Yasushi Noguchi 野口靖, Sep 14th 2011 @ Shinjyuku Station, Berg

日本のコミュニティデザインの流れ

及部克人(武蔵野美術大学?) およべ
http://news-sv.aij.or.jp/kodomo/interview/oyobe.html
http://llline.blog20.fc2.com/blog-entry-77.html


http://www.musabi.ac.jp/kenkyu/shi-de/index_2.shtml
及部克人(およべ・かつひと)
1938年東京都生まれ
東京芸術大学卒業
美大生と子ども・障害者・年長者など、多様な人びととのワークショップ“造形による対話”を、大学や美術館などの生涯学習施設や自主的な地域活動において展開。
「遊べ子どもたち―冒険遊び場づくり1978~1985」「ATFアジア民衆演劇会議:松延・及部地図づくりワークショップ1983」「アジアからの留学生との演劇WS[東京新世界1997]」「震災サバイバル・キャンプ・イン1999」「学ぶ住民から遊ぶ住民へ―せんだいメディアテーク職員研修2001」「江戸東京博物館・東京建築展ワークショップ2001」「小さな夏休み+環境デザインA:大学から地域へ1990~2002」「菜の花里見発見展〈ユニバーシアード〉出前講義[あすみが丘二世代子どもの遊び地図作り]2002」。
本学共同研究「白牛会に集う朝鮮からの留学生たち―帝国美術学校のあゆみと東アジアの動向」メンバー、世田谷「雑居まつり」世話人。

演劇・造形ワークショップ
源流は東南アジアの演劇ワークショップ(フィリピン?)
ドキュメントがあまりのこらないようなやりかたをしているようだ。

アメリカの流れ。ローレンス ハルプリン?

イギリスの流れ。。。これはあまり気にしなくてよいのでは?

建築のほうにも日本の流れがある。
野口さんの学校(工芸大)の建築の講座には原広司さんの流れの建築家がいて、まちづくり関係のプロジェクトをしているようだ。
彼の話によれば、オランダでのグループ展に参加して感じたことがあり、それは近年のヨーロッパでは、大きな規模都市計画ではなく、小規模でもよいからとにかく積み重ねて実現させる、というビジョンが主流だということ。

笹川さん?建築出身の現代美術家、野口さんらの新宿のプロジェクトの会場構成を担当、を紹介される。

藤村さんへ

先日はお久しぶりでした。
及部さんはあまり文章書かない人なんですよ。及部さんの名前の著書ってないかもしれない。後でよく考えてみたら、及部さんは造形ワークショップを地域住民との恊働の中でおこなってきた人なんで、藤村さんの研究と関連はしてるけど、少し遠いかなあ。
でも、彼の活動はローレンス・ハルプリンやPETA(Philippine Educational Theater
Association=フィリピン教育演劇協会)とも強い繋がりがあるので、大きい意味でとらえると重要かもしれないです。このPETAも1967年から活動してるっていうのはすごいよね。
http://www.geocities.co.jp/Hollywood-Kouen/9907/peta.htm
色々調べてみると、これらの源流はイギリスのようですが、それがヨーロッパやアメリカなどに普及していったようです。フィリピンもアメリカの植民地だったことを考えると、納得のいく話ですかね。

藤村さんの研究はローレンス・ハルプリンとの関連性の方が強いよね。彼の奥さんがダンサーだったっていうのもけっこうここいらへんの分野が繋がってる気はします。でも、メディアアート/インタラクティブアートとの関連性を語っている人は、さすがに現在進行形なんであまり理論化はされてないだろうねえ。そういった意味でも藤村さんの研究は意味があると思います。
コマーシャルの要素をどう考えるかは、僕はあまりそっちの方に興味が行っていないので何ともいえないですが。

また、藤村さんが戻ってきたときにゆっくり話せるといいですね。

今進行中なのはこんな感じの展示です。
11/19-12/3(レセプションは11/18)なので、もしその時日本にいたら見に来てください。
http://kabukicho-art.org/

野口

California Wash, Helen Mayer Harrison and Newton Harrison, 1996

http://theharrisonstudio.net/?page_id=301



California Wash is a narrative work of landscape sculpture combining a garden that portrays the former wash ecology, light, pathways, mural and sculptural forms that address the transformations of this site that are the inevitable outcomes of urbanization.
A drainshed mural, drawn on the new Pico-Kentner outfall cover, represents the current human settlement pattern with the California Wash garden as a reasonable reflection of, or memorial to, that which once existed. The mural also contains bronze plaques inset into the concrete, images of certain of the original fauna of the area. It is a reminder of the original life web of the Pico watershed, and of the disappearance of bio-diversity and the region’s most precious resource, its water.

Taizo Matsumura, 松村泰三

http://otonanokagaku.net/feature/vol9/index.html

http://www.exploratorium.edu/snacks/colored_shadows/

http://www.aomori-museum.jp/ja/blog/1175.html

ワークショップでの混色の使用は、以下のものに似ている

http://www.olafureliasson.net/exhibitions/your_chance_encounter_24.html

Slow-motion shadow in colour, 2009
Your chance encounter
21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa, 2009-2010

Selected publications:
Olafur Eliasson: Your Chance Encounter. Exhibition catalogue. Baden: Lars Müller Publishers; Kanazawa: 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, 2010.

