Posts for December, 2008

“Refuse, Redemption, Recollection”

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

“Dérive: Refuse, Redemption, Recollection” is a collaborative installation by Carissa Henriques and Kate Daughdrill. The artists invited 100 participants to collect a peice of “trash,” note where they found it, and give it a name. The jars of trash were then lit and hung over a giant printed, map of Charlottesvile according to where they were found.

The opening reception was a very special night…and the installation initiated more conversations with passerbys than any exhibition thus far. The artist statement below provides some insight into the project.

The Situationist practice of dériving is an attempt to analyze the totality of everyday life through the passive movement through geographical space. To dérive is translated as to drift. This project is an investigation into the possibility of collaborative drifting, collecting, and recontextualizing.

Refuse: This project is political. This project is about where we go and where we don’t go. This project is about walking and driving. It is about the city of Charlottesville and its neighborhoods. It is about what we see and don’t see. It is about accumulation. It is about reexamining the spectacles and curiosities of the everyday. It is about the politics of value. It is about awareness.

Redemption: This project is spiritual. This project is about low things being lifted up. This project is about being made new again. It is about being renamed and reunderstood in a new context and in a new light.

Recollection: This project is historical. This project is about the bringing of memory or attention to the forefront of our minds. It is about evidence. It is about what we forget and what we remember. It is about seeing the history and humanness of the everyday objects that are so easy to discard and cease to notice.

The Situationist Manifesto claims that continual dériving is dangerous to the extent that the individual, having gone too far without defenses, is threatened with explosion, dissolution, dissociation, disintegration. Perhaps we cannot live here, but surely it is a refreshing exploration of how we live, how we see, and what we collect.

Sing-a-Long In Review

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

Sufjan Sing-a-Long Under the Installation

The sing-a-long was lots of fun and quite enchanting. A WTJU DJ brought two of her friends for a surprise Christmas outing. Two friends from NYC planned their holiday trip to Charlottesville around the event. A taxi driver pulled over in front of the Garage and joined us for a bit. Overall, there was quite a bit a of Christmas cheer, gratitude, and singing!

Thanks to Rob Jefferson for this lovely photograph.

Installation Opening this Friday!

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

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Sufjan Christmas Sing-A-Long

Tuesday, December 2nd, 2008

Join us for a listening party of Sufjan Stevens Christmas songs this Saturday, December 6th from 5-7pm. After an hour of listening and hot chocolate drinking, we’ll have a sing-a-long (with a live band!) to Sufjan’s songs and our favorite Christmas hymns.

The current participatory installation in the Garage is only going to be fully lit a few times during its exhibition. The sing-a-long will be a wonderful chance to enjoy the hanging jars of trash fully lit up.

Listening starts at 5pm. Singing starts at 6pm.