Microfest
Microfest
September, 5, 2009
Camp Rainbow
Portland, OR
Block Party

Public Document Files
Pop Noir
Renavigating the Commercial Realm:
2008 Visual Arts and ArtTalk Lineup Announced
PLEASE JOIN US FOR AN EVENING OF LIVE AND SILENT AUCTION.
Talking Art is a series of salon-style discussions about art - making it, appreciating it, and collecting it. These gatherings are intended to demystify the art world and provide for a meaningful exchange of ideas while surrounded by the changing exhibitions at the San Jose ICA.

Infinite Exchange Gallery knows the value of art and believes that everyone should have access to it in their daily lives. Presenting works and services in exchange for non-monetary trades, artists determine what they feel the value of their work is, and what they want in exchange for it. This agreement ensures the cooperative collaboration that manifests between the artists, gallery representatives and the buyer. It is functioning outside of the art market constraints. No work in the IEG has a monetary value. The viewers are thereby invited to swap and potentially even haggle in exchange for what they want.
-Jennifer Delos Reyes and Lori Gordon
(Founders of Infinite Exchange Gallery)
presented in collaboration with the San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art
Zero1 Biennial 2008: San Jose, CA
Friday, June 6: 6-11pm
Featured artists include: Hideous Beast, Christie Hudson, Lynn Marie Kirby, Robin Lambert, Amber Landgraff, Wednesday Lupypciw, Barbara Meneley, Ashley Neese, Berit Nørgaard, Brion Nuda Rosch, Kerri-Lynn Reeves, Amy Steel and Eric Nordstrom, Elena Tejada-Hererra, Sara Thacher, Turner Prize, Gary Wiseman
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
![]() | March 28 - May 17, 2008 |
The work in This Show Needs You actively engages audiences in the process of creating. Evoking Joseph Beuys's exclamation that "everyone is an artist," Michael Smit's ongoing conversational piece How Have You Been an Artist Today? provocatively asks what it means to create. It is in this same spirit that Linda Montano, a seminal figure in contemporary feminist performance art, invites the audience to either "sit down with her in silence" or "sit down and receive Art/Life/Laughter Counseling" during her performance Re-Seeing: Being Blindfolded in California; 7 hours/ 4 days. Montano will also conduct a crash course in performance art called, You Too Are a Performance Artist of Your Life: A Workshop with Linda M. Montano.
Collaborators and lovers Elizabeth Stephens and Annie Sprinkle will present Love Art Laboratory Bridal Party, an experiment in exploring love as art. During the course of this seven-year performance art piece, now in its fourth year, the artists have a performance art wedding each year in collaboration with their guests, other artist and various communities. Stephens and Sprinkle will exhibit ephemera from their first three weddings including dresses, invitations, and gifts made by friends. In conjunction with the UCSC conference, the couple will renew their vows on May 17, at the UCSC campus. Additionally, the ICA will host a Bridal Shower for the couple.
Collaborators Ted Purves and Susanne Cockrell with Joseph McHenry, will rely on the participation of local gardeners to realize their installation Lemon Everlasting Backyard Battery. Inspired by San Jose's agricultural history, Cockrell and Purves will collect garden-grown lemons from the area and preserve them during the exhibition. Rows of the yellow jarred fruits will be displayed and Cockrell and Purves will provide opportunities for individuals to share recipes and stories that involve cooking with lemons. A lemon-infused picnic will convene on May 2, from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. During the last week of the exhibition individuals may take home a jar of lemons.
Other projects continue the creative engagement. Harrell Fletcher and Miranda July give assignments to visitors to complete and post online in their interactive web project Learning to Love You More. Christian Jankowski's work involves collaborations with strangers. Lori Gordon's text paintings ask, "What color does your body need?" and Sara Thacher enlists neighbors and businesses to host and curate The Distributed Exhibition.
The work in this exhibition needs multiple audiences, including those who participate in the creation of the work and those who witness art in-the-making. This Show Needs You encourages discussion and exploration of what art means and what art is in the context of collective social experience.

ampersand international arts presents
HOW FAST YOUR WORLD IS CHANGING
Harrell Fletcher
Christine Hill
Hope Hilton
Jessica James Lansdon
Jennifer Delos Reyes
Markuz Wernli-Saito
curated by Lori Gordon
critical essay by James Servin
OPENING
Friday, March 21, 6-8:30pm
featuring Choral Society for Lori Gordon by Jennifer Delos Reyes and a Silent Walk with Hope Hilton.
EXHIBITION
March 21-April 25, 2008
ampersand international arts
1001 Tennessee Street (at 20th St.)
San Francisco 94107 California USA
**Founded in 1999, ampersand international arts is a contemporary arts space dedicated to championing and nurturing emerging and mid-career artists and creating a critical conversation around their work. ampersand promotes intercultural dialogue and collaboration between artists, curators, & arts enthusiasts, cultivating an understanding of diverse aesthetic and cultural perspectives.**
PRESS CONTACT AND IMAGES
For further information please contact Bruno Mauro
bruno@ampersandintlarts.com
415-285-0170/www.ampersandintlarts.com
GALLERY HOURS: Thursdays, Fridays, 12-5pm and by appointment
Image: Shadow Followers, Returning the Negatives. Markuz Wernli-Saito. (Photograph by K'Li Ang Va.)

