
Public
Phenomena for Multitudes magazine
We
have just completed a spread of new public phenomena research for an
upcoming issue of Multitudes magazine (Paris). It is a special issue
printed in conjunction with the Transmission exhibition we participated
in this spring at the Villa Arson in Nice, France. For the publication,
we look at three new categories of public phenomena: trees that have
been severely cropped to preserve fences and powerlines, fences and
walls made from attaching several pieces of wood and assorted materials
together, and traces of buildings that have been torn down but have
left marks on adjacent structures.
The
pdf of the spread is here:
www.temporaryservices.org/public_phenomena_mltds.pdf |

Public Services -
Sparwasser
HQ, Berlin, Germany, June 17 - July 15, 2006.
We
are presenting Binder
Archives with binders by:
Josh MacPhee, Alexis Petroff, Céline Duval, Harold Jefferies,
Lori Couve, Street Flyer and Public Notice Archive, Peter Redgrave,
Jesse Bercowetz and Matt Bua, Melinda Fries and Jakob Kolding
Participants
booklet: Binder_Archives_Part.pdf
Binder Archives manual: BA_Manual.pdf
Public
Services is described as:
The
exhibition Public Services brings together projects by artists and
architects whose works and research deal with problems involving the
service sector in contemporary urban environments. These projects
represent a critical consideration of alternative models of public
services, which, ideally, are founded on the principles of openness,
access, equality, participation, mobility, adaptability, and transformativity.
When artists today think about structures and forms in the contemporary
city, they think above all about the importance of open communication
within urban structures. By occupying the space that lies between
the many different users of cities, corporate capital (and its interests),
and the urban structure, they draw attention to processes of degradation
and appropriation, borders between public and private, the de-industrialization
and agrarianization of cities, and so on, while developing new public-service
models based on participation, exchange, and solidarity.
Public
Services presents five different starting points for engagement and
five explicitly subjective approaches. These projects and creative
works have been conceived as forms of immediate and physical intervention
in the structure of the city, as social interaction, as a virtual
utopian scheme, etc. In terms of their goals, these works may be either
indirect or immediate, action-based or utopian.
This
exhibition is traveling to multiple venues and the public spaces of
their cities:
Pavel
Haus, Radkersburg, Austria, October 8 - December 3, 2005
P74 Center and Gallery,
Ljubljana, Slovenia, January 12 - 31, 2006
Kibla Multimedijski Center,
Maribor, Slovenia, March 24, 2006
Sparwasser HQ,
Berlin, Germany, June 17 - July 15, 2006 |

Peer Pleasure
II: Red 76, Temporary Services and the VISIBLE Collective
- Yerba
Buena Center for the Arts, April 7 – July 2, 2006
We are presenting
Prisoners'
Inventions. Marc and Brett will both be in SF for the opening.
Stop by and say hello.
Opening Reception:
Thursday, April 6, 2006
From YBCA'a web site:
Peer
Pleasure II continues our exploration of artist group activity and
showcases projects by a whole new set of artist groups working in
the U.S. and abroad. Each of the Peer Pleasure II projects reflects
an interest in forging community networks to distribute art, information
and ideas. Interactive projects by Red 76 (Portland and Chicago),
Temporary Services (Chicago) and VISIBLE Collective (New York), address
a broad range of social and political issues, from life in the prison
system, to the misrepresentation of Muslims in the media. Over the
course of the exhibition, YBCA's galleries will be animated with interactive
displays, impromptu lectures, and unique off-site public events organized
by members of each collective.
Yerba
Buena Center for the Arts |
| 
Transmission - Villa Arson,
Nice, March 18 - June 4, 2006
We are presenting a complete collection of booklets,
books, posters, fliers and other ephemera we have produced over the
past 9 years. We are also making a new booklet for the exhibition. The
collection of materials will be permanently housed at CNEAI after the
show is over.
We made two new booklets for this exhibtion:
Three Bibliographies: 1999-2006
3_bibliographies.pdf
Temporary Services: The first 71 booklets
CNEAI
(Centre National de l'Estampe et de l'Art Imprimé ), Chatou,
France.
Villa Arson |
| 
The Invisible Reading Room - Organized
by The Invisible Inc., Melbourne, Australia, March 2006.
The Invisible Reading Room is described
like this:
The Invisible Inc. will be participating
in the Next Wave Festival's Containers Project in Melbourne in March
2006. The Invisible Reading Room will incorporate over 100 visual
artists’ publications including zines, books, sound recordings,
video compilations, periodicals, online journals and blogs. In response
to the Next Wave 2006 theme ‘Empire Games’, the collection
will focus on projects by young or emerging visual artists from Australia
and across the Commonwealth. By making a large and comprehensive collection
of Australian and international contemporary artists' publications
available at the one site, The Invisible Reading Room aims to demonstrate
the diversity of approaches to the published medium in the visual
arts, and to expose artists' published projects to a broader audience
than they usually receive. The Invisible Reading Room is an ongoing
project, and it is intended that the collection will be exhibited
at other Australian venues in the future.
The
Invisible Inc. |
The Prison
Industrial Complex: Rehabilitating the System - Vera
List Center for Art and Politics, The New School, New York, NY, Friday.,
April 7, 2006, 6:30 p.m. $10, free for students with valid ID.
Location: Theresa Lang Student and Community
Center, 55 West 13th Street, 2nd floor.
"One of the primary goals in the
punishment of crime has been the hope for reform. Today, however, the
role of the prison as a place for rehabilitation, growth, and personal
advancement appears obsolete. Since the privatization of the United
States prison system in the 1980s, the system has become a vast $40
billion-a-year industry, the most elaborate in the world. At a time
when the United States has achieved the highest rate of imprisonment
per capita in the history of the world--in which, for instance, one
in four African American men are under correctional supervision--the
U.S. public is slowly awakening to an unprecedented crisis of mass incarceration.
Investigating notions of punishment and imprisonment, repentance and
acquittal, this discussion addresses many of the issues surrounding
the prison industrial complex, focusing on privatization and industry."
Participants include Ashley Hunt, artist
and activist; Ruth Wilson Gilmore, scholar, University of Southern California;
and Trevor Paglen, artist, writer, and experimental geographer. Salem
will be talking about Prisoners' Inventions---the other panelists are
making great work as well. Come join us for what proves to be an interesting
discussion!
Sponsored by the Vera
List Center for Art and Politics. |
| 
Framing the Artists - Featured
project on Super-flux
Super-flux |

