Metabolic Studio Public Salon
Felicity Powell
Friday, October 2, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission



About The Salon
Alongside the well-known association of medals with glory and achievement lies another darker tradition of the medal as an indicator of dishonour. Celebrating works that denounce their subjects and expose the rich tradition of this largely unexplored medal type, Medals of Dishonour is currently on exhibition at British Museum.

Medals of Dishonour reframes items in the British Museum’s permanent collection by presenting selected historic medals alongside newly-commissioned medals by thirteen internationally recognized artists, including Jake and Dinos Chapman, Ellen Gallagher, Richard Hamilton, Mona Hatoum, William Kentridge, Grayson Perry and Felicity Powell. Elegantly displaying the historical and contemporary medals together the exhibition offers a long view through history that is both intelligent and wry.

Art historian Andrew Graham-Dixon writes that Felicity Powell, the conceptual progenitor and co-curator of Medals of Dishonour, has “singlehandedly…revived an entire Renaissance tradition - a rich and intricate tradition of subtle workmanship and symbolism”. At the Metabolic Studio Felicity will discuss both Medals of Dishonour and works from her recent solo show at London’s Domobaal. It will be a talk “about subversion, secret histories and historical hiccups”.


About The Salon Presenter
London-based artist Felicity Powell has exhibited widely on the international stage and had solo exhibitions at venues including the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. In addition to winning the Millennium Medal Competition by The Royal Mint and The British Art Medal Society, she has received numerous other awards and honors for her work, including commissions from the Linnaean Society and the Permanent Collection of the V&A Sculpture Department. She was elected a council member of the British Arts Medal Society in 2002.

Images
Above: Felicity Powell: Hot Air
Image courtesy: the British Museum

Further Information
Medals of Dishonour at the British Museum

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Metabolic Studio Public Salon
Julian Laird
Friday, September 25, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission




Arctic Ice and Frozen Seeds - Feeding the Future


About The Salon
High in the Arctic, deep inside a frozen mountain, a concrete bunker provides protection to one of the most important resources for human life on Earth - seeds. Julian Laird, of the Rome-based Global Crop Diversity Trust, one of the principal partners in this ambitious project, will describe not only how the Svalbard Global Seed Vault was built and how it works, but why its treasure is so valuable and yet so threatened.

About The Salon Presenter
Julian is Director of Development and Communications at the Global Crop Diversity Trust, a young international organisation, with which he has been involved since before the Trust became a legal entity. Before moving to the Trust, Julian was Director of Programmes and Acting Chief Executive of Earthwatch Institute (Europe), an international non-profit organisation supporting environmental field research and conservation in 40 countries. Julian has been involved in the design and development of capacity building programmes in national parks throughout Africa, as well as global environmental awareness-raising campaigns in the public and private sectors.

Above: The Svalbard Global Seed Vault
Image courtesy: Mari Tefre/Global Crop Diversity Trust

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Metabolic Studio Public Salon
Public Practice, Otis College of Art and Design
Friday, September 18, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission


Reunion/Reunión:
“Laton, CA: Public Practice in the San Joaquin Valley”


About The Salon

A cohort of nine first year MFA students designed a collaborative project, building on their observations, their skills and community needs as observed over several months. Their final project took place on Saturday, March 21st, in a public video installation highlighting the unique identity of Laton through multiple outdoor projections onto freshly painted buildings.

People of the community and visitors processed along the two block long main street of the small town of 1200 where they encountered music, video projections of life in the community, and opportunities to talk about the future of the region. Inside the local merchants stores, short video documentaries revealed the role of small businesses in the identity of this community. The once-abandoned Methodist Church was recreated as a community space and art studio. During the evening installation it featured a free store to nurture a temporary barter and exchange system, created by Suzanne Lacy and Otis students, and a video installation by Andrea Bowers. Photographer Raul Vega and Videographer Dana Duff also produced work on Laton suitable for this presentation.

The salon will present questions about how art can influence and change a community. After a presentation on their collaborative “Reunion / Reunion” project, students will open the floor to engage a critical dialogue about the work, and its artistic and political pursuits.


About The Salon Presenters

Public Practice is a new MFA program at Otis College of Art and Design. Its focus is on developing projects that ask the question “who and what is art created for?” With community building, and political action in mind, what can art accomplish? Graduate students explore new artistic strategies and practices based on observation, research, social commentary and activism, and visual and performance arts productions in the public realm.

Above: Event postcard
Image courtesy: Public Practice Otis College of Art and Design

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Metabolic Studio Public Salon
Rickey Smith
Friday, September 11, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission


Urban Green on Spring


About The Salon
You may have noticed that Millies - the old hamburger stand on the Los Angeles State Historic Park - has been repainted a fetching citrus shade recently? Reincarnated for the 21st century, Millie’s burger stand is in the process of becoming "Urban Green at LASHP". Rather than burger and chips though, Urban Green will grow vegetables and serve them up in delicious vegetarian dishes.

Urban Green has contracted with The State of California Parks and Recreation to build an interactive, interpretive system on the site of The Historic State Park in Downtown Los Angeles. The development envisions “ON SPRING” as a community hub with activities involving educational and practical application of sustainable functions which guests can incorporate into their own personal lives.

Discussing the venture and answering questions will be Urban Green Founder and Director, Rickey Smith.

About The Salon Presenter

Rickey Smith is founder and principal of Urban Green, a social entrepreneurship dedicated to restoring, developing and promoting “green space” within the communities it serves. Urban Green was designed upon Rickey’s philosophy of Circular Synergy, which seeks to establish a CLEAR path connecting the inter-disciplines of Cuisine, Land-use, Environment, and Architecture into Renewable cycles of self-reliant communities.

Inspired by the challenge to evolve food production in the United States, and seeking to create a deeper, more significant experience than just the mere exchange of goods for money, Rickey is committed to the development of functional, small-scale operations using closed-loop, urban-farming systems within the Los Angeles Metropolitan area.

Recognized as a leader and change agent who passionately believes in the Urban Green adage “Waste not. Want not.” He is currently a guest lecturer at UCLA, local charter schools and conference round table discussions. Rickey is also recognized for his community service work with diverse organizations such as Girl Scouts of Greater Los Angeles Robotics Team and Mother’s Club in Pasadena.

Above: pre-green Millies
Image courtesy http://lashp.wordpress.com

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Metabolic Studio Public Salon
Dan Etheridge
Friday, September 4, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission


A New Food Landscape in post-Katrina New Orleans
About the Salon
This salon will present the collaborative work of the Tulane City Center (TCC) and the New Orleans Food and Farm Network (NOFFN) in their efforts to support the growing urban farming/local food movement in New Orleans. Although part of a national trend, the projects presented here also grew out of a post disaster context that has enabled many new visions to emerge with a high probability of success.

The salon will specifically look at two larger scale initiatives in the New Orleans area: the Viet Village Urban Farm (a proposed 28acre urban farm and farmers market in the principal Vietnamese nighborhood in New Orleans) and the Hollygrove Growers Market and Farm (a smaller local growers market and urban farming training center).

These projects differ in scale and intent, however they were both supported by the TCC/NOFFN collaboration that brought design, planning, technical and other skills to projects that had great community support and a piece of land. We feel we have developed a model to support groups that lack the resources to access these skill sets, and the projects we will present showcase how these community generated initiatives can begin to garner the momentum they need to become reality.

About the Salon Presenter
Dan Etheridge is Associate Director of the Tulane City Center and Adjunct Lecturer at the Tulane School of Architecture. Dan has a degree in Applied Environmental Management from Southern Cross University in New South Wales, Australia, is a Fellow of the Institute for Environmental Communications at Loyola University New Orleans, and has worked for the last five years at the intersection of regional coastal restoration strategies and urban design and policy. He has been published in environmental science and management journals, design publications and community advocacy forums and continues to work across these disciplines in research and practice. In addition, Dan is a partner in the environmental consulting practice Meffert + Etheridge Environmental Projects that specializes in bringing sound ecological practice and communication to design, planning and development projects.

