iLAB 2007 The City From a Plants Perspective: Mapping NYC as Native
Flora is a collaboration between Choreographer Lise Brenner,
Curator of Native Plants Ulrich Lorimer (at the Brooklyn Botanical
Garden), and Landscape Architect and Visual Artist Katrina Simon.
The residency was held during July - October, 2007, in NYC.
INITIAL CONCEPT:
Plants, landscapes and people exist as and within physical structures
that all move, all the time. So, botany, design, and choreography
should have points at which investigative methods, classification
systems, and ideal outcomes will intersect, and possibly even
strengthen one another.
BASIC METHODOLOGICAL PRINCIPLE:
What we do must both draw on and be useful for all 3 disciplines
GENERATIVE QUESTIONS:
Where are New York City native plant communities actually
located?
What are their characteristics and how are they integrated
into the urban landscape?
How does putting native plants at the center of my focus
alter my perception of the city, especially 'empty' lots and
waste areas? What does it do to my mental map of New York?
How do plants move?
How do plant communities move?
How is tracking native plants also movement and choreographic
research?
Map making is a creative process that we are all engaged
in on a daily basis
How can choreography be understood as a form of map making?
How is data collection integral to art making?
What does making art bring to data collection?
What is a map?
How can the combination of our disciplines be used to get
people out in the city, enjoying and perhaps coming to value
the natural resources on offer?
ACTIVITIES UNDERTAKEN (roughly in chronological order):
Identify native plant communities in New York City to find
two distinctive sites
Share bibliographies (see Resource List)
Make site visits (see photos)
Create a shared classification system, based on 7 qualities
of human movement utilized in ballet technique (see Project
Documentation)
When collective shift or sudden realization occurs, capture
it in writing and incorporate into Matrix
Matrix stayed open-ended; modelling how collaborative activity
can expand ideas and practices
Capture images hinting at ideas being discussed while on
site (see photos)
Plan interactive public events, facilitating active experimentation
with data collection, creative map making, and looking at
the landscape from a variety of perspectives
Public events = experiment with collective data collection
as both a deductive and creative activity (see photos, especially
participant's notebooks)
Reflection and discussion
PUBLIC EVENTS FLOYD BENNETT FIELD, Sunday, September 30, 2007, 12-5pm;
Floyd Benett Field / Ryan's Visitor Center, Brooklyn, NY.
Floyd Bennett Field, eastern side - dune habitat
Floyd Bennett Field, western side - runway and beach
CONEY ISLAND, Friday, October 5, 2007, 5pm; Coney Island
/ Nathan's, Brooklyn, NY.
Plants, Movement, and Landscape 1
Starting from the reality of walking around an urban landscape,
looking for native plants, my questions were very basic: what
do we actually do? What do I actually experience? What is interesting
about it? ... ideas about mapping started from there. Lise
Brenner
The idea that plants can move around, even hundreds of miles
away, is quite alien to some people. It is a process that occurs
on a time scale much larger than our lifetime and is therefore
hard to grasp immediately. I have a lot of faith and hope in
our local ecosystems and their ability to restore themselves
to equilibrium. Uli
Lorimer
I found concentrating on movement in its many aspects a rich
way to consider the potential and inherent resilience of the
plant world. Katrina
Simon
Plants, Movement, and Landscape 2 (Time)
...apparently simple idea of 'movement' ...shed light on the
relationships of kinetic movement on several different planes
of thinking and on varied time scales... It gave me a sense
of how layered and ingenious ecological processes are, and how
contingent Katrina
Simon
I realized that what I was interested in was 'found choreography'...
landscape as the locus for research into movement: quality,
juxtaposition... the differences between ecological/biological/human/built/natural
etc timeframes... For me this is all fundamental to the craft
(and discussion) of choreography and dancing. Lise
Brenner
Plants, Movement, and Landscape 3 (Succession, Dispersal)
...plant succession and disturbance and the impact of human
activities... dovetails nicely with landscape architecture,
particularly when discussing urban planning and land use. We
must be able to find a sustainable balance between natural space
and urban/societal progression... Katrina
Simon
In the public events, we started with the plants, and the habitat,
which is how we ourselves started; it was our point of reference.
Our goal was to encourage people to see more, or differently,
and the plants gave a focus and a reason for doing that. Lise
Brenner
Plants, Movement, and Landscape 4 (Disturbance)
...habitats as sites of movement research... an exercise in
abstract art-making, grounded in AND MADE POSSIBLE BY having
the plants as concrete points of reference. Uli's teaching about
dispersal, disturbance, etc. provided a series of patterns through
which all the random observations (about wind in the grass,
how the milkweed pod explodes, which plants are native, which
are introduced, etc) could be arranged. It helped the walkers
to differentiate, and then to start choosing how they wanted
to see a place... the first step to mapping, and to creative
seeing ... Lise
Brenner
...when open but a few more eyes to the natural splendour which
exists at the edges of our city, then those enlightened people
can begin to value such spaces. The more people value natural
areas, wherever and as they are, the closer we can come to the
equilibrium I spoke of earlier between urban and natural environments.
Uli
Lorimer
Participants:
Lise Brenner, Choreographer, NYC
Ulrich Lorimer, Curator, Native Plants, Brooklyn Botanical Garden,
NYC
Katrina Simon, Landscape architect and visual artist, Sydney,
Australia
Collaborator Bios: Lise Brenner is a choreographer whose
recent work has been motivated by the desire to understand what
makes a given place unique. Recent works include The Great Migration
(Theatr Felinfach, Wales, 2003); RADIODANCE (Radio Patapoe and
De Appel, Amsterdam, 2004) a collaboration with sound artist
Colin McLean and designer/architect Marion Traenkle; Peter Stuyvesant's
Ghost (New York, 2006, archived at www.free103point9.org/psg.php)
a series of events and walking tours involving sound artists
from the US and abroad, public pay phones, NY Audubon and the
Wildlife Conservation Society; and MASS (New York, 2007) in
collaboration with opera composer Eddy Ficklin. Formerly on
the ballet faculty of Alfredo Corvino's Dance Circle Studio
(New York), she teaches ballet, contemporary technique, and
composition in the Netherlands, Germany, Wales and the US. Her
first academic article is due to be published in the U.K.-based
performance theory journal "Parallax" in late 2007.
Ulrich Lorimer is Curator of Native
Flora at Brooklyn Botanic Garden. A graduate of the University
of Delaware Plant Science Department, he has nurtured a lifelong
passion for the outdoors, native woodlands and their plant communities.
He teaches at the garden on soil and pest management as well
as on native and invasive plants.
Katrina Simon has a background
in both architecture and landscape architecture and is currently
Senior Lecturer in Landscape Architecture at the University
of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia. She has received numerous
design awards for ideas competitions and collaborative urban
design projects, and has published articles on design research,
design criticism and cemetery history and theory. Her research
includes an ongoing exhibition practice which explores cartographic
representation of landscape, in particular the relationships
between three dimensional form and two dimensional representation,
most often explored through objects and 2d works in series which
range in scale from 1:500 000 000 to 1:1. This work also explores
the actual performance of making map projections and markings,
and tries to cultivate an appreciation for subtlety and difference
in landscape experience and representation.
Contact:
Lise Brenner, Choreographer
Email:
Jennifer Monson, Artistic Director, iLAND, Inc.
Phone: (917) 860-8239
Email:
iLAB 2007 is supported in part by the Robison Foundation.