Ian Garrett

MOVING ARTS – MOVING GREEN

MOVING ARTS – MOVING GREEN

The Green Mini-Expo 
FREE 
The Ford Theatres
December 7th, 2009 1pm-7pm 
2580 Cahuenga Blvd. EastHollywood, CA 90068  
Stop by any time during the day for fun,great informationand delicious food provided by Large Marge Sustainables! http://www.largemargesustainables.com

Inspired by the strong environmental themes within Song of Extinction, Moving Arts has begun “Moving Green” by taking steps toward becoming a more eco-friendly company. The Green Mini-Expo is a way to celebrate these changes, as well as connecting audiences with local Green organizations and businesses that provide access to emerging green issues and eco-friendly lifestyle techniques.

Among the vendors participating in the Mini-Expo will be:

The Center for Sustainable Practice in the Arts
All Shades of Green
Jenneration Fix
Earth Resource Foundation
Large Marge Sustainables
and Smart Car!

Audience members are also welcome to participate in a free panel discussion with a diverse group of local, green professionals.  Among the panel participants will be Ian Garrett from The Center for Sustainable Practice in the Arts, Jessica Aldridge, Zero Waste Event Coordinator/Consultant and Natalie Freidberg of All Shades of Green.

GREEN MINI-EXPO SCHEDULE 1pm-7pm  Expo Open to Public3pm-4:30pm  Matinee Performance of Song of Extinction 5pm Moving Green – Panel Discussion on How to Live a Greener Life (45 minutes)7pm Song of Extinction Pay-What-You-Can-Performance for more information e-mail: info@movingarts.org  

If you haven’t seen the show the critics are calling… 

“Exquisite”  Stage Scene LA 
“Gorgeous” LA Weekly   
“Lyrcial”  Los Angeles Times
“Perfection”  Curtain Up
“Captivating”  LA Taco 
You only have two weekends left!    

byEM LEWIS CLICK HERE FOR TICKETS

MOCA faces serious financial problems

From the LA Times:

Since its inception, MOCA has grown to encompass three exhibition spaces. The “Temporary Contemporary,” later renamed the Geffen Contemporary, opened in 1983 in a warehouse at the edge of Little Tokyo that had been revamped by architect Frank Gehry. Three years later, the museum’s permanent home, designed by Japanese architect Arata Isozaki, opened on Grand Avenue, where it is a mainstay of the planned redesign of the area known as the Grand Avenue project. In 2000, MOCA acquired an exhibition space at the Pacific Design Center in West Hollywood.

Before the national economic crisis hit, Strick said, MOCA was gearing up gradually for its first major endowment campaign since the mid-1990s, when it raised $25 million. Now, he said, there’s no time for that, and the focus is on “immediate issues and how to move ahead in a very different world.”

An irony of MOCA’s plight is that, thanks to the appetite of wealthy international collectors, the market value of its prime pieces has soared. Corporations and individuals routinely sell sculptures and paintings in an economic pinch, but a museum that did so would be violating its reason for existing, which is keeping art in the public domain. The codes of ethics of both the American Assn. of Museums and the Assn. of Art Museum Directors, although not legally binding, specify that the only acceptable reason for selling artworks from a public collection is to raise money for buying other, presumably more desirable, pieces.

As a Native Angeleno and frequenter of MOCA (admittedly primarily the Grand Avenue and Geffen Locations) this is a tragedy to me in my personal arts participation. To me this highlights the issues of reliance on contributed income in the arts world. 

See the Original Article by Clicking Here.

Moving Art, Moving Green Mini Expo Reminder

The Moving Arts, Moving Green mini-expo is Sunday, December 7th at the Ford Amphitheater. The mini-expo has been organized as part of the talk-back series for Moving Arts production of Song of Extinction at [Inside] the Ford.

Inspired by the strong environmental themes within this beautiful new play, Moving Arts has begun “Moving Green” by taking steps toward becoming a more eco-friendly company. The Green Mini-Expo is way to celebrate these changes, as well as connect our audience with local Green organizations and businesses and provide access to emerging green issues and eco-friendly lifestyle techniques. Audience members are also welcome to participate in a free panel discussion with a diverse group of local, green professionals on the day of the Green Mini-Expo.

The Expo will be open to the public at 1:00 pm and the talk back will be at 5:00 pm. There are two shows that day at 3:00 pm and a pay-want-you-can 7:00 pm show. 

I will be talking on behalf of the CSPA and as the lighting designer for the show, hopefully providing a bridge between the Art and the Commerce of the green-expo. Myself and Miranda Wright will also be on hand for most of the day with a table in the courtyard to discuss the upcoming EcoDrama Convergence in may. We’ll have copies of the brochure, and both the University of Oregon and our own RFPs.