Drawing by Angelo - pictured is a table made
of cardboard and masking tape.
Prisoners' Inventions - I
Space, Chicago, December 9, 2005 - January 28, 2006.
Prisoners'
Inventions is a collaboration between Temporary Services,
a group based in Chicago, and Angelo, who is incarcerated in California.
Angelo illustrated and described many incredible inventions made by
prisoners. The creations include cooking appliances, cigarette lighters,
condoms and chess sets. These items demonstrate the resourcefulness
of prisoners in response to their restrictive environment. Temporary
Services co-edited a book of Angelo’s writings and drawings, re-created
many of the inventions from the book and built a full-size replica of
Angelo’s cell at his request.
This exhibition at I space will be the most extensive
showing of Prisoners’ Inventions to date. It will include a large
number of re-created inventions, blueprints for and a replica of Angelo’s
cell, videos demonstrating how several inventions are made, a reading
library of related publications, a panel discussion, film screenings
and more. We will also exhibit new Prisoners' Inventions drawings from
Angelo that have never been shown or published. These include a method
for removing pilly fabric bumps from linens, a pizza recipe involving
a light fixture and details of an exorcism that was performed on a television
set that may have been haunted.
Dates:
December 9, 6 - 10 PM
Opening Reception
Please join us and help us celebrate the first complete exhibition of
Prisoners’ Inventions in Chicago.
Workshop and Discussions:
December 10, 1 PM
Exhibition tour and invention making workshop with Temporary
Services
Temporary Services will give a tour of the exhibition. They will talk
about the process of collaborating with Angelo on Prisoners’ Inventions.
The talk will be followed by a workshop on how to make some of the inventions.
The workshop is for all ages and skill levels. Please RSVP to servers@temporaryservices.org
if you plan on attending the workshop.
December 17, 12 - 2 PM
Prison Design: public discussion with Kevin Henry and Glen A.
Hodgson
Moderated by Temporary Services and Jeffery Poss, Associate Professor,
UIUC School of Architecture. Kevin Henry is an industrial designer and
the coordinator of the Product Design program at Columbia College. Glen
A. Hodgson is an architect who has helped plan and design 33 adult and
juvenile correctional facilities. They will discuss Prisoners’
Inventions in relation to their professional experiences.
Film Screenings:
December 15, 8 PM
A Man Escaped (1956)
Directed by Robert Bresson, France, 95 min.
Lt. Fontaine is a French man incarcerated by German soldiers occupying
France in 1943. It gradually becomes clear that Fontaine will be executed
for blowing up a bridge as an act of resistance to the occupation. He
devises several inventions for surviving prison life and escaping. He
figures out a way to communicate with prisoners in neighboring cells
by tapping on the walls, and by lowering a handkerchief with a string
from his window to pass letters to other inmates. Fontaine dismantles
his bed to make a rope reinforced with wire. He fashions grappling hooks
from the metal frame of an air vent cover. This film is packed with
prisoners’ inventions.
January 5, 8 PM
Carandiru (2003)
Directed by Hector Babenco, Brazil, 146 min.
This film is based on the actual experiences of Dr. Drauzio Varella.
He worked at Carandiru prison in Sao Paolo, Brazil in the 90s. The film
delves into the personal stories of inmates and their lives before prison,
while showing the effects incarceration has on loved ones. Carandiru
reveals the impact of the AIDS epidemic on the inmate population and
the tension this adds to their relationships. A massive riot at Carandiru
left 111 inmates dead at the hands of the guards. The film was shot
at the prison right before it was demolished in 2002. Featured prisoners
inventions include weight lifting equipment made from heavy water bottles
attached to wooden poles, and an inmate who creates stunning ‘hot
air balloons’ out of extremely thin paper sacks. These ‘balloons’
lift off the ground by a payload that is ignited to produce smoke.
I Space |