Reporting In! Reno FUNdraiser!

photos: Mark Hammon
photos: Lauren Randolph
photos: p. herz
photo: Colin Loretz – hoops on their way to the party
It was fun…
The Black Rock Arts Foundation-Reno FUNdraiser was held at Cathexes /Unexpected/Architecture…a re-modeled warehouse in Reno complete with an indoor basketball court…where there was lots of dancing and hula hooping thru out the evening.

The party started out with wine and wonderful food!

Tomas McCabe, Executive Director of BRAF gave a brief overview and Crimson Rose, BRAF Board Member spoke specifically about what was happening in Reno…from past to future projects.

Then the party moved outdoors to watch Controlled Burn spin fire.

Thanks to Don and Susan Clark from Cathexes, Amendment 21 for the food, DJ Source for spinning music the entire night, Controlled Burn, Dale and hisGiantHead, Silver Peak, Rodney Strong Vineyards, the OUT-standing hoopers, Mark Hammon, Lauren Raphael, Colin Loretz and Pat Herz photography for the fabulous photos and thanks to the volunteer efforts of BRAF-Reno’s Special Events team. Thanks to everyone for supporting this event…ALL donations were deeply appreciatedand a special thanks to the NEW and Re-Newing BRAF members…….

To see more photos:


Reno’s Rockin’ It! Celtic Forest Opening and Free Workshop and Lecture!


Previously exhibited at Burning Man 2008, Celtic Forest, by artists Laura Kimpton, Jeff Schomberg Antonio Ruperto and Bob Hofmann, is unique in its materials (metal and fire), scale and artistic vision. Fire will glow weekly from the Book of the Raven and surrounding tree-like candelabras with fire dancing by Controlled Burn.

Opening Reception
Friday, June 26 5-10pm
Corner of Sierra St. and Island Ave. Reno, NV
Wine & Appetizers: Sierra Arts Foundation Gallery

Featuring Celtic Music from 5-8
Fire Dancing by Controlled Burn 8-10

This art installation is brought to you by the Black Rock Arts Foundation’s Civic Arts program as part of its mission to bring interactive artwork into communities worldwide.
http://www.bmbraf.local/

BRAF extends its sincerest gratitude to the City of Reno Arts and Culture Commission, Freight House District LLC, Sierra Arts Foundation, United Rentals, Fernley Electric, Peppermill Resort Spa Casino, Sands Regency Casino Hotel and the BRAF-Reno Support Team.

In addition Laura Kimpton will be giving a free workshop and lecture on Saturday, June 27. We will be there and hope you will too.

To read about free live music on Sundays and Fire Jam Tuesdays throughout the summer: http://braf-reno.ning.com/events

And here is the Reno Passport REVIEW.

photo: Jaz Fabry

Free Workshop and Lecture with Laura Kimpton

photo: Jaz Fabry

Laura Kimpton Photo: Toohip Tobesquare
Personal Baggage
with
LAURA KIMPTON
The Reflection Series Free Artist Workshop Assemblage, Image Transfer, and Encaustic Wax
McKinley Arts & Culture Center

925 Riverside Drive
Reno, Nv 89503

Saturday June, 27th 2009
10-4
to Pre-Register please call 775-334-6264,
send email to sullivana @cityofreno.com
Registration at the Door on a Space Available Basis.

Come make art with Laura Kimpton The Reflection Series Art Workshop will introduce you to making Mixed Media artwork using techniques including Assemblage, Image Transfer, and Encaustic Wax. Laura will give a live demonstration of the various processes. She will also instruct and guide individual attendees at the Workshop to complete actual artwork. Participants are requested to bring a small piece of vintage luggage, personal items for collage, and vintage photographs for image transfers, all to be included in their own Mixed Media art creations.

Laura Kimpton:
Kimpton has a Bachelors of Art Education from the University of Iowa, a Fine Art Degree from the San Francisco Art Institute, and earned her Masters from the University of San Francisco. She is also creator of the Celtic Forest installation at Burning Man.

Celtic Forest will be installed on River Walk in Reno, Nevada from June through December, and simultaneously opens on the same weekend as the Kimpton Art Workshop and Lecture.

In addition, Kimpton is giving a Free Lecture from 6pm to 7pm, also at the Mckinley Art Center. We will be there and we hope you will too.




The Work Office – TWO

The Work Office (TWO)
Naomi Miller
Brooklyn, NY
$5,500

Another of our 2009 grant recipients, The Work Office. (TWO) is a multidisciplinary art project posing as an administrative bureaucracy. Informed by the Works Progress Administration (WPA) of the Great Depression in the 1930s, TWO is a gesture to “make work” for visual and performing artists, writers, and others by giving them simple, idea-based assignments to explore, document, or improve life in New York. From a temporary central office, TWO’s administrators—Katarina Jerinic and Naomi Miller—will interview, register, and hire employees; assign, collect, and exhibit work; and distribute Depression-era wages to employees during weekly payday parties.

