Saturday, August 1, 2015

Measuring 100 Tons of Marble - Land Intervention


A Land intervention / Land organization installation by Anne Senstad at The Marble House Artist Residency in Dorset, Vermont. 


Title:  "Measuring 100 tons of Marble". Performed and installed July 31, 2015 during my Artist residency at Marble House Projects. The large marble blocks are remains of the historic industrial marble quarry in Vermont. 

The idea and act of "Measuring" land, mass and mountains is a response to our relationship with nature and represents displacement of our relationship with natural systems of living, having become hybridized societies embracing the artificial and gentrified. This work is simultaneously informed by the language of sculpture, land intervention, site specificity and installation art relating to and inspired by nature, well as an abstract/minimal concept conditioned art practices. 
There is a basic human need to organize nature, control the wild, aquire - as well as need for production through industry, such as for building houses and food production. Bi products of industrial actives in nature, can be found in stacking, linear or circular organization and pattern making, and can have an aesthetic value when extracted from its origin through imagery, site intervention or sculptural representation. The desire to create the mark of human possession can be found in visual representation through the aesthetics of farming of land with linear crop patterns and organization of landscape, marble quarry industrial manufacturing creating deep engravements into mountains and stacking of large marble blocks into immeasurable tons of natural sculptural forms.
Measuring the unknown, or here, innumerable mass of weight in nature with pink bonds, is an impossible and absurd task with no beginning and no end and relates to ideas of impermanence, timelessness and ideas of mass as illusion. The identification of placement and form of the massive marble blocks are highlighted by human intervention as a creative act. By amplifying lines in nature, wrapping stone in artificial pink bonds and using site as white cube creates an art form where one alters the sensation of experience and viewing conditions of the work and the action back into the authenticity of the original idea. The artwork is not displaced, it is placed.











Tuesday, July 21, 2015

The Calligraphy Challenge - CULTURUNNERS



The Calligraphy Challenge is a performative gestural text intervention by Norwegian Artist Anne Katrine Senstad. It was performed as part of the CULTURUNNER initiative and funded by Edge of Arabia and Office for Contemporary Art Norway July 5 - 12 2015. Organized by Edge of Arabia founder Stephen Stapleton and curator Ava Ansari.



CULTURUNNERS  is a road trip initiative across the U.S. in a media outfitted RV bus organized by Edge of Arabia in partnership with Art Jameel for art and cultural practitioners from diverse backgrounds. The first lap of the road trip started with departure from New York July 5th, stopping by towns in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana on our way to Detroit with arrival July 12th as destination for the CULTURUNNERS presentation talk and street party event July 19th. Artists and fellow travellers on the first lap of the RV bus road trip include Anne Senstad, Yazan Khalili, Stephen Stapleton, Felicia Castro and John Mireles.


As a participating artist from Norway and based in New York I wanted to be challenged by and introduced to the Arabic and Farsi Alphabet informed by my previous art projects and experiences in the middle east and a variation of earlier works aestheticizing language, production of social political implied statements and lyrical sentences for the public space as art intervention. These linguistic processes are informed by the idea of advertisement psychology and the economy of public language, anthropologically inspired considerations, mass communication as power, as well as the emotional and intellectually implied realms of poetry and literature. As a gestural performative handwriting study of an unfamiliar language, the process of learning Arabic calligraphy is abstract and lent itself to exploring the physicality of automated writing and study of the line, removing the control of the intellect and analytical aspects of reading and writing ones mother tongue. Adding on a moving RV bus on highways and country roads as classroom with sound and spatial interference, with a constant change of location, the learning process is then additionally challenged and liberated from traditional constraints.

The employment of language as aesthetic and as transportation for ideas and phenomenological domains, influences our perceptions by way of communication, philosophy, psycho-geographical spaces, through engagement and absorption of the process - the performative in action in relation to, and in response to language.


The Calligraphy Challenge, learning to write Arabic on a shaky unstable RV bus going from New York to Detroit.

As a starting point I received a series of Farsi calligraphy instructions from Marco Say, a calligraphy expert based in Teheran as an initiation to my Calligraphy Challenge Project. (Farsi and Arabic alphabet are the same but Farsi has 4 more words). The idea behind my project The Calligraphy Challenge was to practice Arabic and Farsi calligraphy as a beginner and non-arabic speaker in a shaky, unstable RV bus on highways and country roads as a geo-performative text intervention with physical obstruction, challenging the quiet meditative process and action of studying calligraphy introducing physical resistance in the learning process, and a displacement of language to an unexpected environment and culture. It also refers to the idea of the nomadic traditions and travelling artist intervening culturally with people and new locations one would enter by administering the "poison" of the foreign into their environment. Languages and culture have historically been transformed and merged through exchange, trade, travel, storytelling, diaspora and colonialization. American culture shows both a hybridization and a stagnation of national identities, religions and languages from the numerous waves of colonial immigration, and later economical immigration, by integration of cultures as well as a need for preservation of original culture and language. Pioneers and religious outcasts chiefly from Europe established new townships and communities using biblical names reflecting their ideas of Utopia, such as Palestine, Jericho, Zion, Babylon, Jericho, Jerusalem,Salem, New Canaan and so on. The majority Amercian town names settled by pioneers reflect the geographical origin of the settlers such as Fredericksburg  Manchester, New Amsterdam etc, or the names referring to the main settler family such as Jonestown or Margaretsville. Other names originate from Native American names or tribes such as Mineola, Chappaqua or Massapequa, or the numerous Spanish catholic names found in California, New Mexico and Texas.