Further information: www.tulanecitycenter.org

Image: Tulane City Center, courtesy Dan Etheridge

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Metabolic Studio Public Salon
Kirk Anderson & Amy Seidenwurm
Friday, August 28, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission



Let the Bees Be Bees!

About the Salon

Convinced that the current decline in bee numbers is the result of their ‘enslavement’ to industrial processes, Kirk and Amy will discuss the pleasures of beekeeping and ways to encourage the native feral bee population.

Bees make honey to survive, and they’ve been doing it a long time. In its natural state, honey contains sugars, yeast and enzymes. It can also contain pollen and propolis (the resinous substance made by bees to seal cracks and small gaps in their hive). Humans discovered this wonderful honey, and eventually figured out a way to make the bees work for them.

In the early days, beekeepers used an inverted straw basket called a ‘skep’ to house the bees. Later, a man named Langstroth invented the current square wooden box with removable wood frames. This made it much easier for beekeepers to look at their bees and to get the honey out.

Honey can be extracted two ways: the frames can be put in a centrifugal extractor and the honey spun out of the comb or the comb can be cut out of the frame, crushed and the honey strained from it. Commercial beekeepers store the extracted honey in 55 gallon drums until it’s needed. Honey left alone will crystallize. It has to be liquefied to get it out of the drum. If the temperature used to melt the honey is less than 120E it can still be called “raw”. Honey can also be pasteurized (at temperatures up to 280E) to stabilize it and improve shelf life by killing the natural yeast and enzymes.

Humans like to control their environment and the living creatures in it, so beekeepers figured out ways for their bees to make more honey. However, “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” really applies to bees. When bees and their hive are messed with, all sorts of problems can arise. If bees are allowed to go about their business as they always have, they’ll create strong hives and delicious, beneficial honey.

About the Salon Presenters

Kirk Anderson is an urban beekeeper and the founder of an LA collective of small-scale organic beekeepers. His goal is to do right by the bees so that the bees can return the favor. Amy Seidenwurm is a fan of bees, food, dogs, wine, music, typography, technology and basketball. In her professional life, she is a digital marketing geek.

Above: Bees settle into a front porch hive cut out of a wood-and-masonry dollhouse, Los Angeles 2009. Courtesy Kirk Anderson

Further Information: www.backwardsbeekeepers.com

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Metabolic Studio Public Salon
Detective Don Hrycyk
Friday, August 21, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission


Art Fraud in L.A.


About The Salon
Los Angeles is the second largest center for the visual arts in the U.S. This has attracted art thieves and conmen (and women) who have often targeted the cultural heritage of the city. LAPD's two-detective Art Theft Detail has investigated many of these crimes involving not only art but other types of cultural property including rare books, musical instruments, fossils, and Hollywood movie props. These crimes involve not only theft of art but also fakes, fraud and forgeries.

Detective Hrycyk will discuss some of these cases and profile the type of art criminals who prey on artists, art dealers and collectors. Preventive measures that art lovers can take to protect themselves will also be discussed. Additional information about the Art Theft Detail including crime alerts on stolen art can be found at http://www.lapdonline.org/art_theft

About the Salon Presenter
Don Hrycyk is the detective in charge of LAPD’s Art Theft Detail – the only full-time municipal art investigative unit in the United States. During the 15 years that he has been in this position, the unit has recovered over $77 million in cultural property. He has been a police officer for over 35 years. Prior to investigating art crimes, Hrycyk worked a variety of assignments including homicide, robbery, sex crimes, burglary, juvenile, assaults, forgery, gangs, and patrol.

He graduated from California State University where he majored in Criminology. He teaches Art Crimes Investigation to law enforcement officers and lectures on the art crime problem. Hrycyk is a recipient of the Smithsonian Institution’s Burke Award for Excellence in Cultural Property Protection.


Image courtesy Det. Don Hrycyk

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Metabolic Studio Public Salon
Greenmeme
Friday, August 14, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission






Weaving the Landscape
About the Salon
Freya Bardell and Brian Howe of the Los Angeles-based design studio Greenmeme will discuss a variety of their projects. Their cross-disciplinary collective has worked to bridge artistic and scientific disciplines to produce public art, architecture, landscape and ecological design projects, which seek to raise awareness of the cultural and environmental conditions around them. Using science, form, history, story-telling and myth, they have created a series of site-specific works which are playful and educational interpretations of their surroundings. Come join our discussion on River Livers, Matryoshka dolls and how to harness the power of Grandmothers!

Further information: www.greenmeme.com

Image: Matryoshka, Plummer Park 2009 ©2004-2009 Dwell LLC

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Metabolic Studio Public Salon
Charles Phoenix
Friday, August 7, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission



Charles Phoenix's Retro Slide Show Tour of Southern California

About The Salon

“It is the age of space and we have just landed in the most modern metropolis on the planet…”

A live vintage slide show performance by pop-culture expert Charles Phoenix. With his infectious enthusiasm and eagle eye for funny and thought provoking details Charles celebrates Southern California in the 1950s & 60s. You will experience the booming car culture, space age suburbia, fast food stands, shopping centers and drive-in's like you never have before. Go behind the scenes in Hollywood, see famous landmarks,then enjoy Knott's Berry Farm, Marineland and Disneyland when they were new and much, much, more-IN COLOR!

“… the sun-kissed Southern Californians seen here are clearly having the time of their lives. And so are we.” – Los Angeles Times (Critic’s Choice)

“so entertaining we wish it would last forever…” – LA Weekly (Pick of the Week)


About the Salon Presenter

Entertainer, author and pop-culture expert Charles Phoenix is known for his live hilarious retro slide show performances, comparing Downtown Los Angeles to Disneyland, Astro-Weenie Christmas Tree and colorful coffee table books. He offers a hip and highly original take on kitschy and classic American culture. Fans from coast to coast enjoy his infectious enthusiasm, gracious sense of humor and keen eye for detail. Charles is also a recurring correspondent for NPR’s Day to Day and The Martha Stewart Show. Charles was the Grand Marshall of this years DooDah Parade in Pasadena,CA. LA WEEKLY chose Charles for the cover of its 2008 people issue, calling him the Kodachrome King. For more on Charles and to sign up for his Slide of the Week go to www.CharlesPhoenix.com

Image courtesy Charles Phoenix

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Metabolic Studio Public Salon
Finishing School
Friday, July 31, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission


M.O.L.D. / Bioindicator Workshop


About the Salon
Finishing School will discuss their most recent project M.O.L.D. (2009), a performative installation that investigates critical issues related to the science, politics, and culture of food through the lens of decomposition. The salon audience will also participate in a workshop where they will build their own amateur bioindicators to assess food quality and safety.

About the Salon Participants
Formed in late 2001, Finishing School is a collective identity that investigates diverse social, political, and environmental issues. Their projects combine praxis, play, and activism and engage viewers through various participatory models. They have exhibited extensively both nationally and internationally.

Finishing School was recently the inaugural participants in MOCA's Engagement Party, an ongoing "artists residency" program at MOCA in Los Angeles where they presented three projects: Finding Joy (2008), The Drug Run (2008), and Executive Order Karaoke (2008). Other current projects include Little Pharma (2008), which investigates alternative medicines and lifestyles as a viable antidote to some of the drug industry's pathologies. Little Pharma consists of a series of workshops, roundtable meetings, lectures, weblog, community medicinal garden, and drug themed bike ride.

