Ad: [ ? ]
TODAY

Friday, May 15

spacer
Search

spacer spacer spacer spacer


spacer
« The Watch, Ruby Sparks, Red Lights & Sacrifice Black Harvest Film Festival: Q&A With Chicago Actor Harold Dennis »

Art Sat Jul 28 2012

Hot Pockets: the Air Pockets Project

By Britt Julious

spacer

Marianne Kim

The streets of Wicker Park are filled with upscale boutiques and gourmet taco shops, but the neighborhood was once reborn as an artist's enclave. Like many parts of Chicago, Wicker Park has undergone transformation, both good and unfortunate. The last legs of gentrification usually ensure that the artistic colonizers that first remade the neighborhood are pushed out. And yet, many artistic practices (even those still gaining footing in Chicago's fickle art community) remain. Defibrillator, a performance art gallery, has quickly established itself as an epicenter for emerging and established local, national, and international performance art in the city. For the 2012 Wicker Park Fest, the gallery curated (with a grant from the Wicker Park/Bucktown Chamber of Commerce) Air Pocket Project, a series of five inflatable performance installations located at the intersection of Milwaukee Avenue and Wood Street. The Wicker Park Fest runs from noon to 8pm today and Sunday, July 29.

In Jake Myers' Short Court: Tight End, a miniature inflatable field was created for an audience-participatory-football game. The appeal of the project lies in its ability to render athletic advantage useless. For those not interested in sports, their apprehension often lies in its exclusivity. Without the ability to actively participate it in, an activity like football can often feel isolating. Unlike more democratic sports such as soccer or basketball, football's role as sport often lies in its visuals. Myers describes it as "weirdly crass and commercial," and that people are typically, "involved in the culture of buying it, but not participating in it." However, Myers' project aims to eliminate that distance by creating a field that is limited in scale. "Anyone that's good at football will not have an easy time participating in this," said Myers.

spacer

Jake Myers

The inflatable structure is made with an astroturf floor, pvc frame, pvc mesh, a tarp ceiling, and a fan to keep it inflated. Like many of Myers' past projects, Short Court: Tight End is a work that physically engages the audience. "People typically stand and watch, and I don't like that," Myers said. Rather than act as a mere spectator, audiences have the chance to participate, to activate the artwork. An artist will also participate as the defender trying to swap the ball down between two audience participators to prevent injury, but also regulate the level of participaton. A winner of the game will be announced at the end of the day.

In another project, Relatively Inflated I, Hideous Beast (Josh Ippel and Charlie Roderick) will fly a camera overhead with helium balloons and participants may put on goggles to see themselves from above. A sort of analog version of Google Maps, the project addresses our need for a mediated device to help us navigate. The idea first began with Roderick around 2004 or 2005 when he was in graduate school. Roderick initially investigated the means in which one could create a perspective from which one has to navigate.

spacer

Hideous Beast's work often deals with ideas of survivalism and a communal-based world, this latest project included. Participants are asked to see the work, to activate it, and to ask how they relate to it. "How do we position ourselves in space?" Roderick asks. "It's hard to ask people to change their patterns." In the case of Relatively Inflated I, the audience are the creators of the thing they are enjoying. Rather than passively enjoy experiences created for them, the audience is given a chance to "create" their experience, to direct the action and create an environment that reflects their own skills and use of the device. The work addresses our use of fabricating desire, of passive versus active engagement. Do we rely too heavily on things that package and control our emotions, predicting what we will want? With their current work, the audience navigates their own enjoyment. "The work is only as good as your level of engagement in it," Ippel said.

But the work is not solely created for the function of participation. Ippel and Roderick create each work with the function to solidly stand as an image or metaphor on its own. Rather than become comfortable with one's environment through individual navigation of trial-and-error, our use of devices such as smart phones has eliminated that practice while simultaneously rendering us incapable of gaining a firm grasp on our surroundings. With Relatively Inflated I, navigation will sometimes feel disorienting, confusing, and challenging, all aims that Ippel and Roderick feel ground the work substantially. "We gravitate toward work that makes the viewer conscious of themselves," Rodderick noted. "It's about motion, not movement."

--

Air Pocket Project runs Saturday, July 28 and Sunday, July 29 from noon to 8pm and is located at the intersection of Milwaukee Avenue and Wood Street. Additional participants in te project include Claire Ashley, Marianne M. Kim, and Heeran Lee.

 

spacer Add a Comment




Please enter the letter f in the field below:



Live Comment Preview


Notes & Tags

Items marked with a * are required fields. Please respect each other. We reserve the right to delete any comments borne out of douchebaggery or that deal in asshattery.

