Posts

Luminous Passage: Night Migration

Featuring paper cut  silhouettes of 63 bird species from our area who are neotropic, migrate primarily at night, and have been observed forming interspecies flocks in order to keep each other safe

Luminous Passage: Night Migration is a site-specific light installation rooted in data visualization and inspired by the migratory bird species that travel through the Hackensack River watershed. Drawing from research provided by Cornell’s Ornithology Lab, NOAA, and local bird counts, I created images based on 63 local species that are Neotropical and also migrate primarily at night. They traverse every type of border, and participate in interspecies flocking behavior once they reach their winter home in Central or South America.

The installation blends ecological data with projection mapping, animation, and hand-cut-style silhouettes; referencing pre-photographic image-making methods. The patterns suggest cooperation, mobility, and shared knowledge across species, geographies, and cultures. These birds, and the journeys they represent, serve as an allegory for freedom, collaboration, and interconnectedness in both nature and society.

Creating this piece meant that after the images were drawn out, there was still a lot of technical work to be done: navigating design, fabrication, and light behavior for a highly unusual site. I was fortunate to have two excellent assistants and a generous fabricator who helped me test equipment and mount designs on the roof, usually in the rain.

Public art requires community. I’m grateful to Arts Bergen, Main Street Business Alliance, Monocle Group, our incredible fabricator, electricians, and civic partners who believed in bringing a different kind of light to this space. The result is a functional, atmospheric piece that gives viewers the opportunity to reflect on the natural and civic systems we’re all part of.

On view long term: Hackensack, NJ Main Street-Moore street walkway, at 210 Main Street.

ArtBloc: Upward Mobility

Shipping Container Multi-Projection Mapping Project 2013

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The Greening 209

The Greening: 209 evokes different moments in time: present, future, and past. In the U.S. a house or other building may last a generation or more. The systems we design to guide us as a society outlive us all, though they are not permanent either.  How do we know if the structures we put in place are working?  How long does the long view need to be if we are going to plan accordingly? It’s time to remodel.

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Proposing Public Art in Newark


The Jewish Museum of New Jersey (JMNJ) and City Without Walls (cWOW) presented “Public Art in Newark” a panel discussion about the past, present, and future of public art in the City of Newark.

The panel is a collaboration that marks the closings of the JMNJ’s “Hard Times, Good Times: The Art of Michael Lenson” (on December 20) and cWOW’s “Ready to Unveil” , two exhibitions that address themes relating to public art in Newark, NJ.

Water! Water! a collaboration between Ann LePore and Anibal Pella is pictured above, and two additional proposals of LePore’s: Newark Orphan Asylum and Light-Emitting Clematis. All three projects involve large-scale light installations that are viewed at night.

Panelists include: Chakaia Booker (artist), Matthew Gosser (JMNJ Board member, New Jersey Institute of Technology artist and curator), Ann LePore (Ramapo College of New Jersey and artist), Sheila McKoy (New Jersey Transit), Linwood Oglesby (Director, Newark Arts Council), Damon Rich (Newark City Planning Division and artist), Mary Ellen Scherl (Sculptors Guild and artist), with Ben Goldman (cWOW and artist) as moderator.

Temporal Voice, Classical Object

Interactive Performance

Turntables, mixer, computer, large scale projection

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CHiKA

Back in October I had a great studio visit with an interactive artist, Chika Iijima, who goes by the moniker CHiKA.

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Mapping for Empathy in Four Dimensions

Solo Exhibition, Kresge Gallery, 2011

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The Lumber Yard Exhibition

My piece In This Space  Was part of a large outdoor music festival in Jersey City.

 

Jersey City Street Projections

LET IT GLOW is a series of six street projections along three blocks of Palisade Avenue in Jersey City.

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In This Space

In This Space, 3 channel looping video, Sony Trinitron Monitors, Dimensions variable

In This Space  Was part of a large outdoor music festival in Jersey City. It has also been Exhibited at Remote Lounge, NYC, in the Harland Snodgrass Suite at Alfred University, and as part of the NYC Free Biennial.

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