Past projects include Public Interaction Objects (2006), a series of low-tech participatory objects including meet/greet, a semi-autonomous drone designed to move through public spaces and greet individuals with multilingual salutations representing the six official languages of the United Nations; The Patriot Library (2003), a working library that provides access to books, periodicals, and other media considered "dangerous" by the United States government; and Saturday School (2001), a temporary, nomadic teaching institution offering multidisciplinary classes that dissect, question, and illuminate various aspects of everyday life.

Further information: www.finishing-school.net

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Metabolic Studio Public Salon
Jill Leovy
Friday, July 24, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission





The Homicide Report

About the salon

Two or three homicides occur every day in Los Angeles County, but major newspapers report on only around 10% of these. Realizing that most of the stories went untold, LA Times crime reporter Jill Leovy committed to reporting each and every single murder.

Leovy initiated the blog the Homicide Report in 2007 with just 17 names received from the local coroner's office. A year later, the blog had documented every murder in Los Angeles County, 845 in all, something that had never been done before.

The Homicide Blog, "seeks to exploit the advantages of the web to eliminate selectivity in homicide coverage and give readers a more complete picture of who dies from homicide, where, and why -- thus conveying both the personal story and the statistical story with greater accuracy."

About the presenter

Jill Leovy is a crime reporter for the Los Angeles Times. Click here to access the Homicide Report.

Photo: Pearl White sits near a vigil for her cousin, Dennis Joe Rodgers, Jr. who was shot and killed Wednesday night, 7.8.09.Credit: Ruben Vives/Los Angeles Times

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Metabolic Studio Public Salon
Deborah Kane
Friday, July 10, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission


A Facebook for Food as Local Goes Online:
Getting Regional Food to Market with FoodHub


About the Salon

Demand for local food is at an all-time high. As a result, larger-volume and institutional purchasers such as public schools, colleges, hospitals, retail grocery stores and many others are increasingly assigning geographic preference to their key purchase criteria along with long-standing cost, quality, quantity, and delivery requirements. Yet every year more American small- and medium-sized family farms go out of business, having not found a viable method for accessing this increased market demand for their products. This year in the Pacific Northwest the farmer with a fire sale on blueberries will have access to hundreds of online wholesale buyers through a new tool called FoodHub. Will it save the family farm? It just might. Come find out more. (see too www.ecotrust.org/foodhub/)

About the Salon Participant

Deborah Kane’s passion for promoting local and sustainable agriculture places her at that critical junction where the culinary arts and the sustainable agriculture movement intersect. A tireless advocate for sustainable agriculture and food-related industries, Kane currently serves as vice president of Food and Farms at Ecotrust, a Northwest-based conservation organization.

Under Kane's leadership, Oregon became the first state in the nation to institutionalize the notion of getting regionally produced food into public schools by creating full time ‘farm to school’ positions in both its Departments of Education and Agriculture. Kane is the publisher of Edible Portland, an award-winning quarterly magazine that celebrates the region’s bounty, season by delicious season.

FoodHub, Kane's latest project, is an online directory and marketplace designed to make it easy and efficient for buyers and sellers of regional food to find one another and conduct business. Kane looks forward to the day when supply chains are transparent and information flows readily so that questions such as “I wonder where I can sell these parsnips” and “Where can I get 120 pounds of wild salmon” are answered with the click of a button.


Photo: Chef John Toboada receives a delivery of local produce from farmer Laura Masterson. Foodhub makes it possible for local producers to find (hungry) buyers.

Photo courtesy Deborah Kane.

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Metabolic Studio Public Salon
Kevin Kuzma
Friday, June 26, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission

Edendale: Where the Hollywood film industry was born


About the Salon

This year marks the centennial of the first permanent movie studio to set up shop in Los Angeles. But that first studio and others that sprang up nearby where not located in Hollywood. They cranked out silent films several miles east in a village called Edendale, which straddled the border of what is now Echo Park and Silver Lake. The presentation will cover the founding of that first studio, Selig Polyscope, and the emergence and brief reign of Edendale as the center of the region's movie making business.

About the Salon Participant

Angelino Heights resident Kevin Kuzma is president of the Echo Park Historical Society and the owner of Revival Arts Restoration, a preservation and restoration consulting company.

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Updated -- New Salon Speakers For This Friday
Wouter Osterholt & Elke Uitentuis
Friday, June 19, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission

The Farmlab Public Salon Series welcomes Wouter Osterholt & Elke Uitentuis as the Salon presenters on Friday, June 19, 2009 @ Noon.

Osterholt and Uitentuis are currently MAK Center Artists and Architects-in-Residence.

For more information about Osterholt and Uitentuis, please visit their website and see the "about" section at the bottom of this page.

Special thanks to the duo for being able and willing to come Friday on such short notice. Thanks, too, to the MAK staff.

The Salon Series also apologies to anyone anticipating seeing our previously scheduled Salon speakers this week. That duo are unable to participate.

-- Farmlab Public Salon Series

About the Salon Presenters

As of 2005 Wouter Osterholt and Elke Uitentuis have been collaborating together as an artistduo. Their work utilizes a context-specific approach, investigating the relationship between people and their surroundings. They try to visualize the friction of regulation and improvisation in relationship to the planning of society and space and to unravel hidden hierarchies in order to offer an insight into the contradicting interests defining the use of public space. The test-situations they create are supposed to challenge people to redefine their relationship with their surroundings and their personal attitude towards ‘citizenship’.

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Goat Video #2

video

Second in a series. The first is here.

GoatCam Video

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State Park To Close?

The Los Angeles State Historic Park -- site of the Anabolic Monument, past site of Not A Cornfield -- is under threat of being shut down.

LASHP is not alone. 220 of California's 279 state parks, beaches, and preserves are on a budget-cutting hit list. Here's a Los Angeles Times summary. Here's the Downtown News on the local park. And here's an editorial cartoon from the Garment & Citizen.

Finally, here's the website of the California State Parks Foundation, a "friends-of" group to the California State Parks Department.

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Checking in With SCF Trees @ The Huntington


Eduardo, Jamal, Steve and Roberto from Yo Watts pose with pomelos they picked in the Huntington Botanitcal Gardens fruit orchard after a full day of mulching the South Central Farm trees.

For more information about the trees, the Huntington, the Farm, and Farmlab, please see this page.


Farmlab photo by Meredith Hackleman 2009

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Lauren Bon, Metabolic Studio Part of L.A. River Multimedia Piece


KCET.org's latest "Departures" feature is about the L.A. River.

Lauren Bon is among the interviewees. There's also a Metabolic Studio group video portrait.

View the full project here.


Screen grab from KCET.org

(Disclosure: Metabolic Studio's Jeremy Rosenberg freelances for KCET.org)

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Goat Video

video

More goat-related info is here.


GoatCam video, 2009

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F.L.A.G. Planted At Homegirl Cafe


Anna, Homegirl Cafe grower and Master Gardener trainee, picks up seedlings at the Metabolic Studio for the F.L.A.G. ag bins newly located behind Homegirl Cafe at the Homeboy Industries building.


Cell phone photo for Farmlab by Meredith Hackleman, 2009

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New Play Features Rainwater Collected At Metabolic Studio


Touch The Water, indeed.

Touch The Water: A River Play, the new work from L.A.'s legendary Cornerstone Theater Company has various connections to the Metabolic Studio -- not the least of which is the production's inclusion of rain water collected at the Studio.

TTW opens Saturday, June 6. It was written By Julie Hébert and directed by Juliette Carrillo. Visit the company's website for more info.


Farmlab Photo, 2009

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Behind the Scenes at the Not A Cornfield Exhibition


Prior to the opening of the continuing Not A Cornfield exhibition at the George Eastman House, in Rochester, New York, Lauren Bon (center) and Janet Owen Driggs (typing, left) work on the project's installation.


