Monday, August 19, 2013

ONCE UPON A MATTRESS: PART III


In an earlier post, we talked about James Turrell's residency at the Mattress Factory and how it exemplifies the Mattress Factory's continuing and fundamental commitment to providing artists with the resources of space, time, and support without encumbrances or expectations of any sort.   Not only does this commitment remain today, some 35 years later, it stands as one of the museum's guiding principles and a hallmark of the mission of the museum.   When we look at the James Turrell artworks that developed in this unique environment and how those works advanced the entire spectrum of his works (pun, um, intended), we can't help but feel a little encouraged for our next 35 years! 





James Turrell, Danaë, 1983
Photograph by Florian Holzer



During his residency, Turrell slept at one of the Mattress Factory neighbor's house, shopped, cooked, and ate with Barbara and Michael, and spent hours drafting, building, revising, and adjusting to his satisfaction two artworks, Danaë and Pleiades.  While Danaë is a framed light piece similar to his earlier "Space Division Constructions"[1] works Acton, 1976 and Cumo, 1976, Pleiades marked a clear departure from his earlier work.  Pleiades was his first foray into a type of artwork referred to as "Dark  Spaces" or "Dark Places." Later "Dark Spaces" include Selene, 1984 at the Capp Street Project, Meso, 1986 at the Hirschorn Museum of Art in Washington, DC, Thought When Seen, 1988 at the Jean Bernier Gallery in Athens, Greece, and even portions worked into the construction of Roden Crater, 1976-.  These works, and others, all relate to the efforts and artistic developments that occurred while working on Pleiades at the Mattress Factory, way back in 1983.





Working Drawings for James Turrell's Pleiades, 1983



As anyone who has seen Pleiades, visitors to the artwork are guided by a handrail up a long ramp in a pitch-black hallway leading to a viewing platform where they gaze at a seemingly completely dark space.  Resisting the urge to click on one's phone for light, the viewer waits, maybe twenty, maybe thirty, or even forty minutes while the eyes adjust.  As Craig Adcock, scholar of 20th American art, describes Pleiades, "Gradually, dim areas of luminance seem to become perceptible and to move through the space, but these are often phosphenes generated by the random nerve firing inside our own retinas." Eventually a physiological adjustment called the Purkinje Shift occurs allowing the retina's cones and rods to perceive a blob of color first blue and then red, suspended in the darkness (we all paid attention in 9th Grade Biology, right?).  The viewer becomes aware of the ability to perceive color (cones do this) within the darkness (rods do this).  This process rewards the viewer with not only an artwork, but also the opportunity to observe our eyes in the process of perceiving. [2]  Adcock explains:



 ... [P]erception at these threshold levels is never really a matter of "seeing" so much as "sensing" the light's presence.  Such viewing is hard to describe.  The light is there and in no way indefinite.  Indeed, in some ways, it is more "definite" than the light of normal experience.  As it appears in the world, light lacks its own place; it is most often seen on something else as illumination.  In the subtle conditions of the Dark Pieces, light has ipseity.  It is itself, just as light, just as the basic stuff of perception, and in that unique place, it is extremely intense, despite the fact that it hardly exists at all."[3]



It is a truly fascinating piece.  Check out these handwritten notes about Danaë and Pleiades found in the Mattress Factory archives. 





Handwritten notes about Turrell artworks on Michael Olijnyk letterhead



The exhibition was such a success that the Mattress Factory and Turrell agreed to keep the works on view beyond the initial exhibition period and to come to an agreement on a purchase price.  By a stroke of serendipity, Turrell took an interest in a giant, 10-foot motorized band saw that Barbara had rescued from the trash heap at one of the local hospitals several years prior and offered to exchange Pleiades for it, along with her stash of aged black walnut.  Formally, the acquisition marked the start of one the nation's leading permanent collections of contemporary installation art.   It also prompted a decidedly informal cross-country road trip to transport the giant saw and the stash of walnut from Pittsburgh to Arizona during which Barbara, Michael, and Turrell forged what has come to be a long and lasting friendship.  We'll hear more about that road trip in our next installment.  Stay tuned!





[1] Turrell, James et al., James Turrell: Light & Space, (New York: Whitney Museum of American Art, 1980) 35.

