|
|
|||||||||
|
September 9th through October 17th Interactive Performance Dates:
Máximo González’s Changarrito vending stand is based on nomadic, ambulant markets in Mexico City. Small works by a large selection of artists are donated and sold through the cart, all for under $20. Changarrito made its debut in Madrid during ARCO’05, where González presented it as an alternative to the official gallery selection presented by the Mexican cultural authorities. Initially spurned by fair authorities, it is now embraced by art fairs internationally. Pimp My Piragua is a mobile public art project by Miguel Luciano that commemorates the innovations of Latino street vendors by transforming a traditional pushcart for selling shaved ice (Piraguas) into a hyper-modified and technologically advanced pushcart-tricycle with a high powered sound and video system. Piragua carts were among the first start-up businesses for Latino immigrants in New York. SOS Mobile Classroom by Tattfoo Tan merges a cargo bicycle with a mobile classroom to encourage conversation regarding green and sustainable practices by presenting composting and mobile gardening workshops. SOS Mobile Classroom presents an intersection of art with entrepreneurship, mobility, sustainability, grassroots innovation, and the recognition of local economies. Ricardo Miranda Zuñiga’s The Undocumented Drones employs found objects and debris with embedded electronics, each focused on performing a single task. Worker drones and rogue drones are unified by their aesthetics but each have their own unique characteristics and role. Representing a near slave class of undocumented workers within the US, the drones do not have a voice or any other means of expression and exist merely to wander the gallery and provide cheap labor. ... Atom Cianfarani has been a leader in sustainable design for the last decade. In 2005 Cianfarani developed the most sustainable restaurant in North America, and pioneered the world's first light-pipe chandelier. Cianfarani sits on the board of the Lower East Side Ecology Center in New York City and is currently working on a feature documentary about global food waste. Tattfoo Tan seeks an immediate, direct, and effective exploration of issues related to the individual in society, collapsing the categories of 'art' and 'life'. Through the employment of multiple forms of media and various platforms of presentation, Tattfoo promotes group participation including himself and audience. Engaging mind and body in actions that transform the making of art into a ritualized and shared experience. Tattfoo prefers to develop projects that are ephemeral and conceptual. Ricardo Miranda Zuñiga approaches art as a social practice that seeks to establish dialogue in public spaces using a wide variety of media. Zuñiga was born to immigrant parents and was raised between Nicaragua and San Francisco. He completed his undergraduate studies at UC Berkeley in Practice of Art and English Literature, and received an MFA from Carnegie Mellon University. He currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY and is an Associate Professor of Film and Media Studies at CUNY Hunter.
...
|
|
Momenta's programming is supported in part by NYC Department of Cultural Affairs, The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the Harriet Ames Charitable Trust, The Greenwall Foundation, The Greenwich Foundation, The Jerome Foundation, The Lily Auchincloss Foundation, The New York Community Trust, The New York State Council on the Arts, and individual contributors. |
|
current projects | past projects | press archive | membership | store | about us | map | submissions |
search
|