Exhibition Unites Energy with Art and Motion

[Editor's note: sometimes Kurt and I get pretty darn busy with work, life, and Kurt's lifelong plan to ensure that Johnism becomes the ideology of the next 100 years. For these reasons, we will occasionally copy and paste press releases from cool organizations and call them "blog posts" - right now is one of those times].

VANCOUVER: eatART presents an exhibition illuminating the connection between art and energy through photography, paintings, performances and art-in-motion at the Great Northern Way Campus on December 15th.

Exhibits include interactive touch sensitive sculptures, a wearable walking machine, the first walking electric vehicle, and a 50 ft electromagnetic snake.“We define energy as the exertion of vigour or power, and the vitality and intensity of expression,” said said Emily Hamilton, Curator and Co-executive Director of eatART. “Energy manifests through art through mood, emotion, movement, materials, narrative, connection with the viewer, and sources of power and light.

eatART is a volunteer-run charity organization that provides space and support artists, performers, engineers, and robotic sensationalists to gather, network and collaborate. “We give artists the opportunity to demonstrate their explorations of energy and sustainability, promote their message and to gain exposure,” added Ms. Hamilton.

The Hangar is the event space sponsored by the Great Northern Way Campus. Located in the Centre for Digital Media Arts, it echoes the narrative of this exhibition: an industrial past with an educational present.

ART WITH ENERGY

DATE: December 15th

TIME: 7 to 11pm, 6 to 11pm for Media

LOCATION: Great Northern Way Campus, The Hangar, map

ENTRY BY DONATION: All proceeds go to the eatART Foundation to support the artists.

ARTISTS:

  • Michael JP Hall – Realization
  • Vincent VanHaaff – Resonance
  • Leigh Christie – A New Industrial Utopia
  • Frederick Brummer – Dimension X
  • G?Bikes – Powering the Party
  • Raul Casillas – Entanglement
  • Jonathan Tippett – Prosthesis: The Anti Robot
  • mondo spider - The world’s first walking electric vehicle
  • Mark Illing – Clones are People Too
  • The Cooper Bros – Panoramic Photography
  • Titanoboa project – 50ft electromagnetic snake
  • Peter Holmes – Water Portraits

Website: http://artwithenergy.tumblr.com/Exhibition | www.eatART.org

©2009 eatART Foundation

 

Hungry for Community? eatART!

The Mondo Spider in all its community-building glory

The Mondo Spider in all its community-building glory

Thanks mostly to dumb luck, I have become responsible for the publicity of an art project called the Mondo Spider, made by a foundation called eatART, during a sporting event called the Olympics. The Mondo Spider is a giant (8×8-foot) steel robot spider. It’s currently being upgraded to electric power, making it the world’s first zero-emissions walking vehicle. And it represents one of the most interesting communities I’ve ever come across.

Allow me to provide a little background.

In 2005, a crew of masochistic young engineers participated in the Vancouver Junkyard Wars. Tasked with building a walking machine, they created a pared-down version of the spider. They also created a monster. The Mondo Spider, Badass Steel Edition, would consume the next year of their lives. By August of 2006, the beast was ready to lurch and stomp its way to international notoriety.

Daisy, the Solar-Powered Tricycle

Daisy, the Solar-Powered Tricycle

From there it was an easy jump to formalizing the group that had quickly and passionately galvanized around the spider. “Basically,” explains co-creator and eatART director Jonathan Tippet, “you had a bunch of people interested in art, Burning Man, and parties, and a bunch of professionals itching to make large-scale, audacious sculpture. Both groups had waaaaay too much energy.”

eatART, the non-profit art laboratory-come-foundation, was born.

Since then, remarkable growth has occurred. eatART became a registered formal entity in 2008. Its artistic endeavors have included ContainR, a solar-paneled mobile cinema (recently on display in front of the Vancouver Public Library); a partnership with Daisy, the solar-paneled tricycle; 3E-ROI, an 80-foot long helix curve tracing evolution in terms of culture and technology; and a part in the Gramorail project, building pedal-powered vehicles for display on Vancouver’s disused railway lines.

Perhaps most importantly for eatART’s longevity, it also found a home.

The eatART laboratory on the Great Northern Way Campus is an indication of how this community functions. The day I visit – which, I’m assured, is A-typical – I am made party to a strategic communications meeting, the constant shriek of welding and metal-grinding, the taping of a television interview with BCIT Magazine, and Tippet, launching himself around the room in a hammock hung from a heavy-duty crane. The group moves from focused professionalism to hearty laughter and back again effortlessly, and the cluttered, vibrant lab space feels like your parents’ rec room and a boardroom all at once.

3E-ROI basks in the Nevada sunset

3E-ROI basks in the Nevada sunset

What I like the most about the work I do for eatART is being affiliated with eatART. Let’s face it – these guys are cool. They’ve taken some seemingly unrelated threads – Art! Technology! Engineering! Environmental activism! Hammocks! Cranes! – and tied them into a package worth marveling at.

A moving spider the size of Honda Civic; a shipping container housing a movie theater, powered by the sun; a stunningly beautiful conceptual piece celebrating the potential of technology… all built and exhibited in hopes of inspiring responsible energy use.

These are not your average art pieces, nor your average artists. This is, however, one radical and above-average community.

eatART is hosting a fundraiser and unveiling its Zero Emissions Mondo Spider on Saturday, January 16. Come on down to 577 Great Northern Way to witness history. Admission by donation. More details are available at www.eatart.org.