The Persistent Life of the Karl Marx Tree Marker

November 23, 2008

Sarah Elliot holding the most recent issue of The Kaweah Commonwealth newspaper (2008), and right John Elliot holding the first issue of the original Kaweah Commonwealth Newspaper  (1890)

Sarah Elliot holding the most recent issue of The Kaweah Commonwealth newspaper (2008), and right John Elliot holding the first issue of the original Kaweah Commonwealth newspaper (1890)

On Monday November 17th I drove a sculpture called Karl Marx Tree Marker, down to the offices of the The Kaweah Commonwealth a weekly newspaper of Three Rivers and all of Kaweah Country, California. I invited the French artist Aurelien Froment to come with me, both to help me photograph the sculpture in the offices of the Kaweah Commonwealth, and also to see the huge sequoia trees—giants symbolizing the hopes and failures of American westward idealism—in the Sequoia National Park nearby.
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Joseph Tanke: Aesthetics And Utopian Possibility: Herbert Marcuse And The Arts

November 15, 2008

Joseph Tanke with my written example of Robert Barry's Marcuse Piece behind his head, right Joseph Tanke speaking before an audience.

Joseph Tanke with my written example of Robert Barrys Marcuse Piece behind him, right Joseph Tanke speaking before an audience.

On October 18, 2008 the philosopher Joseph Tanke stood on the grass mound, behind a redwood colored podium and spoke about the philosopher Herbert Marcuse’s The Aesthetic Dimension. Below you will find my brief introduction to the event, describing a speech/action I preformed prior to Joseph’s presentation, an audio recording podcast of Josephs talk, followed by a text interview between Joseph and I on the subject of Marcuse’s protest and art. This talk was the sixth and final event that I produced as part of A Grass Mound (With Kind Regards to Utopia).

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As a way of introducing philosopher Joseph Tanke and to tie the subject of Marcusian Aesthetics, to utopia and art or the gallery - in which this event was taking place, I wrote the following words on the gallery wall with a marker.
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Iain Boal: Conflicts On The Common

Iain Boal sitting on the mound in front of a replica of the SF Mime Yes, Parks Commission No, protest sign from the 1965 protest in Golden Gate Park, to the right is Ronnie Davis with Mime Troupe photographs.

Iain Boal sitting on the mound in front of a replica of the SF Mime Yes, Parks Commission No, protest sign from the 1965 protest in Golden Gate Park, to the right is Ronnie Davis with Mime Troupe photographs.

On October 11, 2008 Iain Boal sat on the grass mound and gave a talk entitled “Conflicts On The Common”. This lecture was basically concerned with the history of enclosure, emparkment and it’s relationship with art, one in which Iain, a historian with exhaustive knowledge on the body and the commons, spoke about many, many things. This talk spanned from Thomas Moore, to Wordsworth, to Gerard Winstanly and the Diggers, to 60’s experiments with communal living, to Utopian endeavors and the problematics of Utopian vision. It was a way to mark a path through these histories of resistance taking place in the common open air, as a preamble for a question which Iain asked to Ronnie Davis, founder of the San Francisco Mime Troupe (SFMT); ‘what was the SFMT trying to do in the late 60’s when they brought their political theater outside into the open air of the park?’ This talk was the fifth of six event that I produced as part of A Grass Mound (With Kind Regards to Utopia).
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Lewis Jordan: Freedom And Intonation: Improvised Music And Exploration

November 11, 2008

Lewis Jordan performing at the San Francisco Arts Commission Gallery

Lewis Jordan performing at the San Francisco Arts Commission Gallery

On October 4, 2008, musician Lewis Jordan performed a series of poems, musical improvisations and jazz standards on top of the grass mound. I initially asked Lewis to perform as part of this project because I was interested in having someone who was versed and had participated in the experimental or avant-garde jazz scene in San Francisco and beyond. This scene to me seemed to flirt with Utopian ideas both in its experimentation and in its individual narratives. Lewis accepted because he said he was both enamored with the idea of playing on top of a grass mound, which was saying goodbye to utopia, while also being expressly dubious about the idea. You can read more about this below in the interview that I made with him and/or you can hear his performance reacting to the site in the MP3 podcast available below. This was the fourth of six events that I produced as part of A Grass Mound (With Kind Regards to Utopia).
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Pat Murphy: Potential Futures: Our City, Not Long After

November 2, 2008

Left two covers from The City, Not Long After; Left Pat Murphy reading.

Left two covers from The City, Not Long After; right Pat Murphy reading on the mound.

On Saturday September 28, 2008 science fiction author Pat Murphy read from her book The City, Not Long After at the SF Arts Commission Gallery. This was the third of six events that I produced as part of A Grass Mound (With Kind Regards to Utopia). Below you will find my brief recollection on the event, an interview between Pat Murphy and an MP3 download of Pat’s reading from The City, Not Long After.

There has been a long-standing relationship between grass and science fiction. In Ward Moore’s novel Greener Than You Think, the world is slowly taken over by unstoppable Bermuda Grass. This is the most common grass seen throughout the southern United States. In John Christopher’s The Death of Grass, a plague kills off all forms of grass threatening the survival of the human species. Grass can also be seen as the major signifier of Utopian suburban America, which has been the setting of much critical sci-fi during the 60’s from Ray Bradbury’s Martian Chronicles to Philip K. Dick’s, Time Out of Joint. However when I was programming this event I was not really thinking about the relationships between science fiction and grass, rather I was searching for different perspectives concerning the role that art or creative expression plays in shaping and transforming our cities, and our world. When I read Pat Murphy’s novel The City, Not Long After, I was amazed to discover a novelist who had written a novel in which art, anarchy and creativity are the central themes in a struggle for independence and freedom set within a city in which I am currently living, San Francisco. More… »

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