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iLAND

Interdisciplinary Laboratory for Art Nature and Dance

ArtsPool Member
  • About
    • iLAND
    • Jennifer Monson
    • Board of Directors
    • Funders
  • Dance Projects
    • move thing
    • Choreographies of Disaster
    • ditch
    • bend the even
    • in tow
    • IN TOW TV
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 1: Kaleidoscope
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 2: Nibia Line A
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 3: Nibia Line B
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 4: Fabric | Time Experiment
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 5: Shrugs with balls-5:3
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 6: Drawing Overlay
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 7: In Out Cut 5:3
      • IN TOW TV Season 1, Episode 8: OUT-OUT-IN-IN-IN-OUT-OUT-IN-OUT-IN
      • IN TOW TV Season 1, Episode 9: Composite | Line
      • IN TOW TV Season 1, Episode 10: Flipping the Firmament | Flesh
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 11: Perspective | Tone
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 12: T | I | M | E
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 13: Time + Tone | Tide Score B
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 14: Time + Tone | Tide Score A
      • IN TOW TV – Season 1, Episode 15: Bells Long
      • Bonus Episode! Season 1, Episode 16: Video Perspective
    • Past
  • A Field Guide to iLANDing
  • iLAB Residencies
  • iLAND Symposium
  • Resources
    • A Field Guide to iLANDing
    • BIRD BRAIN Educational Resource Guide
  • iLANDing Laboratories

Fantastic Futures

Fantastic Futures is a collective that began four years ago as a group of artists, designers, students, doctors, and activists from Iraq and the U.S. This project developed from conversations about the importance of sharing stories and collectively envisioning the future. To that end, the group created an interactive sound archive (http://fantasticfutures.fm) through which they could collect and share sounds from different locations and collage them together to form chance-based compositions. The group’s practice includes methods of collective field recording techniques, interviewing and listening exercises. With support from Rhizome, Fantastic Futures created a movement-based performance for The New Museum to experiment with modes of attentive listening. In this event, audience members are blindfolded as performers move around the space playing sounds from the archive using minimal, low-tech megaphones. In the summer of 2013 they collaborated with scientist Jason Munshi-South to investigate the biodiversity of Queens Flushing Meadows-Corona Park and current changes around its use as a public space through a series of recordings that documented the biological concept of the urban to rural gradient. The residency, supported by iLAND, cultivated in a multi-channel sound installation and performance at Eyebeam Art & Technology Center.

Through Body, Through Earth, Through Speech

April 4, 2017 by

Through Body, Through Earth, Through Speech engaged the general public in the Queens Flushing Meadows—Corona Park and Willets Point neighborhoods through research around questions of difference, biodiversity, proximity, and intervention. The collaborators explored and reinterpreted these questions through the cross-pollination of artistic practice and scientific method. Their processes included rat sample collecting, listening, recording, moving and mapping scores, tracings, video, and performance.

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