Posts tagged Saturday
How To Fly & Not To Sink, an Aerial Dance Experiment | Mimi Ke  - 9/23, 6pm

An aerial silks performance with musical accompaniment by Kate Gylten

 
Together, Mimi and Kate will create a soundscape of beautiful sound instruments for an experimental aerial performance.

In the essence of the Art-A-Thon, they will begin composing the performance Saturday afternoon as a “hackathon” within the Art-A-Thon… Coming together for the first time to create the performance within a rapid timeframe, live on-site. You are invited to observe this improv-based process and experience the live performance at 6:00 outside Close House. 


https://mimikeaerial.com/

Kalmia StrongPS1 CloseSaturday
Art Social!

Casual and friendly free open hours at PS1's Close House location. Come check out the space and resources, bring a project to share or work on, or use our art supplies to do some making in company with other folks. Stop by for a few minutes or the whole two hours!

All ages and experiences welcome.

Hosted by Kelly Moore and Megg Fisher.

Kalmia StrongPS1 CloseSaturday
Time To Read

This week for Art-a-thon Bread and Roses, we highlight reading as a valuable form of research, production, community building and life-long learning. In this 24/7 productivity cycle of late capitalism, we make time to read! From September 21-23 visitors to Public Space One are invited to read together, log the book titles they're currently reading, share excerpts, and subscribe to the Art-a-thon reading challenge to complete a book by Saturday, September 23rd. All reading hours are hosted at the Close House. Remote participants are encouraged too! Read from wherever you are and send the title/author and/or a photo of a page to gallery@publicspaceone.com

Don't have a current book?? You can check one out from one of the many libraries hosted at PS1 including the CAS Reading Room, IC Poetry Library, PS1 Zine Library, and LGBTQ Iowa Library.

Shout out to the projects/artists who inspired taking this time, including The Center for Afrofuturist Studies Reading Room, Dewey Decimal Days by Bureau for Open Culture, Jen P. Harris ARTISTS READ, Shannon Stratton, Barry Phipps Off the Shelfies: Portraits in Reading, GenderFail, and Wendy's Subway.

CONTENT | Alejandra Alvarez

"CONTENT" can have different meanings depending on the context, it can refer to:

1- Things that are held or included in something. 

2- To the substance or material that is created and shared through various media 

3- Being content refers to a state of satisfaction // happiness  




Words have the power to both uplift and hurt us deeply. Hurtful words can have a profound emotional impact that can last a lifetime. Words, although they’re intangible, can cause ‘real’ damage. Would it be different if we could ‘see’ those words? What if we could ‘literally’ break the words that were meant to hurt us?

That’s the purpose of creating “CONTENT”, an interactive installation, where people are encouraged to interact with a sculptural object and destroy it. 



Did someone ever say something that hurt you deeply?

Do you // Did you have a hard time recovering from it? 

How are you//did you  break away from it?

Can you share some uplifting words with others struggling to break free from pain?





Despite being different, we’ve all been hurt, and sometimes by the same words. Together we can break away from it… Together we can break them.





Show Your Hand! cyanotype printing with Sally Chai - 9/23, 2-3:30pm

Visitors are invited to participate in A Show of Hands in two ways.

First, buy a print! Half of your chosen artwork’s purchase price will be donated to Earth Justice, a nonprofit devoted to environmental law in the public interest.

Second, show your hand! The gallery will feature two large blank pages to which you can add curiously shaped cut-outs of your own choosing. Then meet with us Saturday Sept. 23 at 2pm, at which time—using the magic of sunlight and water—the formerly blank pages will be turned into curiously blue cyanotype prints.

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Sally Chai is a writer, artist, and working member of the Iowa City Press Co-op. Her art practice uses a mix of drawing and printmaking techniques to create images on the subject of nature and the universe.

Kalmia StrongPS1 CloseSaturday
Randomly Accessed Memories | Tibi Chelcea

For the past 3 years, Tibi Chelcea has worked on a series of embroideries on circuit boards, called Randomly Accessed Memories. This series is inspired by core computer memories from the 1950’s-1960’s, which were woven by hand by pairs of workers passing a needle with copper wire back and forth through a circuit. Unfortunately, quite often, these workers were low-paying positions occupied by women. Each day of Art-a-Thon, Tibi will invite other people to work together on embroidering a circuit boards. Mimicking the original process of paired weaving, a needle with the thread would be passed between the embroiderers through the circuit board creating a new, spontaneous, design.

Junk Plate Intaglio drop-in workshop - 9/23, 12-3p

Learn or observe intaglio printmaking using “junk” materials like milk cartons, plastic food packaging, vinyl floor tiles, etc. Led by Dave Dugan. Drop in anytime at the IC Press Co-op! (225 N Gilbert St)

A lot of intaglio is done with copper plates, which are expensive, and if you're etching the plates, chemical baths are involved. Using "junk plates" takes the fear out of messing up an expensive copper plate. If you mess up a milk carton, who cares, it's just a milk carton!

Come on down and play around with a process you may be unfamiliar with, or if you are familiar with the process, maybe play around with materials you've never used before. It's free! Just show up for a few minutes, or a few hours, whatever works for you.

The Year of the Seldom Sun

The Year of the Seldom Sun is an immersive, multisensory experience that highlights an emotional journey each year as the seasons change, and the Sun travels away from my world and returns again. Everything is affected: The colors and energy; the days, nights, and light; the sights and the sounds; life, death, silence and rebirth. It is a cycle, and the 2020-2021 cycle was particularly dynamic. As we (all) endured wave upon wave of uncertainty, tense civil situations, pandemic, and isolation, I turned to writing music to process. The music came out in the form of a full length, home recorded concept album: The Year of the Seldom Sun

I wrote the album to tell the stories that I was watching unfold around me, and embedded a host of extra sounds, clips, and special textures that provide more to dive into for listeners who want to go deeper than surface level. And while the finished product was conceptual, and flowed thematically and intentionally from start to finish, I still wanted more. I wanted this album to capture people's imaginations and engage their senses. So with the help of my colleague and friend Kelly Moore, and a handful of other local contributors, I have created and curated a physical space to extend the experience. To give visual representation to the imagery, and more storyline to the characters in the songs. To more fully immerse listeners into an environment, and to attempt to re-create that time in history the way that I saw it: from my stool looking out at the beautiful, if not inherently isolated, East Amana, Iowa.

about the artist

Not an artist, really. Not formally trained or practiced enough. Just a maker. A re-creator. For most of his life, Will Kemple-Taylor has been doing his best to mimic and capture the things that inspire him through songs, visual art, and more recently, immersive environments. When he followed his partner to Iowa 9 years ago, he left behind the mountains of Northern New Mexico, and much of the natural beauty that once fueled his creativity. But Iowa brought new inspirations. He found a creative calling working at The Iowa Children’s Museum. And that new path, along with the birth of his children and a move to the countryside, sparked something in him. A newfound urge to tell the stories around him. A need to create, and to do so in as many ways as possible.