EXPO INFORMATION 

When: Sunday, December 7, 2008 from 1pm-7pm 

Where: The Ford Theatres, 2580 Cahuenga Blvd. East, Los Angeles, CA 90068 

Cost: Admission is FREE to the public

Tree Museum by Ilkka Halso

I make plans and construct visually buildings, which protect nature from threats of pollution and what is more important, from actions of man himself.I visualize shelters, massive buildings where big ecosystems could be stored as at present. These massive building protect forests, lakes and rivers from pollution and what is more important from actions of man himself. At the same time I study different aspects of man’s relation to nature as rare unique endangered place.

While putting nature into a museum you have to take under consideration aspect of audience/ consumer. Nature becomes joyride for tourists or beautiful landscape turns into a meditative theatre show.

 

Click here to see the artist’s pdf on the project

Click here to visit Ilkka Halso’s website.

Design without Borders: Designing for Social Justice

 

Design without Borders is a non-profit program linking design skills to efforts for development and humanitarian aid.

Design without Borders is founded on the belief that design and designers can make a significant contribution towards a better and more sustainable society. The program aims at utilizing the creative and analytical skills of industrial designers to develop solutions that promote long-term development and increases the quality of emergency aid. 

Design without Borders also aims to support local product development competency and raise awareness of design as a tool for development.

Programs

Design without Borders participates in projects where the need for its involvement is expressed by relevant organizations or institutions.

Design without Borders collaborates closely with international and national partners on projects within the following areas: 
• Humanitarian response 
• Industrial development 
• Environmental challenges 
• Health and mobility 
• Urban development

Our project involvements focuses on four key areas: 
1) To identify and express design needs in cooperation with partners. 
2) To procure suitable designers. 
3) To participate in obtaining funding for projects. 
4) Professional follow-up of the project in the area of design.

Norwegian designers work on the projects in collaboration with designers from the countries where the projects are carried out. The designers are individually selected, ensuring a match between the requirements of each project, to the skills and experience of the design team.

History

Design without Borders was initiated in 2001 as a joint venture between Norsk Form (the Foundation for Design and Architecture in Norway) and the design office of Peter Opsvik.

In 2001, the program initiated a co-operation with Universidad Rafael Landívar in Guatemala. The aims of the joint program, Design without Borders – Guatemala, are parallel to the aims of the program in general. In the case of the projects in Guatemala, Landívar and Norsk Form have jointly selected project partners among institutions in Guatemala that have expressed an interest in design support to their activities.Based on positive results from the work in Guatemala, a similar program was established between Makerere University and Norsk Form in 2005. Design without Borders -¬ Uganda facilitates the exchange of skills between Norwegian and Ugandan professionals. It will contribute to the efforts of the Makerere to develop tangible links with both large scale and small scale industries in Uganda in order to solve technological and management challenges in industries.

www.norskform.no/dwb

Artevist.com

Artevist is “the place for activism inspired graphic design, discussion and eco-friendlier T-shirts”.

From their website:

Artevist is for people who love T-shirts: wearing them, designing them, and talking about them. Most importantly, it’s a place for people who believe that T-shirts are a great way to communicate one’s views and in some very small, individual way, move others to action. Artevist is for those who believe real change will only occur when activism is fashionably ‘in’ and complacency is decidedly ‘out’.

I’ve always loved awesome T-shirt graphics, but let’s face it, very few have much meaning or purpose and most want to sell you something. With so much happening in the world today, it seemed the opportunity to use design to really communicate important themes was being lost.

There are plenty of individual artists and organizations producing great work, yet finding one online source for a variety of activist-inspired design is surprisingly difficult. Nor is it easy to find great designs paired with high quality, eco-friendly materials and production. That perfect combination of message, design and product eluded me, and so, Artevist was born.

Artevist is a community where artists can come together to share their ideas on BIG issues and create wearable art with meaning and purpose. The BIG issues can be local or global (everything is related) and they can span themes such as: AIDS, climate change, consumerism, extinction, human rights and pollution. It’s also a place where nonprofit organizations and artists meet, and produce work that helps spread their message to a larger audience.

The concept is simple. Artists compete in open, peer-review T-shirt design contests. All Artevist members can vote for their favourites and leave comments. The most popular submissions are reproduced on organic Tees (bamboo, hemp or cotton), which are ecologically and ethically produced and sourced. See Our T-shirts

Artevist, however, is more than Tees. It’s a Forum where the community can learn, share and discuss. It’s relevant Newsand Events, and it’s a Classifieds section where nonprofits and artists alike can find people and materials to help them with their projects.

