Car Free Day/ Free Lunch and lecture to Farmlab
01.30.09
Meet at the civic center stop off the red metro line on the side of Broadway and Temple by the Records elevator at 11:30 leave at 11:45
Come fill your stomach with fresh food /produce and an art lecture all free plus cake because it is the 100th salon! This is brought on to encourage people who work in downtown to ride their bike in the vicinity just to get you started. It's a small ride so it is designed for the begining rider.
Farmlab Public Salon
100TH ANNIVERSARY SALON!
Newton & Helen Mayer Harrison
Friday, January 30, 2009 @ Noon
"Four Works on the Culture of Extraction"
About the Salon
Considering the contemporary condition that they describe as the Culture of Extraction, the Harrisons present four of their projects: the Serpentine Lattice, the Endangered Meadows of Europe, Green Heart of Holland, and Greenhouse Britain.
This is the 100TH SALON IN FARMLAB'S *PUBLIC SALON SERIES.*
About the Salon Participants
"There is a gentle beauty in their work, and much charisma in the otherworldly maps and text panels that are poetic and personal rather than dryly official. The exhibition is, of course, a call to action, but it is foremost a lyrical meditation on what ecological disaster and collective recovery might one day look like."
Elizabeth Mahoney, The Guardian, 2008
Among the leading pioneers of the eco-art movement, the collaborative team of Newton and Helen Mayer Harrison have worked for almost forty years with biologists, ecologists and urban planners to initiate collaborative dialogues to uncover ideas and solutions which support biodiversity and community development.
The Harrison's concept of art embraces a breathtaking range of disciplines. They are historians, diplomats, ecologists, investigators, emissaries and art activists. Their work involves proposing solutions and involves not only public discussion, but extensive mapping and documentation of these proposals in an art context.
Past projects have focused on watershed restoration, urban renewal, agriculture and forestry issues among others. The Harrisons visionary projects have often led to changes in governmental policy and have expanded dialogue around previously unexplored issues leading to practical implementations throughout the United States and Europe.
"Our work begins when we perceive an anomaly in the environment that is the result of opposing beliefs or contradictory metaphors. Moments when reality no longer appears seamless and the cost of belief has become outrageous offer the opportunity to create new spaces - first in the mind and thereafter in everyday life."
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Midnight Ridazz(tm), Ridazz(tm) and Skull(tm) Reproduction without written permission prohibited.