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Just after the Joshua Treenial in May, Larry Lane at Art Queen approached me about his plans for a Stonewall commemoration to take place on the last weekend of June. He asked me to think of artists who might want to have an exhibition in conjunction with the live music he was arranging to be followed by a screening of Milk. 
I approached John Luckett about his interest and he filled me in on a series of his paintings which had shown in an exhibition related to LA Pride last year. Based on illustrations from a swimming manual, the series is titled Search and Rescue and it contemplates the personal and conflicting circumstance of alienation, bewilderment and discovery. They were just right for the context. We also thought of Darin Rich, a performance artist and DJ who has produce some wonderful video works under the guise of Limesparkle.
 
 
We installed the work the week before in the amazing metal clad gallery created to house the work of Randy Polumbo. Some of Randy's newer works were included in the exhibition, bringing color, glass, light and a twist to the table. We could not have predicted the announcement of the Supreme Court ruling on marriage that was announced the day before the event. Commemoration turned into lively celebration.
 
A wonderful crowd turned up the event which kicked off with the exhibition and an impromptu performance by Darin. Live music followed and then the film rounded out the evening. The exhibition will remain up until September 7, 2015.
 

Many thanks to Randy, Larry, John, Darin, Tim and Journi.
  
 
 
 
            
        
          
        
          
        
The inaugural Joshua Treenial, a series of site-responsive installations and performances,  unfolded over Memorial Day weekend 2015. Some 60 artists representing 15 nationalities participated at 5 venues. Co-founded and co-curated by KJ Baysa and Bernard Leibov of BoxoPROJECTS, the series was dedicated to what Joshua Tree inspires and what it makes possible.
The
 weekend kicked off with two sound performances in the acoustic 
perfection of The Integratron. The first performance was led by 
composer/musician Seth Olinsky. Seth led a group of 13 local musicians 
through several pieces that included a composition for multiple acoustic
 guitars, a percussion piece and closed with a wonderfully evocative call for rain that included audience participation and ping pong balls. 
After
 a short break, Kio Griffiths, two other musicians and a vocalist 
performed a 45 minute meditative journey utilizing the unique acoustic 
qualities of the space to full effect.

The venue itself was wrapped in imagery by Faces of Water artist
 Moses Hacmon and the grounds contained several sculptures of desert 
flora created by the Boiling Process collective from Tijuana.
The
 performances were followed by a sprint back to BoxoHOUSE for the 
opening of the installations located throughout the house, studio, land 
and in the nearby rocks. Bob Dornberger served up endless Balinese Pork 
Tacos (and nopali for the meat challenged amongst us) to fortify 
everyone for the task at hand. 
Several projection pieces by Jesse Gilbert were prominently visible on the rock face behind the property. Neighbors sat on their porches and watched the works for several hours. Also visible in the rocks was Ali Beletic's light sculpture, Illuminated Passage, which turned a desert cove into a seemingly icy contemplative space.
 
 
The studio contained a single installation of new works by Phillip K. Smith III based on the phenomenon that was Lucid Stead.
 A series of photographs overlaid with bands of color recalled the 
changing hues of the homestead's openings. Two wall sculptures contained
 wood and mirror of the original structure and, with subtly changing 
colors, created a collage of the original experience. 
 
Across
 the field behind the studio, more projections beckoned. They were part 
of an installation by Janet Belolotto inspired the the dunes and camels 
of the desert surrounding Dubai where Janet resides. The projections on 
the side of a cargo container was paired with a modified vehicle that 
hearkened to Mad Max and Burning Man. The field itself contained several
 reflective metal sculptures of Bajan desert flora by a collective of 
six artists from Tijuana. 
 
 
The
 house itself was filled with several works. Performance artist Kiki 
Seror was engaged in a colorful act utilizing an internet site called 
Chatroulette. There were large wall works by the duo of Anna Stump and 
Daphne Hill as well as interactive pieces by Ichiro Irie and Lucas 
Kazinsky and smaller works by David Eddington and Jon Kolkin. 
 
 
Video works included films by Megan Evans and Biddy Connor, Fred Fleisher, Grimanesa Amoros and Tuguldur Yondonjamts.
 
At
 10.30pm, BoxoHOUSE closed down to allow time to get to the Aaron 
Sheppard performance at Art Queen. And what a performance it was. Aaron 
appeared in a twisted mermaid ensemble to the accompaniment of a live 
band. He undulated, gave birth to floating objects, cut off his tail, 
shed his "skin" and ran naked into the desert night.
In
 the daylight of the next day, several additional works were revealed. 
There were a trio of installations co-located up in the rocks. Bennet 
Lieberman had installed several canvases, splashes of color with poetry 
emblazoned on them, along with a media player from which the poems 
emitted. Nearby, Kevin Lin installed a sculpture which was watched over 
by a friendly iguana for the whole weekend. The iguana was likely 
entranced by the bubbles emanating from a rock cave - the work of Andrew
 Binkley who also created an elusive rock hidden in the huge pile above 
the cave.
 
 
Across
 the field and adjacent to the Arabian desert installation, Kio Griffith
 created a sound piece in the skeleton of an old station wagon. Two 
hundred artists, and Peter Frank, spoke about the color blue. Closer in 
to BoxoHOUSE, Jon Bernad and Skye Quadling had created a sand painting 
and an effigy by Rodney Dickson was hung in a tree. Fluorescent lengths of plexiglass cast their colored shadows across rocks and sand in an installation by Elena Bajo. Nearby, large fluorescent swathes of cloth by Dineke Van Huizen ruffled in the wind, announcing the location brightly several roads away. In the courtyard, Naomi Campbell's sculpture stood watch as Sydney Cooper was raking contemplative patterns into the sand all over 
the acreage.
 
 
As
 participants came and went, some partook in David Goodman's Tuning 
Field project, planting stakes in the field in front of BoxoHOUSE. In 
the late afternoon, Kim Stringfellow arrived to brief some adventurers 
on their trip to spot homestead shacks in Wonder Valley. The group set 
off and eventually arrived at the site of a High Desert Test Sites 
project taking place in cooperation with the MAK Center.
 
As
 the sun began to set, the destination was The Palms in the far reaches 
of Wonder Valley for screenings of Diane Best moving image works. Diane 
projected three works onto a large outdoor screen with live musical 
accompaniment by Reverend Screaming Fingers, The Renderers and Artemis 
Robeson. The magic continued into the night.
 
The
 following day, the action was back at BoxoHOUSE with all works on 
display and an impromptu reenactment of Aaron Sheppard's performance 
provided by a visiting artist. This took place on the Celtic Knot, Steed
 Taylor's large-scale sculpture not quite intended for this purpose 
though picturesque nonetheless.
Sunday evening saw the focus move to Joshua Tree Astronomy Arts Theater for a  performance by Yi-Ping Hou and an episode of Message in the Sky by Shih-Wen Young and Jiayi Young. This was followed by a night sky exploration led by the Astronomy Arts team.
By Monday morning, energy was flagging - a perfect moment to offer a coffee gathering to the artists who mingled and debriefed. At noon, de-installation began and by late afternoon the Joshua Treenial was truly over.
Many thanks to the more than 500 participants who attended, to the dozens of artists who contributed and the many who attended, to the Karl sisters and staff at The Integratron, to the Sibley family at The Palms, to Randy Polumbo and Larry Lane and staff at Art Queen, to Tom O'Key and Leonard Homburg at JT Astronomy Arts Theater, to Natasha Peterson for documentary photography and to everyone else who contributed to making this first Joshua Treenial a resounding success. Until next time!