Finanzkrise/Crise financière/Crisi finanziaria, 2009–10 Installed at 108 State Street, Ithaca, NY for To Let, organized by Carrie Chalmers, Graham MacDougal, and Wilka Roig of The Working Relationship.
Texts: "Finanzkrise/Crise financière/Crisi finanziaria" by Nathan Townes-Anderson
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Note: Some may have noticed a small change in the installation at 208 E. State Street, Finanz krise/Crise financière/Crisi finanziaria. An element in the assembly that had been provided by American Arts and Crafts has sold. This was a steel wine bottle holder in the shape of a dog. I had been anxious about how to approach an installation on the Commons, not wanting to do any “plop art” that paid little or no attention to the specificities of the site. So, I spent a lot of time walking up and down the Commons, attempting to figure out precisely what the aesthetics of this place had to offer me in terms of a visual language. How would I be able to manifest something within the Commons that would be both outside of it (that is, be legible as a difference, however slight) and continuous with it? Which is to say, how could I fit into the Commons, and make something that thinks with the Commons? The relationship between thinking and acting was on my mind, particularly thinking and acting as it related to the marketplace. At the time, I was reading Hannah Arendt’s Life of the Mind, where she ponders the ways and means to bring thinking out of hiding, to “tease it into manifestation”:
Arendt is of course describing Socrates. I was thinking of another philosopher of the marketplace: “I am Diogenes the Dog. I nuzzle the kind, bark at the greedy, and bite scoundrels.” |
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