The Art of Placemaking: Interpreting Community through Public Art and Urban Design, Ronald Lee Fleming, 2007



Book Description
ISBN-10: 185894371X | ISBN-13: 978-1858943718 | Publication Date: April 1, 2007
This expertly researched book makes a radical case for accessible public art that fosters a powerful civic experience of connection to place. The author advocates narrative, site-specific public art that engages the popular imagination through common references to history, folklore, culture and geography, and demonstrates how the integration of approachable art with local landscape, architecture and urban design can facilitate identification with locale. Dozens of case studies of spectacular and innovative works throughout the United States are accompanied by practical information, cost and policy analysis, artist interviews, examples of failures and major controversies, and strategies for the future, making this book an essential reference for anyone involved with transforming and improving our public spaces. “The Art of Placemaking” features public art projects since the 1990s, including the integration of public art in urban design, historic interpretation, street furniture, transit-station and roadway-corridor design, mural towns and more, making this title an invaluable resource for artists, architects, urban planners and teachers, as well as non-professionals seeking to bring art into their communities.

Responsive Environments: Architecture, Art and Design, Lucy Bullivant, 2006

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1851774815/ref=s9_simh_gw_p14_d0_g14_i5?pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_s=center-5&pf_rd_r=047PT8344RB3JGG78TEF&pf_rd_t=101&pf_rd_p=470939291&pf_rd_i=507846

Product Description

The latest title in the V&A Contemporary series looks at groundbreaking interior design, art, and architecture. Responsive environments—spaces that interact with people who use or pass through them—have become ubiquitous lately. Lucy Bullivant provides an intriguing look at these cutting-edge spaces, from an installation in a shopping center that registers passers-by with patterns of colored light and sound, to an interactive artwork in the boardroom of a British TV network.

With insights drawn from the author’s interviews with many of the designers featured, Responsive Environments will appeal to designers, students, and creative professionals, as well as anyone interested in interior design, architecture, and technology.

ACCESS, Marie Sester, 2003

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie_Sester

from wikipedia

Work

After school, Sester’s interests shifted from designing physical structures to the study of ideological frameworks, specifically how culture and politics affect our sense of place. Her work focuses on notions of privacy and identity, particularly how we navigate through contemporary society’s systems of surveillance and security. Her work relies on interaction with the audience, creating encounters where it’s not clear if one is experiencing something playful or sinister.[4]

Shows and Recognition

Sester was a Creative Capital grantee in 2002.[5]

Her work has earned recognition in the art and technology worlds, including an Honorary Mention in Interactive Art from Ars Electronica (2003),[6] a Webby Award for Net Art (2004)[7] and a spot on the “50 Coolest Websites” list on Time Magazine Online (2004).[8]

Recently, her works have been included in the Seoul and Singapore Biennales (2008),[9] Glow Eindhoven (2009),[10] SFMOMA (2010–2011)[11] and EMPAC in Troy, New York (2010–2011).[12]

——————-

http://www.flickr.com/photos/ruiguerra/4400508887#/
Access_Sester_2002

ACCESS(2003)

http://www.accessproject.net/

http://www.sester.net/projects/access/access.html

ACCESS lets you track anonymous individuals in public places, by pursuing them with a robotic spotlight and acoustic beam system.

ACCESS presents control tools generated by surveillance technology combined with the advertising and Hollywood industries, and the internet. It refers to political propoganda and media manipluation.

Tribute in Light, Municipal Art Society and Creative Time of NYC, 2002-present

http://mas.org/programs/tributeinlight/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tribute_in_Light

Tribute in Light, being projected on Sept. 11, 2009, from the ProPublica office on One Exchange Plaza


Tribute in Light was first presented on March 11, 2002, six months after the attacks, and MAS has presented it annually since. Comprising eighty-eight 7,000-watt xenon light bulbs positioned into two 48-foot squares that echo the shape and orientation of the Twin Towers, Tribute in Light is assembled each year on a roof near the World Trade Center site. The illuminated memorial reaches 4 miles into the sky and is the strongest shaft of light ever projected from earth into the night sky. See this list of great Viewing Locations.

It was independently conceived by several artists and designers who were brought together under the auspices of MAS and Creative Time. Tribute was designed by John Bennett, Gustavo Bonevardi, Richard Nash Gould, Julian Laverdiere and Paul Myoda with lighting consultant Paul Marantz. It was originally made possible by a grant from the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation and with the generous assistance of Con Edison.

See and listen to the origins of Tribute in Light and how it is produced annually on September 11.

DJ Light, Cinimod Studio, Lima, Peru. 2010

http://www.cinimodstudio.com/dj-light

DJ Light is an immersive public sound and light installation that gives visitors the power to orchestrate an awe-inspiring performance of light and sound across a large public space. It was created for energy company Endesa as the cornerstone of their Christmas celebrations in Lima, Peru.

DJ Light (DJ Luz), Lima 2010 from Cinimod Studio on Vimeo.

http://www.cinimodstudio.com/
http://www.cinimodstudio.com/