Prospective employees will submit an online application and during their interview will choose an assignment such as documenting a need for repairs, making a regional travel guide for their block or neighborhood, reinterpreting a newspaper photograph, designing a promotional poster, or giving a concert for a houseplant. Once hired, employees will have roughly a week to turn in their assignment, for which they will be paid $23.50, the weekly wage for an artist in the Federal One Project (the arts division of the WPA).


Cardboardia Emerges

CardboardTown will be from 8 till 14 june here, under big sign, over stone fence
m. Krapotkinskaja, Bersenevskaja riverside
photos: cardboardia
photos: Kryakva

Cardboardia is one of our 2009 Grants-to-Artists recipients. Yesterday was the starting day of their first summer 2009 build and it looks pretty fun. Stay tuned for more locations as the summer proceeds.

Cardbordia ‘towns’ are temporary, collaboratively built and inhabited towns manifesting in Moscow, Russian, Finland and Germany in the summer of 2009. Carboardia is, in essence, a role playing community, where guests can create a new identity while contributing to the growth of the town, using cardboard as their expressive and artistic medium. Every town created under the Cardboardia title is a place where people can reinvent themselves – where, for a short time, everyone can leave behind their daily worries through new ways of self-expression.

Previous Cardboardia Posts


Come Party with the Black Rock Arts Foundation in Reno

The Black Rock Arts Foundation is proud to announce the exhibition of Celtic Forest: Book of the Raven by Laura Kimpton and Jeff Schomberg in Reno this summer.

There is a FUNdraiser this Friday, so you can contribute to bringing art to Reno; dance, hoop and check out fire performances by Controlled Burn FREE this Friday, June 5th, but be prepared to buy a raffle ticket or two.

reno-fundraiser
While it is free to attend… the goal is to raise awareness and funds for the Black Rock Arts Foundation Civic Arts projects in Reno. Consider attending, contributing and donating to the Black Rock Arts Foundation to support the values of Burning Man for projects created in communities where you live.


Escombros Vivos (Live Debris)


Escombros Vivos (Live Debris)
Taylor Cass Stevenson
Portland, OR and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
$5,000

Another of our 2009 Grants-to-Artists recipients, Escombros Vivos is a traveling series of events and installations dedicated to sharing and establishing new reuse traditions in Portland, Oregon and Rio de Janeiro. In exchanging practices that promote experimentation with reused materials, the project ultimately aims to dissolve stigmas both against garbage and the people who live and work in our garbage, presenting creative reuse as a means of also reintegrating excluded communities.

Escombros Vivos works in collaboration with local artists, reuse groups and homeless and low income communities in Portland and Rio to demonstrate international reuse techniques and practices through free workshops, materials exchange parties, trash-based public installations and exhibitions of collaborative art engaging all walks of life.

The exhibitions include works of reuse art and design that were started in the green city of Portland, Oregon and taken to Rio de Janeiro, where Brazilian artists are physically and philosophically modifying the works to express their more polemic and necessity-based attitudes towards humanity’s discards. The finished collaborative works will then return to Portland Oregon for a final event demonstrating innovative Brazilian reuse techniques to Portlanders.

www.redsemillaroja.org


East Hollywood Utility Box Art Project

East Hollywood Utility Box Art Project
Karen Mack
Los Angeles, CA
$6,000

The Utility Box Art Project, is the next of our 2009 grant recipients and is a guided collaboration and mentorship program, pairing artists with youth to design and create murals on utility boxes. The team first conducts a neighborhood mapping process in which the artist and youth study neighborhood issues and gather input from residents. The youth interview a broad range of locals to further their understanding of the community and the theme. After an issue is selected, the youth and artist hold story-gathering workshops – including the new on-site component – in which community members contribute images, words and ideas to support the development of the final artwork.

Each project concludes with a community celebration that coincides with an important local event. The celebration provides the opportunity for the community to gather to support its success, to connect to each other and to acknowledge the work of the artists (youth and mentors) and community members who created the work. Audience members include visitors
from other Los Angeles neighborhoods, who come to experience the final artistic creations.

http://www.blogger.com/www.lacommons.org


Detroit Dream Project – Progress Report

During clean up Doxie noticed Bud-e one of our resident poets secretly installed the name plate designed last summer during the Temple build. Thank you Bud-e!