[2] Craig Adcock, James Turrell (Tallahasee: Florida State University Gallery and Museum, 1989) 53.


[3] Craig E. Adcock, James Turrell: The Art of Light and Space (Berkeley, University of California Press, 1990) 111.

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Bridging The History of Public Art


As you may have noticed on your commute this week, the Andy Warhol Bridge has been yarn bombed.  Thanks to the dedication and vision of fiber artist Amanda Gross, 1,847 volunteer knitters and installers, and a number of foundations and institutional partners, Knit the Bridge stands as the largest yarn bomb in the United States! Knit the Bridge is not only super cool piece of ephemeral art, but it helps to raise awareness of the wealth of public art in the Pittsburgh region.  In celebration of the Knit the Bridge project and the recent release of the new edition of the Pittsburgh Art in Public Places: Downtown Walking Tour ,we did a little digging around in our archives to find a handful of historical video clips of the public art works produced by the Mattress Factory artists over the course of our 35-year history.


One of the earliest public art pieces the Mattress Factory supported was a series of performances by Chrome, an Australia-based performance art group.  Having already performed all over the world, in Tehran, in Paris, all over Australia, and throughout Canada, the Mattress Factory's presentation of Chrome was the group's premier performance in the United States.  The performances took place in early August, 1983 and progressed from Market Square to One Oxford Center.  Consisting of a unique mix of song, dance, music, mime, comedy, and improvisation. The performances captivated crowds in downtown Pittsburgh.





Chrome's artwork Public Performance in Market Square in downtown Pittsburgh.



Chrome's artwork Public Performance at One Oxford Center in downtown Pittsburgh.

For more information about Chrome, visit their website.



A couple years later, the Mattress Factory again presented a public art performance work that fascinated local audiences.  The work, Steamshuffle Pittsburgh by artists Christopher Janney and Joan Brigham, consisted of eight large glass panels that were inscribed with the text of a poem by Emmett Williams and installed upright in Oliver Plaza in downtown Pittsburgh.  In this interactive work, movements by pedestrians triggered electronic sounds and activated jets of steam aimed at the glass panels, thereby revealing the text of the inscribed poems. 





Look in the botton right corner of this video to see Founder and Co-Director Barbara Luderwoski chatting with passersby as a child interacts with Steamshuffle Pittsburgh.






Steamshuffle Pittsburgh was exhibited during the winter of 1985 in Pittsburgh.



The Mattress Factory also maintains two public artworks as part of the museum's permanent collection.  These works, Garden Installation by Winifred Lutz and Music for a Garden by Rolf Julius, are available to the public during regular museum hours.  Check out this video of artist Winifred Lutz sitting in the chair in Garden Installation.





Winifred Lutz sitting in the chair in Garden Installation.


and this video of her walking around the various levels of the artwork. 






Caption: Winifred Lutz in Garden Installation.



You can read more about Winifred Lutz's artwork at our website or stop by the museum lobby to see the models she created while planning the artwork. 



Rolf Julius's sound work, Music for a Garden, neighbors the Lutz garden, but is an independent work of public art.  In this archival video, Rolf Julius discusses the relationship between Music for a Garden and Winifred Lutz's Garden Installation.  





Interview with Rolf Julius about Music for a Garden.




Julius discusses the sculptural elements to his sound piece.


You can read more about Music for a Garden and several other Julius artworks on view at the Mattress Factory at our website.



As you can see, public art plays a vital role in the creative life of Pittsburgh.  We tip our hats to the Knit the Bridge project and to Greater Pittsburgh Arts Council's Office of Public Art for all their efforts to raise awareness of the rich cultural heritage available in our region!




Thursday, August 1, 2013

August 11th CraftFactory Market

Join us in the MF Lobby on Sunday, August 11th for our 'almost end of Summer' CraftFactory! Come explore hand-made objects and artwork from Pittsburgh makers. The event runs during museum hours, 1-5pm. Museum admission is required to shop -  yet, we are offering half-price admission throughout August. Do some early holiday shopping or pick up a treat for yourself!  - This event is sponsored by the MF Shop.


Trilodeon by Niffer Desmond
Trilodeon creates living arts for your everyday growth and evolution.  Find engaging creations that heal the body, enliven the mind and stir the soul! We make high consciousness arts, learning toys, healing tools, apparel, eco decor and more. 

