Page 47 of A Field Guide to iLANDing.
Fallow Time
Fallow Time
Movement Research Spring Festival in Collaboration with iLAND
Tuesday May 27 – Monday June 2
fallow time was curated by Elliott Maltby, Jennifer Monson, Aisha Ohs, and Tatyana Tenenbaum in partnership with the Movement Research Spring Festival. iLAND Symposium events included a workshop and performance with Through Earth, Through Body, Through Speech at Flushing Meadows Park and the Queens Museum and Sensing to Know/Analyzing to Imagine: a talk and walk exploring the dual perspective of the artist-scientist with artist scientists Amy Berkow, Kathleen McCarthy, Jason Munshi-South and Hara Wolz. The symposium also included two days of fallow time at Floyd Bennett Field, Gateway National Recreation area camping site.
For more information check out the Fallow Time Brochure or the Movement Research website.
Curatorial Statement
A fallow field is one that is plowed – it is prepared but then left open. fallow time is a festival that invites emptiness or the unanticipated. The festival is prepared space and time for open action, or inaction, to take place. It creates a platform for participation, intergenerational meetings and intersectionality to support all bodies in their creative potential. We are providing time for concrete and insubstantial ideas to be tested, to take hold and grow…or fail. fallow time is a time of rest, where unexpected actions and materials make contact and allow for new forms and systems to flourish: a chance for us to be together that is not dictated by any need to produce. The festival examines both urban ecologies and artistic production in our society. Inviting the multiple meanings of sustainability to rub against a range of creative practices, we will enact scenarios for thriving in our increasingly unpredictable environment. fallow time allows us to ground ourselves and to recuperate the values that are so central to dance: the values of the body to listen, feed, touch, see, taste, deliver, heal, digest, produce, die.
Overview
Tuesday May 27 – 11-6pm – Flushing Meadows Corona Park and the Queens Museum – Free
Through Earth, Through Body, Through Speech Join Fantastic Futures and Jason Munshi-South for the workshop and per formance listed below, a continuation of their summer 2013 iLAB residency in Flushing Meadows Corona Park and Willets Point. The collaboration uses a cross-pollination of ar tistic practice and scientific method to engage the local community in a conversation around personal and family histories of the park and their visions of the park’s future.
Workshop – 11am-3pm
Meet at the north end of the Unisphere. Rain or Shine.
A movement and mapping exercise based on Munshi-South’s study of white-footed mice, “Urban landscape genetics: canopy cover predicts gene flow between white-footed mouse (Peromyscus leucopus) populations in New York City.”
A light informal lunch will be provided. Activities are appropriate for all ages.
Performance – 4-6pm
In the Queens Museum of Art A multi-channel sound installation and per formance that represents the scientific concept of an urban to rural gradient. Field recordings of the park are layered with interviews in which visitors are asked to express their memories and hopes for the park, and with a spoken narrative from a mouse’s perspective based on urban landscape genetics. participants in both workshop and performance: Fantastic Futures (Julio Hernandez, Huong Ngo, Phuong Nguyen, Solgil Oh, Sable Elyse, Or Zubalsky) and Jason Munshi-South.
For additional information for Tuesday’s events, email info@ilandart.org or call 917-860-8239.