Metabolic Studio photo by Steve Rowell, 2009

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Farmlab Public Salon
Riccarlo Porter
Friday, June 5, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission


How-To For Economic Dilemnas


About the Salon

Focus: Insightful solutions and ideas for troubling economic times get a step-by-step once-over by Riccarlo Porter, ACS (Toastmaster). He give green initiatives for new development and alternative speak for collective development.

The Main conclusion: To give participants new hope in dealing with a troubled system.

Q&A to follow.

About the Salon Participant

Riccarlo Porter
developed a perspective on Public Relations through theater, media experience and social activism. Recently, working on four plays; two of which, he is the director. At Aware 1 Magazine, he wrote contracts, advised on production, placed magazines, and set up locations for photo shoots. He also writes scripts and articles for newspapers and magazines. He has developed a knack for networking from working as a Co-host on Go Gospel Radio and ad consultant for Fix My PC Please, I Will Recycling Service, and other companies.

Image courtesy Riccarlo Porter

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More From The Eagle Rock Exhbition



Lauren Bon and the Metabolic Studio have a work, titled PSQ.2, in this exhibition.

The text in the image above reads:

"Lauren Bon and The Metabolic Studio
PSQ.2 / Eagle Rock Arts Center 2009
material: corn fodder, hydro seed, water
Dimensions: 8 feet, 4 feet, 4 feet
edition of 100

This object is in a process of decay. The remainder of one process -- the growing of corn -- is the material for this structural form. That form once bundled and shaped is impregnated with seeds, brought to the site and connected to reclaimed water. This sculptural object's very form will change as a process of growing another life on it. Catabolism is the term that refers to the breakdown of metabolic form. It is the process by which ground is made which allows new things to emerge. The connection to pregnancy and mothering is there; as is the idea of generations. Once the flowers are mature, they will blow to neighboring ground where more flowers will emerge."

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Farmlab Public Salon
Victoria Yust and Ian McIlvaine
Friday, May 29, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission




Old Ideas that should be new again...and other dreams for L.A.


About the Salon

Monorail? Solar hot water on every roof? Courtyard housing? Shared green spaces? Natural hot spring community bathhouse?

Architects Ian McIlvaine and Victoria Yust, of Tierra Sol y Mar, will present a few projects, still in their very early stages, that incorporate these old, yet still forward-thinking, ideas. Small steps that could make Los Angeles not only a more sustainable place to live, but a more pleasant one. We lost the red car system; would a monorail be the 21st century solution? We used to have unlimited space and room for everyone to have a freestanding house and a garden; would a "small lot subdivision" with a shared central park be the solution for a denser city? Los Angeles has long been called a collection of neighborhoods in search of a city, but these neighborhoods need to maintain their sense of community; is a mixed-use building at the old Bimini Baths, on an LAUSD-owned site, a way to do that?


About the Salon Participants

Ian McIlvaine, AIA, LEED AP, and Victoria Yust, AIA, formed Tierra Sol y Mar in 1994 to provide environmentally conscious design through a close collaboration with builders, artists, and most importantly, their clients. Their first project was the design and construction of a straw bale pavilion for the 1994 Yuba-Sutter County Fair, using rice straw, a local waste material. Projects completed since then range from single family residences, including a house in Venice which was the first permitted SCIP (Structural Concrete Insulated Panel) building in Los Angeles, to commercial projects including a three story commercial building in downtown Santa Monica where they collaborated with three different artists. In their own 4-unit building in Venice, they had the opportunity to test their mettle as "green developers". 90% of their current clients have come to them asking for sustainable design – a noticeable change since 1994.

Image: The Schwebebahn (monorail), in Wuppertal, Germany, built in 1900 and still in operation.(LIFE Images)

from: http://www.californiasolarcenter.org/history_solarthermal.html via Victoria Yust

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Farmlab Public Salon
Kim Stringfellow and Chris Carraher
Friday, May 22, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission


JACKRABBIT HOMESTEAD


About the Salon

Join Kim Stringfellow along with Wonder Valley artist, Chris Carraher, for a presentation of and discussion about the JACKRABBIT HOMESTEAD audio tour project.

Stringfellow and Carraher will discuss the history and contemporary landscapes of jackrabbit homesteading, specifically how the cabins resulting from the Small Tract Act have helped to foster the thriving creative community located throughout the Morongo Basin region where Joshua Tree National Park is located. Several tracks from the freely downloadable car audio tour available at www.jackrabbithomestead.com will be presented.

JACKRABBIT HOMESTEAD is a forthcoming book and web-based multimedia presentation featuring a downloadable car audio tour exploring the cultural legacy of the Small Tract Act in Southern California's Morongo Basin region near Joshua Tree National Park. Stories from this underrepresented regional history are told through the voices of local residents, historians, and area artists—many of whom reside in reclaimed historic cabins and use the structures as inspiration for their creative work. Funding for this project was made possible, in part, by a grant from the California Council for the Humanities as part of the Council's statewide California Stories Initiative.

About the Salon Participants

Kim Stringfellow
is an artist/educator residing in Los Angeles. Her work and research interests address ecological, historical, and activist issues related to land use and the built environment through hybrid documentary forms incorporating writing, digital media, photography, audio, video, installation, and locative media. She teaches in the Multimedia area as an Associate Professor in School of Art, Design, and Art History at San Diego State University.

Her projects been commissioned and funded by leading organizations including the San Francisco-based Creative Work Fund, the Seattle Arts Commission, and the California Council for the Humanities. Her photographs and projects have been exhibited at the International Center for Photography (ICP), John Michael Kohler Arts Center, Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (LACE), the Rachel Carson Institute, 18th Arts Center in Santa Monica, and San Francisco Camerawork. International exhibits include Paisajes Toxicos at the José Martí National Library in Havana, Cuba and the Tallinn City Art Gallery in Estonia.

Her first book, Greetings from the Salton Sea: Folly and Intervention in the Southern California Landscape, 1905–2005 was published by the Center for American Places (CAP) in 2005 and was partially funded by the Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in the Fine Arts. She is currently working on her second book with CAP, Jackrabbit Homestead: Tracing the Small Tract Act in the Southern California Landscape, 1938—2008, available in fall 2009.

Chris Carraher is a Wonder Valley, CA artist who uses a historic jackrabbit homesteading cabin as her studio. Her recent body of work, "The Plan: Claims of Territory in the High Desert," uses the cabins and the landscape they inhabit as subject.

She is actively involved in organizing cultural events incorporating the homesteading cabins as the event’s core theme. Carraher with two other Wonder Valley artists, Scott Monteith and Andy Woods, co-directed the Wonder Valley Homestead Cabin Festival in 2008 to showcase the work of area artists and performers whose work is inspired by the abandoned shacks. For more info: http://www.jackadandy.net/dandyhome4.htm.


Image courtesy Kim Stringfellow

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Farmlab To Be Polling Place For Upcoming Election


On Tuesday, May 19, 2009, Farmlab will continue its recent role as a neighborhood polling station.

That's the date of the California Statewide Special Election, which features various propositions. More information on the election is here.

This will mark the third consecutive election for which Farmlab has served as a center for voting. Previous occasions were November, 2008 and March, 2009.

For information about how to find Farmlab, including map, street address, please visit here. (Note: Hours listed on that page are not applicable on voting day -- State-mandated voting hours will apply.)

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Goats Coming Back Wednesday;
An Anabolic Monument Update




Goats are coming back to the Anabolic Monument -- on Wednesday, May 13, 2009.

Recently** this blog asked Farmlab team member Olivia Chumacero for an update about all things Anabolic Monument. Here was her reply:

"Goats! Wonderful spotted goats, returning to the Anabolic Monument . Plus, please check out the chicken mobile, it will be traveling throughout the park.

