Either way, since it is  	related to sound, it has that distinct shape and space. To put it in reverse,  	whether it&#8217;s painting, sculpture, photography or architecture, I think &#8220;sound  	art&#8221; has interesting possibilities.</p>
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