stillspotting nyc finale, Peter B. Lewis Theater, Guggenheim Exhibition NYC
stillspotting nyc : Guggenheim Exhibition New York City
New York Guggenheim Exhibition – stillspotting nyc news
Guggenheim Presents stillspotting nyc : finale on October 9
Culminating Program Celebrating the Off-Site Exhibition Series Exploring Sound and Stillness in Urban Environments to Include Architect Charles Renfro, Historian Hillel Schwartz, Sound Artist Jana Winderen, and Writer Robert A.F. Thurman, Among Many Others
Sep 28, 2012
stillspotting nyc event
(NEW YORK, NY – September 28, 2012) — On October 9, the Guggenheim Museum and Unsound—creators of the celebrated New York festival—host a variety show of talks, performances, films, readings, statements, and personal reflections by architects, artists, planners, scientists, politicians, philosophers, and musicians as a finale reflecting upon the issues explored within the five editions of the off-site exhibition series stillspotting nyc. Program visitors will join in a larger conversation about how man-made environments can be reconceived, reshaped, and redesigned to provide increased opportunities for calm and stillness, and will be invited to revisit elements of the site-specific commissions from each of the five New York City boroughs recreated in the Guggenheim rotunda during the evening of the stillspotting nyc: finale.
Snøhetta. Concept sketch for To a Great City, 2011
Digital photograph with handwriting
photo © Snøhetta 2011
The program will take place in the Peter B. Lewis Theater of the Guggenheim Museum from 7–10 pm, with a lounge—including restaged elements of stillspotting nyc editions—held in the rotunda from 9–11 pm where specialty stillspotting cocktails will be served. Tickets are $10, $7 members, $5 students. For a complete program description, more information, and tickets, visit stillspotting.guggenheim.org/visit/learn.
Program for stillspotting nyc: finale
7:00 pm At LAST: Between the Concert and the Wall by artist and musician Sergei Tcherepnin (Brooklyn, NY)
7:20 pm Introductory notes by David van der Leer, Associate Curator, Architecture and Urban Studies, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, and Lawrence Kumpf and Andy Battaglia, organizers and co-curators, Unsound (New York, NY)
7:35 pm Sound Histories of NYC by historian Emily Thompson (Princeton University, NJ)
7:45 pm Urban Noise and Health with health researcher Dr. Robyn Gershon (University of California, San Francisco, CA)
7:50 pm On Tony Schwartz #1 sound collage by historian and radio DJ David Suisman (Philadelphia, PA)
7:55 pm Professionalizing Stillness with Janette Sadik-Khan, Commissioner, NYC Department of Transportation; Sarah Williams, (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston); and noise consultant and professor Eric Zwerling (Rutgers University, NJ)
8:15 pm Water Signal by sound artist and acoustic researcher Jana Winderen (Oslo, Norway)
8:35 pm On Stillness by writer and academic Robert A. F. Thurman (Columbia University, New York, NY)
9:00 pm On Schwartz #2 presentation/biographical talk by historian and DJ David Suisman (Philadelphia, PA)
9:10 pm The Still City? by architect Charles Renfro (Diller Scofidio + Renfro, NYC)
9:20 pm On Schwartz #3 sound collage by historian and DJ David Suisman (Philadelphia, PA)
9:25 pm Between Language and Sound with novelist Ben Marcus (New York, NY)
9:35 pm Sound intervention by experimental musician Jon Mueller (Milwaukee, WI)
9:55 pm Making Noise with historian, poet, and arts consultant Hillel Schwartz (Leucadia, CA)
10:00 pm Restaging of five stillspotting nyc editions and reception
Editions of stillspotting nyc included: Sanatorium by visual artist Pedro Reyes in downtown Brooklyn; To a Great City around Lower Manhattan by composer Arvo Pärt and architectural firm Snøhetta; Transhistoria in Jackson Heights, Queens, by architectural firm Solid Objectives – Idenburg Liu (SO – IL); and Telettrofono in Staten Island by sound artist Justin Bennett with poet Matthea Harvey. The fifth and final edition, Audiogram in the South Bronx by Improv Everywhere and audiologist Tina Jupiter, charts the impact of noise on the hearing abilities of New Yorkers through a unique interactive audio experience taking place October 13–14. Tickets are $12 for adults and $10 for members. To register and purchase tickets, find directions, or to learn more visit stillspotting.guggenheim.org.
The stillspotting nyc finale is supported by the Royal Norwegian Consulate General in New York. Support for stillspotting nyc is provided by the Rockefeller Foundation NYC Opportunities Fund and a MetLife Foundation Museum and Community Connections grant. This project is also supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts. The Leadership Committee for stillspotting nyc, co-chaired by Franklin Campbell and Pamela Samuels, is gratefully acknowledged for its support.
This event is presented as part of Archtober: Architecture and Design Month.