"Why? Because these animals produce a valuable garden necessity: Manure. They do this everyday and we will use this to fertilize the land in an organic manner. Which means that when you walk, run, stroll, bike, or sit on the ground, in the Anabolic Monument, you will not be bombarded with any harmful chemicals.

"Please do give us a call at our office building 323.226.1158 x 5108 if you are interested in volunteering."

Olivia Chumacero and friends, March 2009, inside the Anabolic Monument. Photo by Abel Salas

**=Note: This post has been updated twice the past two weeks as goat dates have changed.

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Photos From The Not A CornfieldExhibition in Rochester, NY



The Not A Cornfield exhibition at the Eastman House Museum in Rochester, NY opened Saturday, May 9. Here's a link to a Flickr photo set of the show.


Photo by Flickr user Museumphotographer

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Neighbors & Seedlings



Recent Farmlab and Under Spring visitors Edgar, Linda, and Willy pose with the tomato, pepper, jalapeno, basil and ruda seedlings offered to them by F.L.A.G. team member Meredith Hackleman.


Farmlab photo by Meredith Hackleman, 2009

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Farmlab Public Salon
Jeremy Pal
Friday, May 8, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission


Climate Change Impacts on Water Resources, Agriculture, and Extreme Events


About the Salon

Temperature and precipitation are virtually certain to substantially change over the next century in response to anthropogenically enhanced greenhouse forcing. Such changes will impact a wide variety of natural and human systems resulting in dramatic ecological, economic, and sociological consequences. This presentation focuses on the impacts of climate change on water resources, agriculture, and extreme events based on high-resolution climate model projections over North America.

About the Salon Participant

Jeremy Pal, assistant professor of civil engineering and environmental science at Loyola Marymount University, is among the contributing authors on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Changes (IPCC), an international collaboration of scientists that shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with Al Gore. Prior to joining the LMU faculty, Pal worked for the International Centre for Theoretical Physics, an agency that operates under two United Nations Agencies in Trieste, Italy with the mission to foster the growth of research in developing nations. Pal has authored numerous internationally recognized articles on the impacts of climate change.


Photo illustration for Farmlab by Kate Balug. Graph courtesy Jeremy Pal, copyright IPCC 2007. Photos for Farmlab by Kate Balug.

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Not A Cornfield Exhibition
To Open May 9, 2009 in Rochester, NY


On Saturday May 9th the Not A Cornfield exhibition is scheduled to open at the George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film, in Rochester, NY. The exhibition is scheduled to continue through Sunday, July 12, 2009.

This is the first exhibition about Lauren Bon’s metabolic sculpture Not A Cornfield, which transformed an abandoned Los Angeles train yard from a brownfield into a green field in one agricultural cycle.

The exhibition offers visitors the opportunity to explore some of the sights, sounds, ideas, and legacies of Not A Cornfield, including Farmlab and the Metabolic Studio, and the local initiative PLANT Rochester.



About PLANT

Inspired by Not A Cornfield, PLANT Rochester is a citywide cultural initiative of the George Eastman House in partnership with Rochester Contemporary Art Center, which functions as a hub for citizens to share actions and ideas related to nurturing life in the urban environment.

About the Exhibition

More information coming soon...

Exhibition Dates

Saturday, May 9, 2009 - Sunday, July 12, 2009

Exhibition Location

George Eastman House
900 East Avenue
Rochester
NY 14607
585 271 3361

Related URLs

http://www.notacornfield.com
http://www.eastmanhouse.org
http://www.eastmanhouse.org/inc/exhibitions/exhibits.php?mode=upcoming
www.rochestercontemporary.org
http://plantrochester.org/


Images -- Top: Lauren Bon, Not A Cornfield concept sketch, November, 2004.
Bottom: Photo by Steve Rowell, 2005.
Copyright and courtesy Not A Cornfield.

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Baker Street F.L.A.G. Moving Under Spring;
Winter Crops To Be Harvested; Summer Seeds Planted


During the month of May, F.L.A.G. (the Farmlab Agbin Garden) on Baker Street will be moving Under Spring. That same month will bring a harvest of the winter crops that have gone to seed, and a replanting with seedlings for the summer season.

Please check back for volunteer opportunities to help with the seed harvest and give-a-way. Pictured above are some lettuce, spinach and arugula going to seed.

Farmlab photo by Meredith Hackleman, 2009

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Digi of the Week

May 3 - 9, 2009


In January, 2009, LA Weekly's LA People 2009 Autumn Rooney and Lisa Gerstein of the Echo Park Time Bank organized a lecture by Edgar Cahn, creator of time dollars, at the Metabolic Studio.

Farmlab photo by Kate Balug

April 22 - 28, 2009


Earth Day special -- From the Anabolic Monument, at an earlier stage in its metabolism.

Farmlab Photo

April 15 - 21, 2009

The April 17 salon was a performance by Frank van de Ven and Victoria Looseleaf

Farmlab photo by Kate Balug

April 8 - 14, 2009


From 2008, but couldn't resist revisiting: Cluster (!) performing Under Spring.

Farmlab Photo

March 2 - 8, 2009


Goats bring permaculture students out to the Anabolic Monument at sunset

Farmlab photo by Kate Balug

February 23 - March 1, 2009


One of Farmlab's water harvesting storage tanks, with new vinyl sticker featuring roadrunner logo. Each tank -- Farmlab has four -- holds 5,000 gallons.

Farmlab photo by Kate Balug

February 9 - 15, 2009



Patriots doing the hokey pokey at the Metabolic Studio's third Optimists' Breakfast, themed "What Patriotism Means to Me"

Farmlab photo by Kate Balug

January 26 - February 1, 2009



Helen Mayer and Newton Harrison presented Farmlab's 100th Public Salon to a full house on Friday.

Farmlab photo by Kate Balug


December 8 - 14, 2008

The Metabolic Studio hosted The Moth Main Stage on December 11th.
The theme was "It Takes Two to Tango."

Farmlab photos by Kate Balug

November 24 - 30, 2008


The Metabolic Studio hosted its first glass orchestra rehearsal in the Owens Valley on November 24.

Farmlab photo by Kate Balug

November 10 - 16, 2008


Some salons are messier than others.

Farmlab photo by Kate Balug

November 3 - 9, 2008


Oguri + Body Weather Laboratory enchanted audiences at the Metabolic Studio on November 7 and 8.

Farmlab photo by Kate Balug

October 27 - November 2, 2008


La Ofrenda ceremony offering at the Anabolic Monument at the Los Angeles State Historic Park. The ceremony took place from midnight on Saturday, Nov. 1, until sunrise the next day. La Ofrenda remains on view until November 7 during park hours.

Farmlab photo by Sarah McCabe


Click here for prior Digis of the Week.

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No Public Salon Friday May, 1

There will be no Public Salon Series happening this coming Friday, May 1, 2009.

The Series resumes May 8, 2009 at its regularly scheduled Friday @ noon time and place.

Please come join us for a conversation that day with climate expert Jeremy Pal.

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Metabolic Studio Located Within Proposed "Clean Tech Corridor"

Today's Los Angeles Times includes an article discussing and a map showing the boundaries of a proposed "CleanTech Manufacturing Center" for the city. The Metabolic Studio (Farmlab+Chora+AMI) sits well inside the area.

Excerpted from the article, by Maeve Reston:

"Last fall, CRA officials and the mayor's business team began courting clean technology companies - talking up the purchasing power of the city's public utilities, as well as the array of tax incentives available to business."

The full story is here.

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Meet the PLANT Blog

[UPDATE: PLANT mentioned in Rochester City Paper]

This Rochester, NY-based site stands on its own, as well as precedes and foreshadows the rest of an upcoming exhibition related to Not A Cornfield.