The focus of my project The Calligraphy Challenge and choice of words was influenced by destinations determined by my fellow CULTURUNNER artists projects, and served as a joint cross cultural effort. On our way to East Palestine, Ohio, New Palestine, Indiana, Palestine Lake, Indiana and Detroit, Michigan, I practiced writing these town names on calligraphy friendly paper. For the text intervention I wrote the Arabic versions of the town names on pink, white and mirrored Plexi glass signs that I would then document on location by asking locals to hold while photographing them in their natural surroundings.

I also included a political text in Farsi Calligraphy, relating to my ongoing social political concerned works and not place-specific to the RV journey, yet still in the context of the intervention as it would include practicing Farsi Calligraphy. The text "Saudi America" refers to my ongoing research project "Capitalism in the public realm", and is included in the Bruges Art and Architecture Triennial 2015.

   

Learning Farsi Nastaliq Calligraphy on a moving RV bus. 
Text: Saudi America. The inclusion of my political criticism text "Saudi America" is based on joining the ongoing text practice I have developed, utilizing the situation to include the Arabic written language.


Learning Farsi Nastaliq Calligraphy on a moving RV bus. Text: Detroit



Farsi Nastaliq Calligraphy provided by master calligrapher Marco Say in Teheran. 
Text: Palestine, Ohio 



Location: East Palestine, Ohio. Town name written in Arabic on 6x12 inches semi transparent double sided mirror plexiglass. A local East Palestinian woman named Erika who's husband drives long distance trailers cross country holding the Plexiglass sign. Text: East Palestine, Ohio

Learning Arabic Calligraphy on a moving RV bus. 
Text: Palestine Lake, Indiana
























Location: Palestine, Indiana that also features a Palestine Lake. Arabic text written in a shaky unstable environment on pink plexiglass, 12x12 inches.Text: Palestine Lake, Indiana. The locals holding the signs are retirees who have chosen to live in affordable low population states such as in Indiana.


Along the journey I expanded the texts to include practicing Arabic sentences based on words as a travelling communication, the traveller's absence and the experience of the exiled/diasporic longing and nostalgia. The sentences, romantic in nature were “You are my angel”,  “You take my heart”, “You are my Life”, “Eternal kisses”, “Hugs forever”. The sentences were given to me along the way while on the road, 1 new sentence per day. The english translation of the sentences is a direct word by word translation into English from Arabic, not necessarily exact expressions one would use in English (like “Hugs forever”).  The Arabic sentences are authentic, so as a Norwegian non Arabic speaking artist, the performative action creates a bridge between cultures and language, stating commonalities between nationalities, the universal, the personal, the intimate and sense of time and place.





The Calligraphy Challenge - Arabic texts written on a shaky RV bus, 1 new sentence per day:

1st Text: Eternal Kisses

2nd Text: You Are my Life
3rd Text: You Take my Heart x 2
4th Text: Hugs Forever
5th Text: You Are My Angel


Practicing Arabic sentences allowed me a glimpse into the culture-specific nuances of Arabic writing and speech, the differences between the middle eastern languages. We published the progress of my Arabic learning through documentation imagery and film on CULTURUNNERS website and social media so the calligraphy advisors, artists and friends could follow the development, journey and supply feedback. At the starting point, day 1 on the bus, I was told my Arabic handwriting resembled a 5 year olds hand writing, by day 2 and 3 the social media feedback from total strangers in the Middle east who had picked up on the published Calligraphy Challenge material and process-journey, as well as Arabic speaking people in Norway and US, became more engaged, encouraging and generously offering suggestions to changes, corrections of mistakes and explanations of the differences in Arabic alphabet, as well as explanations in the variations of Farsi Calligraphy. By day 4 and 5, the Arabic speaking followers had grown in number and responses, open mindedly cheering me on and supporting my progress, graduating my Calligraphy to the "not bad" and "pretty good" level.


As part of the first lap of the RV road trip across America, Culturunners organizer and founder Stephen Stapleton and curator Ava Ansari hosted lectures and events at the Red Bull Art Space in Detroit the weekend of July 18-19 with artists Sarah Ouhaddou, Salar Ansari, Peyman Shafieezadeh, Lila Nazemian and John Mireles. The RV road trip is currently continuing its journey through America with a variation of international artists and projects related to place and cultural exchange.
Arabic Text intervention: Text: Detroit