Close Calls

Open Engagement: Art After Aesthetic Distance
Open Engagement: An Introduction
By Jennifer Delos Reyes
Open Engagement: Art After Aesthetic Distance was a hybrid project that used a conference on socially engaged art practices as it’s foundation and incorporated elements including workshops, exhibitions, residencies, pedagogy, curatorial practice and collaboration. The event was hosted by the University of Regina, the Dunlop Art Gallery, The Mackenzie Art Gallery and various local Regina residents from October 11-13, 2007. The three days of the event each focused on a theme of exploration; October 11, You are all that I see: Art and everyday experience; October 12, It takes two: Collaborations, collectives, other team relationships; October 13. I’ll call you: Long term relationships, communities, and connectivity. Over 40 national and international contributors were present during Open Engagement. The contributors were selected from a response to a call for submissions and a selection of three invitational individuals who could best represent one of the three themes. This was an around-the-clock experience. It was a conference, an exhibition/performance venue, a mini-residency, and a workshop. Each out-of-town presenter was billeted with a member of the local community. Participants shared meals with one another and members of the local community, commuted together and were encouraged to thank their hosts by leaving a created trace.
The structure of each day began with Three Cheers! a collaboration between Maiko Tanaka and Open Engagement. On day one each participant was introduced to the group and cheered for. For each day of the event a cheer was written that addressed the theme of exploration for the day. Following the morning cheer was a group activity that was centered on the day’s theme. After this was group lunch. Proceeding lunch the conference broke out into 5-8 parallel sessions. This was followed by a panel addressing the day’s topic and discussion. Each evening highlighted a different social event. On day one was a potluck and artist talk by Harrell Fletcher, on day two a small group dinner in the home of a local resident, and on day three a game of bingo followed by a dance party. Throughout Open Engagement connections were made to local individuals, local arts institutions and focused on projects that were made possible through the work of groups of individuals as well as projects that expressed support and solidarity, such as the airport pick ups. The goal of Open Engagement was to bring together like-minded individuals (artists and audience) around socially engaged art and forge lasting connections, disseminate information, share knowledge, and create networks and connections, and foster the creation of work.
What does it mean to be open? What does it mean to be engaged? What if one were to be both open and engaged simultaneously? Openness is honesty, generosity, a sense of possibility, freedom, free of boundaries and restrictions. To be engaged is a promise. It is a commitment, an obligation. It is also a sense of involvement and participation. To have an “open engagement” implies a commitment that is potentially limited or short lived. But what if the two terms once united could keep their respective definitions making openly engaged a term that would embody an obligation to honesty, sharing and possibility?
It is important to note that this website is just one aspect of a large project that had many contributors and elements. Open Engagement should be looked at as a paratext. This is just one part of a larger text that is made up a variety of sources from the call for submissions, contributor blogs, the conference program, the post-conference publication, promotional materials, interviews, the conference archive, essays and reviews written on Open Engagement, collateral events, and more. All of these external elements each play a significant and specific role in informing this project.
One Night Stand

SOEX Marks the Spot
Feb 24-march 17, 2007
INTERIOR LIFE
conception and organization by Amber Hasselbring
Come on Over: a month-long art exhibition celebrating experiential and participatory projects by artists in the Bay Area and New York City

April 1-30, 2006
February 24, 2006, 6-11pm

[curator]

November 4-December 16, 2005
Computer Music Concert.
Screening: Romance with a Double Bass
October 28, 2005
Center for Research in Computing and the Arts (CRCA)
La Jolla, CA
An interactive Bay Area Tour

Black Market Auction
Dress: Clothing As Art
July 19 - August 5, 2005

(Close Encounters)
April 30, 2005 - 8pm

Benefit show for Students for a Free Tibet
Short Film Festival
Press Release [PDF]
September 21 - October 7, 2004
September 4-16, 2004
Jurors: Courtney Fink, Rene de Guzman, Steve Seid.
[In conjunction with the Artist Projects Series: Exersizes]

Jurors: Caveh Zehedi, Hannah Henry, Gregory Cowley.
Curated by Meredith Talusan
Feb 27, 2004
Feb 20, 2004
November 23 - 25, 2003
June, 2003
January 15, 2003