That exhibition will open May 9, 2009 at the George Eastman House, in Rochester. More information to be posted here soon.

In the meanwhile, on the "About Plant" page, you'll find the below:

"PLANT – Place, Land, Art & Agriculture, Neighbors and Technology – is a community wide cultural initiative that will function as a hub for citizens to share actions and ideas related to urban land use, urban greening and public health.

"PLANT Rochester is an initiative of the George Eastman House (GEH) and Rochester Contemporary Art Center (RoCo). Inspired by artist Lauren Bon’s Not A Cornfield project and it’s ongoing offshoot Farmlab, an L.A. based collaborative that is dedicated to nurturing life in the urban environment.

"Initiated in August 2008, PLANT will:

* Host weekly events at GEH and RoCo, such as panel discussions, lectures about land use and public health, public fruit picking tours, and local history tours.
* Instigate citywide participation in international and national events such as Park(ing) Day.
* Establish a basecamp/workshop room at Rochester Contemporary Art Center from which excursions will depart and dialog will flow.
* Host an exhibition about community-based and local citizen actions at the intersection of art and agriculture, opening at RoCo May 2009.
* Host an exhibition about Not a Cornfield at George Eastman House opening May 2009.

"Why GEH?
With the opportunity to present the forthcoming exhibition Not A Cornfield, Eastman House is proud to explore and celebrate the agricultural legacy of George Eastman by engaging the community in a dialog around the history, heritage, and current/future importance of agriculture in Rochester.

"Why RoCo?
Rochester Contemporary Art Center brings fresh ideas in contemporary Art to Rochester audiences. Contemporary multi-disciplinary art practice is open to pursuits beyond the purely aesthetic activity contained within the white cube of the gallery. PLANT builds upon the visual communication strategies and shared space of the gallery and gives added voice to the actions and ideas of Agriculture and Community outreach agencies from all around Rochester. Contemporary artists have increasingly embraced such social practice for the past forty years. Joseph Beuys called it “Social Sculpture”, Claire Bishop writes about “Participation”, Grant Kester describes it as “Dialogic”, and Nicholas Bourriaud calls it “Relational Aesthetics”. Implemented as social practice art communicates not only through image or object but through shared experience, person-to-person exchange, participation and learning. The primary material of social practice is interaction; its primary focus is on relationships – between people and between people and places. Its strategies include new genre public art, project-based community practice, research and information sharing, service actions, street performance and community outreach.

"Running hand-in-hand with the implementation of art as social practice, artists such as Helen and Newton Meyer Harrison, Bonnie Sherk and Lauren Bon have allied social and environmental concerns to create environmentally beneficial art that implements actual change on the ground. The Harrison’s Endangered Meadows (1994-98) for example saved a 400 year-old meadow in Germany from development. Sherk’s work Crossroads Community (The Farm) (1974-1980) integrated disparate land beside a freeway interchange into a new city farm in San Francisco. While Bon’s Not A Cornfield (2005-06) transformed 32-acres of Los Angeles’ post-industrial brownfield into a vibrant agricultural, social and cultural arena.

"Why Farmlab?
PLANT is inspired by the power of art and culture to transform the world and is aided by the example of Farmlab (2006-ongoing) an LA-based think-tank and art production studio dedicated to the preservation and perpetuity of all living things. Farmlab grew out of Not A Cornfield (NAC). Led by Bon, the Farmlab team conducts multi-disciplinary investigations into land use issues that are related to sustainability, livability, and health. Not A Cornfield and Farmlab continue to serve as catalysts for community involvement and change through the development of art actions.

"Why Now?
Over the last decade, Rochesterians have built strong foundations in support of diverse movements that focus on sustainable communities, agriculture and youth. These include: school-community gardens, neighborhood and citywide public markets, food security (establishing access to healthy, affordable, culturally acceptable food for neighborhood residents), nutritional and culinary education, agricultural work skills development, and food-based economic ventures.

"Functioning as a hub, a network, and a series of events, PLANT brings these diverse initiatives together into conversation about Rochester’s sustainable future. PLANT also recognizes that sustainable cities are aware of their own history and re-engaging citizens with urban Rochester’s agricultural past will contribute to rebuilding and solidifying Rochester’s core."

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PLANT Rochester Mentioned in City's Paper

From a piece in part about PLANT Rochester, written by Bleu Cease in the Rochester City News:

"PLANT, an acronym for Place, Land, Art & Agriculture, Neighbors and Technology, is an exhibition that attempts to bring this home. PLANT is a collaboration between Rochester Contemporary Art Center, George Eastman House, the Los Angeles-based Metabolic Studio, and numerous other local groups and organizations. PLANT challenges institutions to work together, and individuals to imagine and utilize the gallery as a social zone and resource center for sharing ideas and actions.

"The PLANT exhibition and its Sunday coffee hours simultaneously present and constitute an example of "participatory art practice," a loose category of cultural initiatives that brings people together to share in creative production and action. PLANT doesn't simply exhibit framed images, documenting an action. It IS an action. PLANT fosters discussions about the boundaries between art and the actions taken by a number of inspirational individuals and groups, those who are doing important work to improve our city. PLANT is as much about public health and urbanism as it is about aesthetics and white gallery walls."

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Onion's Earth Day Spoof Says: 'Plant Some Flowers in the Rusting Frame of a Car..."

The Onion's recent Earth Day infographic concludes with the following:

"Be sure to plant some flowers in the rusting frame of a car or inside a shattered old television set, as this will provide your local news station with a perfect visual metaphor for the revitalization of urban areas."

Assignment editors, this one's for you:




Photo for Farmlab by Joshua White, 2008

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Seed Library Photos





Above are shots of the Farmlab seed library room...

More information on the room coming to this blog soon...


Farmlab Photos by Sarah McCabe (top and middle) and Kate Balug (bottom), 2009

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Farmlab Public Salon
John Malpede & Susan Gray
Friday, April 24, 2009 @ Noon
Free Admission


Skid Row History Museum


About the Salon

Join Susan Gray, Arts Planner for the CRA-LA and John Malpede of Los Angeles Poverty Department for a discussion of their project to create a series of public artworks that would acknowledge the cultural contribution to the city of people who have lived and worked in Skid Row L.A., and to recognize the history and shifting contours of the area.

About the Salon Participants

John Malpede is a director, actor, activist, writer and the founder of the Los Angeles Poverty Department. At its inception, in 1985, LAPD was the first performance group in the nation made up principally of homeless people. LAPD is dedicated to building community on Skid Row, Los Angeles.

Since 1985, the company has offered performance workshops that are free and open to the Skid Row community— partnering with numerous social service and advocacy groups, including SRO Housing, Inc.; LA Community Action Network; The Downtown Women’s Action Coalition; St.Vincent DePaul Center; The Salvation Army’s Women’s and Men’s drug recovery programs; and the Inner City Law Center.

Susan Gray is the Arts Planner for the CRA-LA.


Photo courtesy John Malpede

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State Park Brochure Features Anabolic, Metabolic, Not A Cornfield


The California State Parks Department has issued a new brochure for the Los Angeles State Historic Park. (Visit here to download.)

LASHP is located across the street from Metabolic Studio (Farmlab+Chora+AMI), and is the site where the
Not A Cornfield project occurred and where the Anabolic Monument resides.

The cover of the fold-out brochure features an aerial photo by Joshua White, taken for and courtesy the Metabolic Studio.

Inside the brochure, a map of the park and immediate area notes the
Anabolic Monument as well as the "Farmlab / Metabolic Studio" headquarters.

