Monday, February 11, 2013

Residency Goodness

David Goodman kicked off the second season of residencies at BoxoHOUSE with a highly productive couple of weeks. David's focus for the residency was to map his relationship to the desert environment based on a science of looking and understanding. His approach is comparable to archeology - reconstruction of a visual landscape based on traces. For materials, David turned to paper he brought with him that had been immersed in the snows of Santa Fe as well as found materials lying in the local landscape.

 
Courtesy of Douglas Wolfe



To kick off the residency appropriately, a couple of activities were called for. First, a walk in the landscape along the north ledge of the National Park boundary adjacent to BoxoHOUSE. This was the first of many walks that David took in which he comprehensively experienced the section of Joshua Tree sandwiched between the National Nark and Highway 62. On the morning of day two, a sound bath at the Integratron to balance energies for the days and weeks ahead.

Despite the fact that construction on converting the freestanding garage structure into an environmentally-controlled studio was not starting until February, David moved in and worked long hours during an unusually cold snap. His drawings evolved, informed by his daily perambulations as well as interactions with the local community through our participation at the monthly art crawl, periodic outings to local eateries and attendance at the Cosmic Monday film series.




David also began to work with fabrics he had found in the landscape, eventually creating several fabric works as well as incorporating some fabric into his drawings. As the works grew in number and scope, David began installing them on the walls, initiating the use of the raw space for exhibition.

On the second weekend of David's time here, he was joined by Douglas Wolfe a friend and photographer who came out to do his own exploration of the environment as well as to be part of documenting David's work. 

On Sunday January 13, we held an open house for the community. To address the cold, David prepared a very large pot of chicken soup and several dozen hearty souls appeared to consume both the broth, engage with the artworks and create a sense of warm community. David whitewashed some of the walls and installed a large fabric piece in the courtyard between the house and the structure. Both art and soup were very well received.


Courtesy of Douglas Wolfe
Courtesy of Douglas Wolfe



Courtesy of Douglas Wolfe
David had also created a participatory sound piece, Tuningfield, inspired by his experience at the Integratron. Participants are invited to enter the land in front of BoxoHOUSE, carrying a wooden stake fashioned by David from found wood. Once they find a spot that resonates with them, based partially on experiencing the sense of being surrounding by sounds as they echo off the rock face behind, participants insert the stake in the ground. This is an ongoing project, initiated that day and now living on beyond David's time here. He ahs offered to keep making and sending stakes as the Tuningfield continues to be fertile.

Courtesy of Douglas Wolfe











Tuningfield  is a very apt legacy for David to leave behind - an inspired project that maps back his experience here, links across geography and time and allows the community remain connected to the art, the artist and the site. Many thanks to David for his impactful presence.

David has also comprehensively documented his residency under the title ANATOMYOFADESERT, and you can read all about it here.

Boxo



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