Niffer Desmond has crossed disciplines as an artist, activist, healer, and consciousness pioneer. In December 2012 Niffer created the 'Evolutionary Art Faire' - a cross pollination of brilliant creatives combining healing, spirit, music and art. With a flair for the fun and curious, Niffer continues to explore strange new worlds, uniting and igniting the imagination of Spaceship Earth. Also on Etsy.






Kitsch Ditch by Sam Ditch
- Kitsch, noun. Art, objects, or design considered to be in poor taste because of excessive garishness or sentimentality, but appreciated in an ironic way. - 


The work of Sam Ditch explores obsessive florals, googly eyes and glitter. Sam’s work delves deep into the nostalgia of mid-century America and challenges the notion of the uber feminine. 99.9% of materials used are second hand – so not only is this work awesome, it’s very eco-friendly.

Sam Ditch is a Bellevue resident, and a 2009 graduate of Slippery Rock University. Sam has exhibited work in the Pittsburgh area and currently has work for sale at Wildcard and on Etsy. She’s a collector of all things kitsch and an avid folk music consumer.






Rose Duggan

Rose Duggan is a painter living and working in Lawrenceville, Pennsylvania. Her work has focused on small-scale acrylic abstract paintings since 2009. In her work, she strives to create color intersections that are playful and engaging. She graduated from Allegheny College and most recently has been featured as one of Pittsburgh Arts Council's Emerging Artist at the annual Three Rivers Arts Festival as well as selected for Pittsburgh City Paper's 2013 ArtBox project.  









As one of the oldest art forms, ceramics has a versatility shared with few other mediums. Vanessa's work is a conversation in form vs. function. Form, shape and surface decoration are combined to create objects that walk the line between usable and sculpture. Themes include the abstracted vase, drawings etched in clay (a technique she developed herself) and the never ceasing desire to push high-fired stoneware to its physical limits.
Vanessa Kettering creates her ceramic work at the Pittsburgh Center for the Arts, and is a member of the Associated Artists of Pittsburgh. A trained art educator, she works at an after school program in Regent Square and has led several art classes for a variety of ages. She speaks some Italian and is studying Japanese language and culture.








Lynne Kropinak

Lynne Kropinak is a self-taught jewelry maker, flea market addict, and enthusiast of all things crafty. Her work is inspired and constructed with found and salvaged materials: pictures out of old books, gemstones and leaves, polymer clay, paint, recycled trinkets, conversations heard in line at the grocery store, and other things too good to throw away. She has been making and selling crafts for over 25 years and delights in sharing skills and inspiration with other crafters. charmed by nature wares can be seen at many local craft markets in Pittsburgh and also at Wildcard. Lynne is also mom to the 2 Pittsburgh Craft-O-Tron machines that roam the city spreading the joy of local handmade goodies in small boxes. 









John the Craftist by Alethea Okonak
John is actually Thea, a true rustbelt gal who makes Pittsburgh greeting cards out of her century-old apartment in Aspinwall. She believes in the importance of handcraft, correspondence, regional culture, and -- perhaps most of all -- humor. Her cards are printed on paper manufactured by a sixth-generation, hydropowered Midwestern company, and she uses mostly vintage and distressed fonts based on wood type and mid-century modern aesthetics. When she isn’t printing and folding cards, she is most likely behind the counter at Wildcard, ordering a vegan pizza from Spak Brothers, or spoiling her Mom’s three rescue cats.












The Urban Feltmaker by Karen Page
(website currently under construction)
Karen Page has been a practicing artist and educator for more than three decades. She began her love of textiles when sewing and knitting clothes for her Troll dolls and then advancing to sewing her own clothes in high school to spinning and knitting one-of-kind sweaters.  Exhibitions and study have led her to Denmark, Turkey, and Kyrgyzstan – where she conducted feltmaking workshops over four summers to various women’s co-ops. Karen teaches the textile studies classes (and occasionally costume) at CAPA.  Her work has been recognized with regional, national, and international awards including a PCA Individual Artistic Fellowship Grant and a NEA Individual Artistic Fellowship grant.









Devorah Naturals


Devorah Naturals creates safe and effective plant derived skincare for all ages.  Products are made with organic and natural ingredients and never contain parabens, formaldehyde donors, phthalates or petrochemicals. Devorah Naturals manufactures using earth and animal friendly practices.   