And brochure text under the heading "Sanctuary in the City" reads:

"California State Parks acquired the park land in 2001. Before the development of the Interim Public Use Park plan, L.A. artist Lauren Bon planted 32 acres of corn on the vacant parkland, creating what came to be known as the "Not A Cornfield" project. The remnants of the project, now called the Anabolic Monument, functions as a vibrant and dynamic public* space."


To download the LASHP brochure,
visit here and follow the instructions.


Screen grab is from .pdf found on the www.parks.ca.gov site


*=Correction: In the original post, the word "public" was misspelled. That was this blog's error; the State Parks staff had the spelling accurate. We regret the mistake.

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Visiting Writer Touts Farmlab, Seed Library

In Eat My Words: Urban Farming, a recent post to her Gelatobaby blog, journalist Alissa Walker offered up the following observations about Farmlab:

"To my delight, some of the most interesting urban agriculture projects are happening right here in LA. I got to spend a day at Farmlab, the incredible project founded by artist Lauren Bon near Chinatown. After our tour of their radical urban agriculture structures, gardener Jaime Lopez Wolters took me on a bike ride tour through the former Not a Cornfield, now LA’s newest state park. If you go there now, you can see the wildflowers blooming.

"I also visited Farmlab’s seed library, which is probably the single coolest room I’ve ever been in. Every single plant they grow is hung upside down here until it dries so they can properly capture the seeds. They also have an annual seed giveaway, which was happening in December. If you haven’t been to Farmlab yet, I encourage you: Go."

Walker visited Farmlab while doing research and interviews for an article which appears in the March/April edition of ID magazine.

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Metabolic Studio Team Members, Salon Speakers, Among LA Weekly "People 2009"

The LA Weekly's annual "LA People" issue is out, and 2009 honorees include Metabolic Studio (Farmlab+Chora+AMI) member Paolo Davanzo, co-founder of the beloved Echo Park Film Center. Lisa Marr, likewise from EPFC and Metabolic Studio, is quoted in the piece.

The Annenberg Foundation is also mentioned in the story, for supporting EPFC and their purchase of a traveling veggie bus / microcinema.

Other "LA People" this year included Autumn Rooney, a former Farmlab colleague, for her work, with Lisa Gerstein, founding Echo Park Time Bank. A recent program the duo put on at Farmlab is noted in the write-up.

Edgar Arceneaux, Sean Percival, and Don Hrycyk also made this year's list. Each of those gentlemen have been, or is scheduled later this summer to be, a speaker in the Farmlab Public Salon Series. Gary Leonard, who shot news photos of Not A Cornfield, Farmlab, and the Anabolic Monument, is in the issue too. Bigs to the Bike Oven, too.

We're probably forgetting all sorts of other connections... Just one blog's quick read...

Also, here's last year's post that noted a handful of Farmlab friends and colleagues...

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Farmlab's Nodal To Be Honored Sunday

The California Lawyers for the Arts are scheduled to hold an awards ceremony and fundraiser in Santa Monica on Sunday, April 26, 2009.

Longtime Farmlab team member Adolfo V. Nodal will be among the five recipients of the Lawyers' "Artistic License Award 2009."

Other recipients include Abe Carnow, Danny Glover, Ben Guillory, and Don Knabe.

In addition to Nodal's work with Metabolic Studio (Farmlab+Chora+AMI) and, previously, with Not A Cornfield, he's the President of the City of Los Angeles' Cultural Affairs Commission, among many other accomplishments.

For more information about the upcoming awards ceremony, click here.

Note: This program is not related to or otherwise endorsed by The Metabolic Studio. But on behalf of everyone here, congratulations, Al!

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Anabolic Monument


Lauren Bon's sculpture Anabolic Monument is a thirty-meter-radius circle of decaying corn bales. The twenty-two bales were made from the remainder of corn plants grown on site and harvested during Ms Bon's artwork Not A Cornfield.

Located at the north side of the Los Angeles State Historic Park, this compost monument holds mystery and hosts numerous butterflies, hummingbirds, and bees in their odyssey toward nectar. It is tended by the Metabolic Studio in association with California State Parks.

Related Links:

  • About the Anabolic Monument

  • Public Harvest (1/31/09)

  • Goats (2/28-3/9/09)

  • More Goat photos

  • Wildflowers (2/28/09)

  • Flora & Fauna of the Los Angeles State Historic Park, as observed by a naturalist (5/08)

  • Aerial View 2/2009

  • Harvest & Seed Giveaway (12/20/08)

  • Community Marigold Harvest (12/1/2007)

  • Photo taken just north of Anabolic Monument (2/2009)

  • Photos taken just outside Anabolic Monument (2/28/09)

  • Not A Cornfield (2005-2006)

  • Not A Cornfield -- Cornhenge (i.e. an earlier name for the the Anabolic Monument)reacting

  • Not A Cornfield -- Cornhenge created

  • Not A Cornfield -- Cornhenge created, aerial view

  • Los Angeles State Historic Park

  • Anabolic Monument Facebook Group -- to join, Facebook members please search for the "anabolic monument" group

  • More past links to be added to this page soon, as archiving continues...






    Photos (from top): Farmlab photo by Joshua White 2009; iPhone photo copyright and courtesy Julie Pittman 2009; Not A Cornfield photo by Steve Rowell 2006.
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    Lauren Bon & Metabolic Studio In Eagle Rock Show
    Opening May 23, 2009

    The Metabolic Studio (Farmlab + Chora + AMI) will be participating in the upcoming exhibition, "Broodwork: Creative Practice and Family Life," scheduled to open at the Center for the Arts, in Eagle Rock, a northeast Los Angeles neighborhood.

    The Center's press release is cut-and-pasted below...


    BROODWORK: CREATIVE PRACTICE AND FAMILY LIFE
    TO OPEN AT CENTER FOR THE ARTS, EAGLE ROCK,
    MAY 23-JUNE 21, 2009

    LOS ANGELES – (April 24, 2009) Center for the Arts, Eagle Rock is pleased to present the exhibition BROODWORK: Creative Practice and Family Life, curated by Rebecca Niederlander and Iris Anna Regn. Opening on May 23rd with a reception from 3-6 pm. The idea for the exhibit came from the personal experiences of the two curators reconceiving their creative practices after becoming parents. Parenthood changes everyone; however, since artists (like Niederlander) and architects (like Regn) invent out of their own experience, the issues surrounding the complete life change of parenthood give rise to specific opportunities for rethinking and reconsidering.

    Is creativity fostered by proximity with an innocent, uninformed person? Are creative questions previously thought sufficiently answered suddenly asked anew? The curators realized that their own experiences had a much broader significance and that a creative community was producing something they named BROODWORK.

    BROODWORK cannot be classified along lines of gender, content or medium, but Niederlander and Regn discovered defining characteristics that often appear, even indirectly. Families and Work Institute in NYC reports that families today spend significantly more time with their children than even a decade ago. This aligns with shifts in methodology in the creative practice: work is made in small increments of time; projects are also conceived as an accumulation of parts; work is created collaboratively. There also exists an increased awareness of being the “responsible” generation, where ethical and environmental concerns can become a focus or ancillary to it, such as a simple shift towards safe materials. Another type of work takes on the topic of children or childhood, with the specific viewpoint of a creative person who is a parent.

    The exhibit provides some of the questions and answers that have emerged from a distinguished group of artists, architects and designers who are the parents of children aged 1-10. There will also be a series of social events that deal with the themes of the show, including readings and documentary films. BROODWORK at the Center for the Arts will be the first in a series of analogous exhibitions in different cities, and Niederlander and Regn plan to show BROODWORK as a book by 2011.

