projects
- Trapeze Performance by Lollo Brigatta |
Posted by Lollo Brigatta on Aug 07 2007
Lollo Birgitta are exciting and sexy but not without a sense of humor and danger! They make quite a pair on the doubles trapeze! They have performed in venues all over the 5 boroughs including The Zipper Factory Theatre, Union Pool, Galapagos, Glasslands and as part of the Mix Festival. Interpreting stories of love and […]
- Lonesome Land (A Social Dance, A Vehicular Orchestra) |
Posted by Mary Walling Blackburn + Chris Marionetti on Aug 06 2007
On Friday, September 14, Mary Walling Blackburn and Chris Marionetti present Lonesome Land (A Social Dance, A Vehicular Orchestra), at New General Catalog in Greenpoint.
The structure for this performance is derived from […] - Urban Disorientation Game . Long Game |
Posted by Calvin Johnson, Kurt Braunohler + Scott Knowles on Aug 05 2007
The Urban Disorientation Game invites participants to be lost in the city. Participants are placed in situations where they are made to be disoriented and then challenged to find their way out of this state.
- Not An Alternative Tactical Media Presentation: Picture New York |
Posted by Not an Alternative on Aug 05 2007
This summer the Mayor’s Office of Film proposed regulations that would severely restrict the ability of even casual photographers and filmmakers to operate in New York City. These rules can be seen not only as a blow against New York as a place that welcomes and inspires art-making and documentation, but are part of […]
- In Passing |
Posted by The Light Surgeons on Aug 05 2007
In Passing
By The Light Surgeons
6 mins
This digital short was commissioned for the Bigger Picture project in conjunction with the BBC in Manchester, and shown on a public screen in the centre of the city. The fi lm explores the psycho-geography of the city through the experiences of a local woman who is partially blind. It […] - We like to Peep |
Posted by Régine Debatty on Jul 30 2007
Recent discussions about urban space have debated the issue of surveillance and how it is modifying the way we engage with cities. But is the problem coming only from above, from those who govern us? Or is voyeurism becoming increasingly integrated in our popular culture?