MakeWan





Electronic Component Jewelry from MakeWan. Shanning Wan has a Web/graphic design background, and is interested in the intersection of traditional craftsmanship, media art and digital fabrication. MakeWan can be found on Etsy, and at makewan.com.

















Edited 8/3/13 - Emily Walley will not be able to participate in this CraftFactory, but her earrings are for sale in the MF Shop. Her work can be purchased on Etsy




Please contact us if you have any questions about this event:
T: 412.231.3169 //  shop [at] mattress [dot] org

Are you interested in participating in events like this? 
Email our Shop Manager at: sam [at] mattress [dot] org

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

MF EDUCATION @ THE OBAMA ACADEMY

The Mattress Factory produces a robust series of educational outreach programs in local schools around the Pittsburgh region. Our educators work with teachers and students in classrooms to actively investigate the creative practice of resident artists as they experiment with new materials, take risks and communicate ideas through installation art.

Recently artist John Pena visited the Barack Obama Academy of International Studies to explore his process with the students there. This is what he had to say:


Over a series of twenty sessions, I worked with an art teacher named Donna Hetrick and eight of her advanced art students at the Obama Academy in East Liberty to create a series of site-specific installations throughout their school. During my first ten visits, we focused on shorter exercises that I created to help familiarize the students with installation art and the role that context plays in creating an installation.

The first exercise I gave them was to create a mini-museum that had to house five objects of great importance to them. It also had to be small enough to be stored on their body somewhere. One student painted tiny images of his objects on his keys. Another created a tiny paper house with small clay sculptures of her objects inside. We then took a field trip to the Mattress Factory and the students were impressed and challenged by what they saw. It left an indelible mark on them as they continued talking about it over the course of our time together. 

Finally, each student had to pick a site in their school for which they were to propose a work of installation art. After they secured their site, Donna and I had them write up a proposal of their installation including all logistics, materials and motivations for their idea. This proposal had to be supplemented with preliminary sketches as well. Once their proposals were approved by the principal of the school, the students began creating their installations. The reactions to their installations were very positive. The student body began talking about them and it was exciting to watch the young artists explaining their ideas and approach to their peers. Below is a list of the installations with a quick description of each project.



Rina Matsuda
Title: Sun
Materials: Yellow paper & Tape
Description: Rina proposed to create a giant image of the sun using small pieces of yellow paper. It took about a month to install this project. Rina was trying to draw awareness to the one space in the entire school where there is an abundance of natural light.





Wendy Levenson
Title: G2G
Materials: Paper and Red Cellophane
Description: Wendy noticed that an exit sign on the 2nd floor of the school was missing its cover, so she decided to create a new cover using the language of text messaging instead of the traditional word “Exit.” This was an effort to address how much of a hurry everyone seems to be in during the school day. Wendy wanted to cause people to look at their environment more closely as well as create an installation that was enhancing or improving upon her school. 


 
Myiya Peters
Title: Vines
Materials: Paint and Graphite
Description: Myiya wanted to create an installation that was always in a state of constantly growing and changing. Over two weeks time, she painted an image of a vine growing out of a hole in a pillar near the cafeteria. She expressed her concern about how there has been a hole in the pillar for a long time and it bothers her. So she decided to make something exciting emerging from it.

 


India Harper
Title: Bridge to Nowhere
Materials: Paper, Markers and Tape
Description: India’s idea stemmed from a quote from Barack Obama in which he states, “Excuses only build bridges to nowhere.” She wanted to visually represent this somehow so she took strips of grey paper and asked her friends and teachers to write an excuse on each piece of paper. Then after she collected well over 60 excuses, she used the paper to construct a bridge on the wall of the school. One side of the bridge is emanating from a students mouth while the other end of the bridge is collapsing.

 

Tommy Brewer
Title: Barriers to Water
Materials: String, Wood and Glue
Description: Tommy’s IB Diploma theme is clean water. He decided he wanted to create an installation that would draw awareness to how fortunate we are in the United States that we have easy access to clean water. So he suspended wiry string around a water fountain in the school to cause people to paused before they drink the water. Then there was a printed explanation of the project above the fountains.

