Monday, April 28, 2008

I can't believe these are all me!

I was going through my computer's photo booth album and this is what I found. I feel like I look like a different person in each picture.


















Sunday, April 20, 2008

It's Nice to Meet You! in action

pictures from the opening in Portland

Peter took these at the Milepost 5 opening. All I have to say is that my friends are the best. The BEST! Yes!





Saturday, April 19, 2008

text message from maggie

My inflatable self got to hang out with friends in Portland last night. So perfect!

artist auditions


This is actually something that took place a while back when I was in Portland, but I just found their website while I was google searching my own name. Basically, artists that were interested in participating had to do all this crazy stuff... show up in weird places at weird times and complete really random assignments. Eventually they narrowed it down and eliminated people, and chose just a few artists to showcase in the final exhibition. But the process was really fun. This is something  I made when I was involved... it's a pop-up with a monkey and Hulk Hogan that are the same size (they gave us a square white piece of posterboard and we had 24 hours to make something with it, and I found both of these pictures in the current issue of National Geographic magazine).

Thursday, April 17, 2008

artist statement

I submitted this statement today for the ISC student award competition and am pretty happy with it. I'd love some critical feedback....

The ordinary objects, spaces, people and places I encounter in my everyday life provide much of the inspiration for my work. I strive to signify and dispute the supposed monotony and disposability of daily life by focusing on what is conventionally considered mundane. When taken out of context and viewed from a new perspective, what is normally commonplace has the potential to become novel and extraordinary and, most importantly, memorable.

My own habits, routines, social interactions and possessions are often used as a platform for these investigations. Consequently, much of my work tends to take the form of self-portraiture. Although I am the subject and my experience is completely subjective, my intention is not to focus solely on myself. I wish to be seen as a surrogate for the universal experience of day-to-day life.

I'ts Nice to Meet You! is an interactive inflatable self-portrait that emphasizes our inherent desire for social interaction. It could visually be described as a wacky-waving-arm-flailing-inflatable-tube-person, much like the ones seen advertising grand openings or at car dealerships along the side of the road. The sculpture was commissioned and made by an inflatable images advertising company, and its height and physical proportions - such as the chest, waist and hip measurements - match those of my own figure. The caricature of my face was drawn from a digital picture that I emailed to another artist I found through a Google search on the internet. The figure is activated and inflated by motion detectors that turn the fan and blowers on when they sense the presence of another person. It then deflates after 30 seconds, or the approximate time it would take for a viewer to lose interest and walk away.

opening in Portland

My inflatable self portrait is making its debut in an opening at Milepost 5 in Portland tomorrow night. My friend Gary Wiseman (co-founder with me of Kitchen Sink PDX) curated the show. Here is a little more info about the exhibition, appropriately titled Self Projections, as seen on the art blog portlandart.net.
And here is the Milepost 5 website.

Monday, April 14, 2008

quote of the day

"Nobody's ever died from change."

Sunday, April 13, 2008

I discovered the reason for my obsession with self-portraiture!

"The more we immerse ourselves in ourselves, the more open we become, since the closer we get to the germ of our totality the closer we are to the germ of totality of all men."
-Piero Manzoni, For the Discovery of a Zone of Images, 1957

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

send a message



I found this website where you can pay a Palestinian to spraypaint your message on the West Bank Wall.
They take 3 pictures of their graffiti and email them to you, but can't guarantee how long the message will last. I have been wondering what I would say ever since I found this. Ironically, I think most of the messages people paid for are to loved ones (I found the link on a website that was giving "great Valentine's Day gift ideas"), like "Jakob loves Julie 4eva", etc. 
But this whole thing just makes me wonder... what do I have to say? Especially to a people/place in such a situation? 

*** UPDATE***
I am still thinking about this. Lately, my favorite idea is to quote people from my everyday life. Normal people saying normal things that would seem absurd if isolated and taken out of context. My friend Genevieve used to write down the amazing things people would say without noticing what they were really saying. Maybe she still does this. I might start doing it too.

Sunday, April 6, 2008

more of me


I am sending my inflatable self portrait It's Nice to Meet You! to Portland for a show that opens on April 18th, and this is the picture I really hope they use for the catalogue. I have been thinking about humor and making sure the viewer knows when something is supposed to be funny vs. ironic. I think this picture of me is really funny. It's the same one I sent to the company who made the inflatable when they needed a picture of me for reference.

Friday, April 4, 2008

video of a video of me in a box


I am working on hooking it up to a battery so it can go on a journey. I think I will start by sending it home to mom and dad, and have them send it to Portland, and from there maybe to New York, then Philly, etc. I want to send it to lots of friends and loved ones that are spread out around the country, and have it eventually come back to me. It will be a long journey home.

Thursday, April 3, 2008

owning you


My friend Dallas Kavanagh is working on a really cool project for her thesis show, for which she is "gifting" away parts of her body to friends and loved ones (kind of like real estate). Check out the blog for more information and a better explanation. I "own" site #4 (pictured above)!