The amazing ride around Toowoomba’s East Creek is still on, however moved from Tuesday 12 February to next Tuesday 19th. Also stay tuned for more details/events lined up for Harrell Fletcher’s project Michael Pleming.
FELICE VARINI
DANIEL BUREN
Brown Cows Bike Ride
A part of Harrell Fletcher’s request to get to know our chosen “stranger”, the found Michael Pleming, is to join him in certain things he enjoys doing. So as bike riding was pretty close to the top of his list we decided to organise a group bike ride with all members of the Toowoomba community. For matters of safety we thought it best to ride in a mob like a group of brown cows to dodge the city traffic. It’s time to dust off the cob webs from your BMX bikes and join us for some fun in the sun. We will have bread to feed the ducks along East Creek and for those who would like, a coffee stop at the end of the ride. See you on the corner of Margaret and Lindsay Streets, 10am Tuesday 12th February.
TED’S wish for art to turn the world inside out
Our landlord at RAYGUN sent us this link from his Facebook page from the TED website. Check it out
Harrell Fletcher ‘Michael Pleming’ Opening
On Friday night at RAYGUN we had Harrell Fletcher’s opening ‘Michael Pleming’. Here are some images from the night, there is also a wonderful skype conversation we had with Harrell on Friday during the day, which will be posted soon, as well as a floor talk which features Michael. Many thanks to all who came and got to know Michael, the two events which we have planned surrounding Michaels interests/world are coming up in the next weeks.
February 19th – Brown Cows Bike Ride
February 20th – Wine Tasting ($20)
Hope to see you!
more OTHER EXERCISES by Kurt Johannessen
Try to imagine how elephants perceive time.
Spend a whole day collecting dirt and dust.
Put the dust between two glass plates.
Place the glass plates in front of the TV screen.
Watch the news.
Interview with Harrell Fletcher by Allan McCollum
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Harrell Fletcher interviewed by Allan McCollum WE GENERALLY EXPECT OUR ARTISTS TO BE MORE INTERESTING people than those from other walks of life, and we reward them for their special abilities to help the rest of us find complexity of meaning, beauty and even grandeur in the world around us. So when an artist attempts to sidestep that mythology and chooses a project that shifts the attention away from himself to the capabilities of other people, it’s not an easy task; such efforts can be hard to read without prejudice. Harrell Fletcher, an artist originally from California and now living in Portland, Oregon, has taken it upon himself to turn the spotlight onto others. With a dedicated, empathic intelligence, he treats us to the joy and poignancy of appreciating our fellow humans by walking a difficult line between artistic skill, organizational savvy and anonymity. Interview took place on July 29, 2005 in New York City (images and captions are from the artist’s website) |
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Allan McCollum: One of the things I enjoy about your work is the way that the meaning of it doesn’t reside in any one piece. In fact, if you take a look at any one piece you might pass over it; they’re often so simple and easy to describe. But when you start looking at project after project after project, it seems to go into the hundreds, and then you get into your Learning to Love You More website and there’s a couple of thousand more projects to look at, then pretty soon you start realizing that your work is best understood when you take a look at everything, a lot of small projects, and at the way everything is balanced—and then a certain set of values comes through. You’re not trying to produce singular masterpieces, like what we generally expect from an artist. And this is one of the ways you turn things on their head all the time, and it constantly takes me by surprise. Like the way almost all your work is totally about people other than yourself. A lot of the things that we expect an artist to do, you do backwards. Harrell Fletcher: That’s true. I saw the structure of how an artist is supposed to operate, but most of those structures didn’t feel comfortable to me. At a certain point, while I was still in graduate school, I just started realizing that I didn’t have to go the normal course. I could just do what seemed like the right thing for me to do. AM: How did you perceive the ‘normal course’ while you were in school? HF: Well, it’s so concentrated in graduate school. You see all of these people going into their studios. They’re all making objects, paintings, whatever, and they’re spending hours and hours doing that. It’s really supposed to be about isolating yourself from the world. Maybe there is a wall of inspirational pictures from magazines or something like that, but otherwise that’s the extent you’re supposed to be interacting with the world. click here to read the rest of the interview http://allanmccollum.net/allanmcnyc/harrellfletcher/mccollum_interview.html |
Harrell Fletcher (Opening this Friday) talking about his project at BMW Tate Live
Harrell Fletcher talks about the interests surrounding his practice and his project at the Tate. Take a few minutes, it’s a great project.
Michael Pleming Cont.
So a part of the project we are doing at the moment with Michael for Harrell Fletcher’s show is to get to know him.
This morning we took him up to the RAYGUN space and did a short interview with him. This is what we discovered…….
What is your name? Michael Pleming
Where were you born? Tamora, NSW.
Where have you spent most of your life?
My first 13 years on a property called Ariah Park, via Tamora.
3 years Wagga Wagga, NSW.
7 years Melbourne, Victoria.
3 years Wagga Wagga, NSW.
3 years Brisbane, QLD
10 years Sydney, NSW.
12 years Toowoomba, QLD
Did you study when you left school? Yes, I studied fashion design at RMIT in Melbourne, Victoria.
Do you have any pets? Not currently but my favourite pets have been Thoroughbred horses and Greyhound dogs. Fast machines, I like fast machines.
List 3 things in your life that you’ve loved doing? Horse riding, swimming, and fashion design.
List 3 things in your life that you couldn’t do without? My health, fresh air and good food.
When you move to a new home what are 4 things you look for? A quiet street, lots of windows to let the Northern lights in and a great location, whether it be on a mountain top or by the beach.
Favourite food? I have 2 favourite cuisines – Japanese and French.
Favourite travel destination? Australia.
What are your favourite wine regions? Mornington Peninsula, Yarra Valley, Northern Tasmania and Great Southern- Western Australia.
Favourite colour? I have several favourite colours, orange, grass green, white is a favourite colour and red is a favourite colour but I also really love yellow ocres and browns.
Do you read? Extensively. What kind of things? I read the Bible every day for around 2 to 2 and a half hours. I read a lot about the food and wine industry. I don’t read novels or fiction.
If you needed to communicate with a friend how would you do it? Face to face or by telephone. Mobile phone if I have to.
Drive or cycle? Definitely cycle unless its too far. With the advent of electric bikes they can take you farther. Everybody needs to ride a bike.
Have you got a favourite quote? Not off the top of my head. Or something you’ve learnt this week? I remembered my Grandma this week.
That is a really beautiful thing.
Thanks for having me.