Monday, July 29, 2013

ARTIST JOHN PEÑA ON COMMUNITY ART LAB

I led a two-week workshop for kids ages 9-12 called “Mammoth, Monstrous, Massive Sculptures.” During this time we created large scale sculptures made out of low-tech materials like cardboard and paint. We then brought the sculpture to life by using our bodies to control them. During the first week, I had the students create a series of smaller sculptures to help familiarize themselves with the materials and ideas.


During the first shorter exercise, I had each student bring in an small object then asked them to replicate that object five or ten times its original size using cardboard, tape and paint. We installed these objects in the Mattress Factory Garden and the kids were excited to see their large objects in a new context. The next project centered around the concept of “Ephemeral.” We discussed the definition of ephemeral then I showed them examples of Ephemeral Art. I broke them into teams of 3-4 and gave them one day to create an ephemeral experiences using cardboard and paper. This exercise went wonderfully and I was excited to see how well they understood and internalized this concept. We had a spirited discussion after each of the teams presented their final project.
 


The last week of the workshop was spent working on two large-scale interactive sculptures. We brainstormed ideas for what we wanted to become as a group and quickly decided to make two projects. One team called “Team Iceburgh” made a giant iceberg out of cardboard, tape and paint. Each part of the structure was made to fit one of the students so they could all be a part of the overall structure. In order to give the illusion that it was melting, they all moved in unison with each other and slowly knelt down to create the illusion the melting ice. The second team was called “Pencil Plan” and they created a large box of colored pencils that they inhabited. Each person was clad in a costume that resembled a colored pencil. The costumes were quite creative as they involved a hat with a tip that could be pressed down to mimic the dulling of a pencil’s lead. The kids acted out a skit where they ran out of the box, dulled themselves by drawing and then had to return to the box to get sharpened.
 


Both projects were a huge success. I was amazed at how well the kids worked together to bring their ideas to life in such a short time.

--John Peña

Visit John Peña's website at johnpena.net.

Friday, July 26, 2013

RUSS ORLANDO: SALT OF THE EARTH

Meet Russ Orlando. Russ arrived this week for his residency at the Mattress Factory to install his work for the exhibition, Detroit: Artists in Residence. Russ holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Wayne State University and a Master of Fine Arts from Cranbrook Academy of Art, and has built his career as an artist primarily through performance, often using his own body as an impetus for social commentary. The artist's statement on his website offers:

Whether physically present in my work or creating a sculptural object, the methods I use attempt to capture the immediate in gestures, from a place that I both know and do not know. I experiment with performance, video, photography and collage, often in the same piece.

I like to explore conflict in my work, always leaving several entry points for the viewer. My natural inclination is to do things that are improvisational. To counter this, I’ll sometimes do a piece that’s very controlled and meticulous to refresh and regroup. But occasionally, I combine these two approaches. Most recently, I’ve been focusing on activating the performance in a sculptural object.


When I arrived at work this morning, Russ was standing in our administration office, clad in a mechanic's blue collared jumpsuit, stirring a pot of salt water. I would have raised an eyebrow, but things like that are more common here than not; one of the coolest aspects about working at the Mattress Factory is that we get to witness artists in action as they prepare their installations for public view. Russ invited me and my coffee out to the garden to watch him "salt" some of the pieces for his installation, which will incorporate old car parts crusted in salt. 

Russ Orlando (right) chats with MF co-director Michael Olijnyk about his project

Between hurling ladles of salty sludge at a rusted and graffiti-ed fender he pulled from a junkyard in Detroit, Russ explained that his process for this project is to not alter the original metal piece in any way, but to apply layers of salt, letting it "cure" in the sun for a few days at a time. 


Russ Orlando applies salt to metal car parts in the garden


Russ stressed that he likes to leave the way the salt adheres to the metal to chance, and referenced Richard Serra's early work with flinging red-hot lead at the wall and floor in Jasper John's studio.


I left Russ as he was dripping the last crystals of salt onto his fender and grill, wondering if the salt would eventually completely obscure that fabulous section of aqua paint on the fender. I suppose we won't know until the piece is finished--that is the exciting thing about installations at the Mattress Factory...you never know.


Save the date for the opening reception of new works by Detroit: Artists in Residence, Janine Antoni and Chiharu Shiota, September 12 from 7 - 9 p.m.
 

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