We’re a for-profit company, but without any aspirations or intentions of becoming a mega-brand. We think the world needs more art, not more brands. We’ll be donating a good portion of sales to environmental and social causes and are now looking into various options.

So look around. Participate. Enjoy!

Nature and Art in San Diego

 

Human/Nature: Artists Respond to a Changing Planet is organized by the University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAM/PFA) and the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (MCASD), in partnership with the international conservation organization Rare.

This picture is of Xu Bing, an artist i particularly like. But here is some more information from the exhibition website:

Human/Nature is a pioneering artist residency and collaborative exhibition project that, for the first time on this scale, uses contemporary art to investigate the relationships between fragile natural environments and the human communities that depend upon them. This collaborative multi-year exhibition project sent eight leading artists to eight UNESCO World Heritage sites around the globe to create new work informed and inspired by their experiences in these diverse cultural and natural regions. The exhibition features new commissioned, site-specific works by Mark Dion, Ann Hamilton, Iñigo Manglano-Ovalle, Marcos Ramírez ERRE, Rigo 23, Dario Robleto, Diana Thater, and Xu Bing created in response to their travels to these threatened sites.

MCASD David C. Copley Director Hugh M. Davies remarked, “This dynamic group of groundbreaking contemporary artists continually creates thoughtful works that push the boundaries of what art is. For Human/Nature, the artists are producing engaging works that prompt viewers to question their relationships to the world in which we live.”

The artists each traveled to a World Heritage site of their choice and completed two or more mini-residencies, creating works based on their experiences. Through a wide range of works that cross all media, Human/Nature encourages global support for the protection of cultural and biological diversity and provokes new questions regarding conservation, cultural understanding, and artistic inspiration.

“If we are going to effect change, it must be a concerted effort between people in the arts, in the sciences, and people working directly towards a better future for our planet. This is where Human/Nature positions itself as a model for change: artists working together with the communities and individuals most concerned with the fate of these World Heritage sites. These collaborations create hope for the future,” stated Jacquelynn Baas, director emeritus of BAM/PFA.

“Some of the world’s most remote developing areas contain the highest levels of natural resources—the forests, species, and waterways that provide global life support and whose loss will impact all of our futures,” said Brett Jenks, president and CEO of Rare. “One of our biggest challenges is bringing the natural and cultural riches of these faraway communities to life for audiences here in the U.S., so we are grateful to the artists in this exhibition and to the museums who are making this possible. I look forward to expanding the dialogue with new audiences on the future of our planet.”

Check out the article on Tree Hugger by clicking here.

Ecodesign is not a trend, it’s an industrial necessity

Rome based designer Marco Capellini has become a well-known name in the Latin ecodesign movement.

Creator of the organization Remade, which promotes design with recycled materials in seven countries; and Matrec, an online resource for recycled materials, Capellini was in Buenos Aires for a conference organized by the city’s Metropolitan Design Center.

After his presentation, he spoke with TreeHugger about the evolution of green design. In response to those who still refer to the green movement as a trend, Capellini says, “the consideration of the environment in the design process is not a fashion, it has become an industrial problem and will not go away.” 

Click here to read the Interview

NYC’s Great White Way Is Going Green

Mayor Michael Bloomberg — with the help of green friends like ”Wicked” witch Elphaba — launched the ”Broadway Goes Green” initiative Tuesday that includes plans to use energy-saving bulbs and recycle stage sets.

The aim of the campaign is to reduce Broadway’s carbon footprint, a measure of greenhouse gases produced by human activity.

Ten theaters already have replaced some 10,000 bulbs with more energy-efficient ones. And within the next 12 months, all of Broadway’s theaters will have made the switch.

”By this time next year, the lights on Broadway will burn just as bright, but the energy bills and our city’s carbon output will be lower,” Bloomberg said. ”This commitment will raise the level of awareness for everyone involved in these shows including the audiences and that’s going to have an impact that reverberates far beyond the Big Apple.”

Under the plan, theaters will strive to use environmentally friendly materials in scenery; recycle and reuse props; and wash costumes in cold water and use rechargeable batteries in sound equipment when possible.

Patrons also will be asked to do their part. Theaters will give out cards with tips on steps they can take at home to help save the environment.

The initiative is part of the mayor’s PlanNYC goal to reduce the city’s carbon footprint 30 percent by 2030.

On the Net: www.nyc.gov

See the Original Article on the New York Times Website by Clicking here.Â