Permitted tags and how to use them:

To link: <a class="blahblahblah.com">Link text</a>
To italicize: <em>Your text</em>
To bold: <strong>Your text</strong>

Feature Thu Apr 16 2015

From Chicago to Senegal by Way of the Drum: Interview with Local Filmmaker Mallory Sohmer

By Ana Sekler

Mallory Sohmer is a freelance documentary filmmaker from Chicago and a Columbia College alumna. She co-directed the new film, Drum Beat Journey, the story of four inner-city youth who travel to Petit Mbao, Senegal, to participate in a drumming workshop. The program used music as a vehicle to capture and connect with the young men in an engaging and original way. But this is not just a film about drumming; it's about stepping into another culture to learn about oneself.
Read this feature »

Steve at the Movies Fri May 15 2015

Mad Max: Fury Road, Pitch Perfect 2, Lambert and Stamp, Iris, I Am Big Bird, Metalhead & The Film Critic

By Steve Prokopy

Read this column »

Blogroll

ACRE
An Angry White Guy
Antena
AREA Chicago
ArchitectureChicago Plus
Arts Engagement Exchange
The Art Letter
Art or Idiocy?
Art Slant Chicago
Art Talk Chicago
Bad at Sports
Bite and Smile
Brian Dickie of COT
Bridgeport International
Carrie Secrist Gallery
Chainsaw Calligraphy
Chicago Art Blog
Chicago Art Department
Chicago Art Examiner
Chicago Art Journal
Chicago Artists Resource
Chicago Art Map
Chicago Art Review
Chicago Classical Music
Chicago Comedy Examiner
Chicago Cultural Center
Chicago Daily Views
Chicago Film Examiner
Chicago Film Archives
Chicago Gallery News
Chicago Uncommon
Collaboraction
Contemporary Art Space
Co-op Image Group
Co-Prosperity Sphere
Chicago Urban Art Society
Creative Control
Defibrillator
Devening Projects
Digressions
DIY Film
ebersmoore
The Exhibition Agency
The Flatiron Project
F newsmagazine
The Gallery Crawl...
Galerie F
The Gaudy God
Happy Dog Gallery
HollywoodChicago
Homeroom Chicago
I, Homunculus
Hyde Park Artcenter Blog
InCUBATE
Joyce Owens: Artist on Art
J-Pointe
Julius Caesar
Kasia Kay Gallery
Kavi Gupta Gallery
Rob Kozlowski
Lookingglass Theatre Blog
Lumpen Blog
Marquee
Mess Hall
N'DIGO
Neoteric Art
NewcityArt
NewcityFilm
NewcityStage
Not If But When
Noun and Verb
On Film
On the Make
Onstage
Peanut Gallery
Peregrine Program
Performink
The Poor Choices Show
Pop Up Art Loop
The Post Family
The Recycled Film
Reversible Eye
Rhona Hoffman Gallery
Roots & Culture Gallery
SAIC Blog
The Seen
Sharkforum
Sisterman Vintage
Site of Big Shoulders
Sixty Inches From Center
Soleil's To-Do's
Sometimes Store
Steppenwolf.blog
Stop Go Stop
Storefront Rebellion
TOC Blog
Theater for the Future
Theatre in Chicago
The Franklin
The Mission
The Theater Loop
Thomas Robertello Gallery
threewalls
Time Tells Tony Wight Gallery
Uncommon Photographers
The Unscene Chicago
The Visualist
Vocalo
Western Exhibitions
What's Going On?
What to Wear During an Orange Alert?
You, Me, Them, Everybody
Zg Gallery

 

Events

Fri May 15 2015
You Are Here Festival

Fri May 15 2015
Chicago Underground Film Festival

Fri May 15 2015
Jeffly Gabriela Molina Opening Reception @ Kruger Gallery Chicago

Fri May 15 2015
Opening Reception for Feminism (n.): Plural and The Gallery Tally Poster Project @ Woman Made Gallery

Fri May 15 2015
Josep Lluís Sert: A Nomadic Dream Screening @ Graham Foundation

Fri May 15 2015
ACTIVATE @ Chicago Loop

Fri May 15 2015
Manifest Urban Arts Festival @ South Loop

Sat May 16 2015
Open screening @ Chicago Filmmakers

Sat May 16 2015
Mortified Chicago @ Mayne Stage

Sat May 16 2015
Chicago Underground Film Festival

Sat May 16 2015
Hellman's Another Part of the Forest, @ Goodman Theatre

Sat May 16 2015
Hot Doug's Appreciation Day @ Paulina Meat Market

Sun May 17 2015
Wink & Whisper @ Uptown Underground

Sun May 17 2015
Chicago Underground Film Festival

Sun May 17 2015
Vintage Garage Chicago

Tue May 19 2015
Kirsten Leenaars' Notes on Empty Chairs @ MCA

Wed May 20 2015
That Was Awesome @ Logan Theatre


A/C on Flickr

Join the A/C Flickr Pool.



About A/C

A/C is the arts and culture section of Gapers Block, covering the many forms of expression on display in Chicago. More...
Please see our submission guidelines.

Editor: LaShawn Williams, ldw@gapersblock.com
A/C staff inbox: ac@gapersblock.com

Archives

 

A/C Flickr Pool
spacer  Subscribe in a reader.

gipoco.com is neither affiliated with the authors of this page nor responsible for its contents. This is a safe-cache copy of the original web site.