After the arson attempt last fall the pillar was cleaned up and spare pieces affixed, not to cover the damage, but illustrate how the the Detroit Dream Project is a Phoenix from the ashes and is proof of our overall resiliency
SailorMan” Chris Ahart helps to clean up the area around the Temple during our Spring Clean Up
All but a few saplings made it through the rough Michigan winter and were budding – getting ready to burst into life
Just in from our woman in the street in Detroit, Danielle Kaltz (Doxie), reporting to us that one of the Detroit Burners, Jeremy Hockett says his friend, Phill from Seattle is a contributor to a new magazine Just Cause, and the Detroit Dream Project, which is part of our Civic Arts Program, and was designed by BRAF board member, David Best, is featured on Page 39 as part of a story on the Motor City Blight Busters.

The photos above are from the Spring Clean-up Saturday March 28 10:00 AM. The clean up day coincided with the Detroit Project Day that brings over 1,000 University of Michigan students to Detroit to help in clean-up efforts throughout Northwest Detroit. As you can see, the participants did a first post-winter park clean-up to freshen up the site.

Thanks from us at the Black Rock Arts Foundation to all of you in Michigan who are carrying the torch for the Detroit Dream Project.

For Your Calendar:

Saturday June 20 — Sunday June 21: plans underway for our 1st Anniversary Celebration!

Saturday July 18 — The Temple (the Detroit Dream Project) is the host site for Burners Without Borders Detroit Chapter “Benefit without Borders” Volunteer Event

http://burnerswithoutborders.com/detroit-gets-busy/

http://burnerswithoutborders.com/event.2009-01-29.8033323464/

Contact for BWB Detroit: Danielle Kaltz (dkaltz @gmail.com 313.608.4580).
And Doxie says:

Remember, the Detroit Dream Project belongs to all of us.

Together we
will shape how this new artistic pavillion

Previous Detroit Dream Project posts

photos and commentary: Danielle Kaltz (Doxie)

Raising Environmental Awareness for Water Through Textile Art

This just in from artist and environmental water activist, Linda Gass:

Dear Friends,
I’ll be giving a presentation entitled “Raising
Environmental Awareness for Water through Textile Art”

Sunday, May 17th,
from 2-4 PM

as part of a special program at the San Jose Museum of Quilts and Textiles.

Also presenting is Adam Parris, from the Bay Conservation and Development Commission, speaking on “The Rising Tide – Climate Change and San Francisco Bay Wetlands.”

This special program is in conjunction with the new exhibit entitled “Reservoir,” featuring extraordinary contemporary quilts from the private collection of John Walsh III. Walsh is the owner of a water purification business and his recent focus is on commissioning quilts dealing with the subject of water. I had a chance to see the exhibit last Sunday and there are many magnificent large artworks (not all on water).

The event admission is $20 ($15 for museum members) and your dollars will help support this unique textile museum and includes admission to see the exhibit.

408-971-0323 x14.

The museum is located at 520 S. First Street in San Jose.

http://www.lindagass.com/


Discarded

Another of BRAF’s 2009 Grant Recipients:

Discarded
Benjamin Jones
Brooklyn, NY
$1,000

Discarded is a wooden creature crafted entirely from furniture discarded on the streets of Brooklyn. The creature stands roughly 30’ long x 7’ wide x 8’ tall at its highest point. Much of the furniture used is kept, as much as possible, in its original (discarded) form, allowing participants to speculate on the origins of each element and the methodology that went into creating the piece.

While the sidewalks of New York City on trash night are a rich resource of useful items and cultural artifacts, most New Yorkers hold pre-conceived fears of tapping into this resource: practical fears of dirt and vermin, and emotional fears based on the societal perception of welcoming discarded items into our homes. The resulting obsession with new purchases saps the world of natural resources, and the ease of shopping versus crafting creates a psychic distance from our belongings that enables us to acquire and discard at will. By refocusing our communities on the process of foraging and creation, we can help transform our society into one that values originality and sustainability rather than purposeless consumption.

Through community gatherings and workshops, the piece will be a collaborative effort, culminating in exhibition at this year’s Figment festival. FIGMENT 2009, held in partnership with the Governors Island Preservation and Education Corporation (GIPEC), is a 3-day participatory arts event on Governors Island in New York Harbor (www.figmentnyc.org). FIGMENT is a project of Action Arts League, and is produced by a coalition of volunteers in partnership with the Pure Project.


Cardboardia

It is our favorite time of year at BRAF. Time to announce our 2009 Grant Recipients:

Cardboardia (Cardboard Town Free!)
Sergej Korsakov
MOSCOW
$7,500

Cardboardia ‘towns’ are temporary, collaboratively built and inhabited towns manifesting in Moscow, Russian, Finland and Germany in the summer of 2009. Carboardia is, in essence, a role playing community, where guests can create a new identity while contributing to the growth of the town, using cardboard as their expressive and artistic medium. Every town created under the Cardboardia title is a place where people can reinvent themselves – where, for a short time, everyone can leave behind their daily worries through new ways of self-expression.

Cardboardia brings together all people of all ages and backgrounds in a conflict free environment. All the participants have the equal significance and room for self expression.