About Unsound
Unsound explores links between cultures, communities, and hidden histories related to music and sound. Established in 2003 as a festival of advanced music in Krakow, Poland, Unsound has expanded to include a similar festival in New York—begun in 2010—as well as international platforms for performances, presentations, commissions, and special projects supported by dialogue and debate pertaining to what we hear when we listen to the world around us.
About the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation
Founded in 1937, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation is dedicated to promoting the understanding and appreciation of art, primarily of the modern and contemporary periods, through exhibitions, education programs, research initiatives, and publications. The global network that began in the 1970s when the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, was joined by the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice, has expanded to include the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao (opened 1997), the Deutsche Guggenheim in Berlin (1997–2013), and the Guggenheim Abu Dhabi currently under development. Looking to the future, the Guggenheim Foundation continues to forge international collaborations that take contemporary art, architecture, and design beyond the walls of the museum. More information about the foundation can be found at guggenheim.org.
Feb 22, 2012
Guggenheim Exhibition in Queens, NY
Guggenheim stillspotting nyc in Jackson Heights, Queens, Presents Cultural and Personal Narratives Recounted by Local Residents
Third Edition in Off-Site Exhibition Series Exploring Stillness and Quiet in Urban Environment, with Stories Commissioned by Authors, Poets, and Rappers Affiliated with Queens
Exhibition: stillspotting nyc: queens
Transhistoria by Solid Objectives – Idenburg Liu (SO – IL)
Venue: Several locations in Jackson Heights starting at the 74th Street – Roosevelt Avenue Transit Hub, Queens, NY
Dates: Apr 14-15, 21-22 & 28-29; May 5-6, 2012
(NEW YORK, NY – February 21, 2012) — Stillspotting nyc is a two-year multidisciplinary project that takes the Guggenheim Museum’s programming out into the streets. Site-specific commissions in all five of New York City’s boroughs identify moments of urban quiet and respond to everyday issues of noise, anxiety, and stillness. For stillspotting nyc: queens, the third edition in the series, the architects at New York-based Solid Objectives – Idenburg Liu (SO – IL) address the encounters of life in the urban environment with Transhistoria, inviting visitors to neighborhood spaces in Jackson Heights, Queens, to listen to stories of migration, displacement, and finding home away from home. Transhistoria will be held at several sites around Jackson Heights for four weekends: April 14–15, 21–22, 28–29, and May 5–6, 2012. In two-hour self-guided tours, starting from the Jackson Heights–Roosevelt Ave transit hub, visitors will encounter four of these personal transhistories.
Stillspotting nyc is organized by David van der Leer, Assistant Curator, Architecture and Urban Studies, with Sarah Malaika, Stillspotting Project Associate, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum.
Support for stillspotting nyc is provided by the Rockefeller Foundation NYC Opportunities Fund and a MetLife Foundation Museum and Community Connections grant. This project is also supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts. The Leadership Committee for stillspotting nyc is gratefully acknowledged.
In the northwest section of the New York City borough of Queens, Jackson Heights was founded as a “garden community” in the first half of the 20th century, and was a leader in developing utopian ideals of high-density housing in direct contrast with the traditional, over-crowded, and noisy New York apartment buildings common during the time. Over the past decades the neighborhood’s housing stock has risen dramatically, making it one of the more densely populated areas of the city. Jackson Heights counts 138 languages spoken among its many global communities and is also one of the most culturally diverse neighborhoods in the United States. For Transhistoria, their project for stillspotting nyc, the architects at Solid Objectives – Idenburg Liu (SO – IL) investigate how one finds calm and inner peace in a bustling environment such as Jackson Heights. Florian Idenburg of SO – IL explains, “We are exploring the question of how the residents of Jackson Heights, who often have roots elsewhere, achieve a sense of home and localness in a post-national living situation? And what urged them to leave their old households and countries in the first place?”
Rather than reiterate well-documented reports on migration that stress economic or political motives for relocation, Transhistoria explores individual and cultural narratives, such as the flight from problematic family situations or escape from suffocating social structures. These types of everyday stories open up a different enquiry in the search for identity and home away from home. SO – IL offers visitors an opportunity to hear transformative personal histories through a series of accounts commissioned from renowned Queens-affiliated narrators, including poets Roger Sedarat and Maria Terrone, editor and writer Nicole Steinberg, writers Erik Baard, Premilla Nadasen and René Georg Vasicek, chaplain Alan Briceland, and rappers Himanshu Suri and Ashok Kondabolu of Das Racist. Each will create a story about personal transition and finding a sense of familiarity and tranquility in Jackson Heights. During these four weekends in April and May, neighborhood residents will recount their stories around several local stillspots as varied as residential living rooms, performance venues, and private courtyards. In two-hour self-guided tours, starting from the Jackson Heights – Roosevelt Ave transit hub, Transhistoria visitors will encounter four of these personal transhistories, selected from a choice of six indoor and outdoor spaces.
