Field Test

Field Test (N55 SHOP)
presented at the conference
Open Engagement: Art After Aesthetic Distance (slide show here)
(post catalogue preview and download here)
October 11-13, 2007 Rigina, SK Canada

(preview and download reformatted Field Test: N55 SHOP here)

open engagement

WHO WE ARE
Hideous Beast is a collaborative effort between two artists, Josh Ippel and Charlie Roderick. Through organizing structured participatory events we attempt to encourage cultural activity outside the boundaries of mainstream entertainment and fabricated desire.

Critical of the audience as a passive participant, Hideous Beast seeks to coordinate events in which an acknowledged exchange between the event (as entertainment) and the spectator (as collaborator) can generate meanings beyond traditional formalized modes of entertainment.

hideous beast

WHAT WE DID
Hideous Beast is invested in creating alternate forms of social exchange. To further this practice, we investigate the efforts of other artists and cultural producers who promote new understandings and modes of social interaction. Many of these projects carry an imperative for the gesture to be repeated. This is apparent either implicitly in the ideology and logic of the activity, or explicitly in the form of instruction sets or public presentations. As an extension of our own search for new tactics of engagement and in order to evaluate these reproducible actions, we will recreate other artist’s projects, document and analyze the results.

For Open Engagement, we decided to reproduce SHOP by the artist group, N55. They present the project on their website, http://n55.dk where it is described as follows:

“SHOP enables persons to exchange things without the use of money. At SHOP, persons can contribute things for other persons to use, persons can use things, borrow things, swap things, or persons can take things they need. All sorts of things can be available at SHOP.”

open engagement

HOW IT HAPPENED

In preparation for the project, we contacted Jennifer Delos Reyes, OE Conceptual Director, about the possibility of finding a space to host SHOP on a long-term basis. Through discussion with her and our hostess Andrea Young, we determined that no long-term venue was available. For the duration of the conference we were given space in the Riddel Centre–a common space at the University of Regina, surrounded by a food court and traveling vendors.

Before arriving we also talked to Andrea about where to acquire free things. We looked into Freecycle.org and various other free exchange websites, but since we had easy and readily available form of transportation, it was difficult to pick up items from multiple individuals. Fortunately, Andrea provided a solution. Her mother had quite a surplus of things leftover from a family garage sale and was more than happy to have them taken away. We filledup Andrea’s car with cassettes, LPs, VHS tapes, board games, dolls, wicker baskets, books and toys.

We were given three folding tables to use for the setup of SHOP. In order to mimic the forms used by N55 and to set SHOP apart from the rest of the vendors in the building, we set up the tables in a triangle. We also constructed a triangular pedestal out of cardboard that held information about the project, instructions for its use and the word “SHOP” written on it. For the duration of the 3-day conference we setup SHOP in the morning and broke down in the evening.

katie + oe + shop

andrea + oe + shop

WHERE IT WILL GO
For our first trial of Field Test we came away from the conference with a wealth of feedback. Our interactions with participants of SHOP and the dialogue surrounding our lecture presented us with new ways for evaluating the project and how it might manifest in future attempts. Hideous Beast presents its projects to the public in hopes of finding effective ways to communicate ideas. We are often confronted with issues of clarity, and strive to acknowledge its importance. How clear is our intention? How might we improve on previous projects? How do we expand and experiment, avoiding formulaic stagnancy? By reproducing the works of others, we hope to learn more about method and process. How do ideas hold up when variables change and context shifts? SHOP is presented to the public by N55 and we would like to learn more about their practice. By experiencing their ideas we might understand their proposals. In doing so we also want to widen their project, producing an expanded version of “Manual for SHOP” with the addition of our situation and experience at the conference, eventually producing a manual that grows through time and repeated performances. In retrospect this came across as us trying to critique, or point out flaws in SHOP, which became inflated by our use of terms like “success” and “failure”. Although these terms are important for us, and became part of larger conversations at the conference pertaining to establishing criteria, measuring success, documenting effects, or evaluating effectiveness, our presentation of Field Test was perceived as a quantitative rather than qualitative analysis. This might change though.

open engagement


Field Test (Temporary Services’ Product Placement)
Field Test was presented as part of doublebounce, a curatorial project about collaboration over geographic distance organized by Helen Reed and Maiko Tanaka at XPACE in Toronto, Ontario, in March of 2008.

 

Hideous Beast is invested in creating alternate forms of social exchange. To further this practice, we examine the efforts of other artists and cultural producers who promote new understandings and modes of social interaction. Many of these projects carry an imperative for the gesture to be repeated. This is apparent either implicitly in the ideology and logic of the activity, or explicitly in the form of instruction sets or public presentation. As an extension of our own search for new tactics of engagement and in order to evaluate these reproducible actions, we recreate other artist’s projects, document our process and analyze the results. We call this series of investigations Field Test.

For this instance of Field Test we reproduced Temporary Services’ project Product Placements: Ongoing Public Research in Denver, Colorado, Chicago, Illinois and Toronto, Ontario. This publication includes the original text for the project found on Temporary Services website, documentation of our efforts in each city and our reflections on the process. View and download here!

Temporary Services | http://temporaryservices.org
doublebounce | http://www.doublebounce.org
XPACE | http://xpace.info

DOLLAR STORE MAP

This map of dollar stores in the Toronto area is a supplement to the publication Field Test: Temporary Services Product Placements. In hopes of further expanding the project we are providing these dollar store maps, the Field Test guide, Product Placement totes and some dollar store supplies to willing participants. In exchange we ask that you execute your own product placement and provide us with any documentation and reflections. Please leave your email address so that we may contact you about the project. Any submissions will be published on the Hideous Beast website under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.


PP Denver + Chicago from charles roderick on Vimeo.

Photo Documentation:


Field Test (The Center For Tactical Magic Uprising!)
presented as part of our InCUBATE Residency
Sunday, August 10, 2008 2-6 pm
Montrose Beach, 4400 N. Lakeshore, Chicago, IL

Uprising!
Uprising! Kite Messages for the Multitudes
Call For Participation

Sunday, August 10, 2008 2-6 pm
Montrose Beach, 4400 N. Lakeshore, Chicago, IL


View Larger Map
Hideous Beast invites you to participate in Uprising! – a project originally produced by artist group The Center For Tactical Magic in collaboration with Eva Strohmeier. On their website, http://www.tacticalmagic.org the project is described as follows:

“UPRISING! is a community kite-making project that invites participants to design and build their own kites with a message they wish to communicate from up high. This contemporary twist on the ancient practice of aeromancy (divining messages from the sky) encourages people to rise above the dark clouds hovering overhead by unleashing their own messages upon the heavens. This aerial display is a visible demonstration of democracy and a multitude of voices in these dark times.”

Build your own kites with messages for the multitudes! Materials and instructions will be provided. Uprising! is presented by Hideous Beast as part of Jennifer Delos Reyes’ project, Satellite Festivals (Be Longing) for Provflux 2008.

http://www.jendelosreyes.com
http://provfluxv.wordpress.com