Visiting Transhistoria
A ticket to Transhistoria grants access to four of six possible locations for readings in Jackson Heights, Queens, initiating from a stillspotting kiosk near the Jackson Heights–Roosevelt Ave transit hub on 75th Street and Broadway. Hours are Saturdays and Sundays, April 14–15, 21–22, 28–29, and May 5–6, 11am–7pm with the last tour starting at 5pm. Visitors will receive a map, directions for a self-guided tour, and a wristband for access to four sites that they may choose from the six sites open daily. A full visit to four sites takes approximately two hours, and visitors may customize their route or make other stops along the way as there is no suggested itinerary. Tickets are $10 for adults and $8 for members and will be available later this spring. Discounted rates are available for groups of ten or more. Advance registration is strongly suggested. A program for families will be offered as part of stillspotting nyc: queens on Saturdays April 21 and May 5 from 12–3pm with a story written expressly for families performed in a public space in Jackson Heights. To register and purchase tickets, find directions, or to learn more visit stillspotting.guggenheim.org.
For this edition and for the two upcoming editions of stillspotting nyc, the Guggenheim Museum is in collaboration with NYC’s Department of Transportation on a city-wide initiative. For this upcoming edition, visitors wishing to travel by bicycle to stillspotting nyc may take advantage of an additional free self-guided cycling program around Jackson Heights that highlights issues of silence and noise in the neighborhood.
About Solid Objectives – Idenburg Liu (SO – IL)
Founded in 2008 by Florian Idenburg and Jing Liu, the American architecture firm SO – IL is an ideas-based practice with a global reach. With a strong sense for detail as well as the large scale organization of space, SO – IL combines philosophies and design aesthetics from Asia—especially Japan and China—with those from Europe. In 2010, SO – IL was selected as the winner of MoMA PS1’s Young Architects Program for its Pole Dance design, which provided a playful yet pleasing aesthetic experience in MoMA PS1’s courtyard in Queens. SO – IL designs projects of varying scales, including a master plan for Kukje Gallery in Seoul; a wedding chapel in Nanjing, China; student housing in Athens; and a sound pavilion for the Get It Louder festival in Beijing.
Editions of stillspotting nyc
Following Transhistoria for stillspotting nyc: queens, a fourth edition in Staten Island by sound artist Justin Bennett and poet Matthea Harvey will be offered the summer weekends of July 14–15, July 21–22, July 28–29, and August 4–5, 2012. Subsequent editions planned through the end of 2012 will be announced at a later date by the museum. Prior editions featured Sanatorium by visual artist Pedro Reyes in downtown Brooklyn and To a Great City around Lower Manhattan by composer Arvo Pärt and architectural firm Snøhetta.
Improv Everywhere and stillspotting nyc
Over the two-year course of the project, the group Improv Everywhere explores the themes of stillness, silence, and noise in the urban environment through a series of performances in public spaces. Using undercover actors, the group has staged unexpected scenes for people to discover across New York City. These projects are documented online at youtube.com/guggenheim.
Interactive Programs and Studies for stillspotting nyc
In conjunction with the projects organized around the city, visitors may identify and plot out their personal areas of quiet and respite in a personalized map as part of the Create Your Own Stillspot program at stillspotting.guggenheim.org/create-your-own.
For stillspotting nyc, the Spatial Information Design Lab (SIDL) at the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation at Columbia University was commissioned to develop a mapping study on silence and noise in New York City. The interactive map developed by SIDL presents actual noise complaints generated by New York residents when calling 311, the city’s phone number for government information and non-emergency services. Reading the complaints offers insights into the city’s types of noise, and the contrasts between private and social space and between residential and commercial necessities. A second visual study was developed with students in the MFA program in the Photography, Video, and Related Media Department at the School of Visual Arts who created video studies of the visual, aural, and sociological ecology of the urban landscape. The interactive maps and videos are presented on stillspotting.guggenheim.org.
11 Aug 2011
Guggenheim Exhibition in Lower Manhattan
Composer Arvo Pärt and Architects Snøhetta Collaborate for Guggenheim Exhibition in Lower Manhattan
Second Edition of stillspotting nyc Series Exploring Stillness and Quiet in Urban Environment
Exhibition: stillspotting nyc: manhattan
To a Great City by Arvo Pärt and Snøhetta
Venue: Five locations around Lower Manhattan starting at Castle Clinton National Monument in Battery Park, across from 17 Battery Place, New York, NY
Dates: September 15-18 and 22-25, 2011
stillspotting nyc Guggenheim : further information on the event from 2011
Guggenheim Exhibition in Lower Manhattan information from Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation
Location: New York City, NY, USA
New York City Architecture Design
Contemporary New York City Building Designs – recent architectural selection from e-architect below:
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, USA
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Frank Lloyd Wright
photo : David M. Heald, © SRGF, New York
Guggenheim Museum New York
Exhibitions – chronological list
Another Guggenheim Exhibition on e-architect:
Contraptions for the Production of Cultural Confections, Guggenheim Museum
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image : ballnogues with Seal
Guggenheim Exhibition New York
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America Architecture News – latest building updates
Comments / photos for the Guggenheim Exhibition Lower Manhattan – stillspotting nyc page welcome