    Designers and Architects include: Hadley & Peter Arnold, Barbara Bestor, Julliette Bellocq, Kim Colin/Industrial Facility, David Fletcher, Iris Anna Regn & Tim Durfee, Linda Taalman & Alan Koch. Visual artists include: Lauren Bon and The Metabolic Studio, Jemima Brown, Rebecca Campbell, Jamison Carter, Seonna Hong, Soo Kim, Brandon Lattu, Rebecca Niederlander, Laura Owens & Edgar Bryan, Michael Pierzynski, Eli Pulsinelli & Allen Compton, Lucas Reiner, Denise Uyehara & Natalie Nguyen, Alexis Weidig, Patty Wickman, Patrick Wilson

    The exhibition is sponsored in part by Green to Grow; Laura Gabbert, director/producer of the feature documentary No Impact Man; Cristi Lyon for Pomegranate Glass; Little Flower Candy Co. Café; Plan It Green Printing; Mia Sushi; Cafe De Leche, and The Loft Hair Lounge.

    Refer to the Center for the Arts, Eagle Rock or the Facebook page for exhibition information.

    Center for the Arts, Eagle Rock is a nonprofit 501(c)3 organization whose mission is to provide innovative and multicultural arts programming to the communities of Northeast Los Angeles. The Center is located at 2225 Colorado Blvd. in Los Angeles, and is open Monday through Saturday. For more information on Center for the Arts, including our gallery hours, schedule, and arts classes for children and adults, visit: www.centerartseaglerock.or or call 323-226-1617.

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    Farmlab Public Salon
    Frank van de Ven & Victoria Looseleaf
    Friday, April 17, 2009 @ Noon
    Free Admission



    "Corpus Criticus: Bodies on Words - Words on Bodies"


    About the Salon

    Frank van de Ven and Victoria Looseleaf present "Corpus Criticus: Bodies on Words - Words on Bodies." Considering the art of improvisation as danced by Frank van de Ven, arts journalist and critic Victoria Looseleaf opens a dialogue with both performer and audience, demystifying the genre in real time. In today's environment where criticism is losing currency, we explore the conversation between the moving body - the unspoken - and that which needs to be said.

    About the Salon Participants

    Frank van de Ven: Frank van de Ven is a dancer and director who spend his formative years in Japan working with Min Tanaka and the Maijuku Performance Company. In 1993 he founded with Katerina Bakatsaki 'Body Weather Amsterdam' as a platform for training and performance. Since 1995 he conducts with Milos Sejn (Academy of Fine Arts Prague) the interdisciplinary Bohemia Rosa Project, connecting body and landscape with art, geology and architecture.

    Interest in practice and theory led to working with other dancers and theorists in extracting concrete strategies for dance from the theories of Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari evolving around the question 'How to make yourself a Dancing Body Without Organs'. Together with Peter Snow (Monash University) he performs the Thought/Action Improvisations. An ongoing collaboration exists with musician Daniel Schorno, artistic director of Steim in the 'Noughts' project. He is a regular guest teacher at the SNDO (School for New Dance Development, Amsterdam).


    Victoria Looseleaf is an award-winning arts journalist and regular contributor to the Los Angeles Times, Dance Magazine, Performances Magazine and KUSC-FM radio, among other outlets. In addition, she is the producer of the long-running cable access TV show on the arts,"The Looseleaf Report" (currently airing in New York City), as well as a blog of the same name. Covering music and dance festivals around the world, Ms. Looseleaf's recent travels have taken her to Havana, Lyon, Montpellier, Abu Dhabi, Amsterdam, Venice, Athens and Buenos Aires. She currently teaches dance history at Cal State Los Angeles and Santa Monica College. In an earlier incarnation, Ms. Looseleaf was a professional musician who recorded two albums of solo harp music, "Harpnosis," and "Beyond Harpnosis," both registered trademarks.


    Photos courtesy Frank van de Ven (top) & Victoria Looseleaf (bottom)


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    LAT Gardens Article Inspires Response From Farmlab Visitor

    Farmlab visitor Ellen Switkes emailed the info at farmlab dot org mailbox to say that she noticed this article in the Los Angeles Times about potential public / private gardening in Santa Monica and "immediately thought of Farmlab's efforts."

    The LAT subhead: "Program would match willing homeowners with would-be gardeners, reducing the years-long waiting list for a plot of soil."

    The complete article is here.

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    Past Salon Speakers In The News

    Here's a handful of the recent stories and references to some of our past Farmlab Public Salon Series speakers. One in an occasional series of updates, and admittedly very incomplete...

  • The Junk Raft project, with quotes from Dr. Markus Erickson, in the New Yorker. Public Salon Series link is here.

  • Marqueece Harris-Dawson, in the Los Angeles Times, on efforts to shutter a South L.A. liquor store. Public Salon Series link is here.

  • Bill Patzert, in Science Daily via a NASA press release, on cyclones and Hispaniola. Public Salon Series link is here.

  • Fallen Fruit, mentioned in the Huffington Post. Public Salon Series link is here.

  • Helen Mayer Harrison and Newton Harrison, noted in an Latimes.com art review. Public Salon Series link is here.

  • Jane Usher, noted in an LA Weekly piece about billboards in Los Angeles. Public Salon Series link is here.

    That's all we'll post for now... If eager for more, to do your own search -- here's a list of past, current, and upcoming Salons.

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    Farmlab Public Salon
    Bill Deverell
    Friday, April 10, 2009 @ Noon
    Free Admission


    Little Girl Lost: The Kathy Fiscus Tragedy and Modern California


    About the Salon

    On a bright Southern California day sixty years ago, a little girl playing in a field tumbled into an old well. Kathy Fiscus was three years old. Her tragic ordeal caught the attention of the world, as would-be rescuers worked around the clock to save her. Any number of unusual ideas were posed, tried, or discarded in the feverish hours of digging rescue shafts. Hundreds, if not thousands, of spectators came to the site, and television cameras and reporters invented live t.v. from the scene of the accident. This talk will explore the Fiscus tragedy in all its fascinating detail, as well as pose some questions and ideas about how post-World War II California saw itself and was in turn seen by the nation.

    About the Salon Presenter

    Bill Deverell is Director of the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West: More Information


    Image courtesy Bill Deverell

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    A Conversation, In Neon

    video

    Sign meet Sign.


    Metabolic Studio FlipVideo

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    Public Salon Series
    Mayisha Akbar & Judith Hopkins
    Friday, March 27 2009 @ Noon
    Free Admission

    Compton Jr. Posse, Meet Taking the Reigns


    About the Salon

    A first-ever summit between the executive directors of two Southland organizations that help kids, via horses.

    More information about this Salon to be posted soon.

    About the Salon Participants

    More information about Mayisha Akbar coming soon.

    Judith Hopkins came west to attend California Institute of the Arts. In 1987 after receiving her MFA, she taught art at community colleges and the California Youth Authority. Twelve years ago she went on a trail ride in Sequoia that changed her life—she took up riding horses and never looked back. In 1998 she and Debra Avery founded Taking the Reins, a nonprofit organization that teaches life skills to at-risk girls through a unique equine-based educational program. She has served as the executive director of Taking the Reins for the last decade.

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    DO NOTHING
    New Neon @ Under Spring

    video

    Do Nothing.

    By Qingyun Ma, presented to the Metabolic Studio.

    Installed March, 2009, Under Spring.

    (Related: See Ma's print made for the recent Metabolic Studio project, Chora Prints 2008: New Political Posters from TJ2LA.)


    Metabolic Studio FlipVideo

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    Join "The Tin Man Group" on Facebook

    See photos and read witness postings from the Metabolic Studio's March 14 open rehearsal of the Owens Valley Dry Lake Bed Glass and Water Orchestra and visit to meet “Oz” in the Emerald City. You must be a Facebook member to join this group.

    Search on Facebook for “The Tin Man Group.”

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    Flickr User Bacchruz's Wildflower Photos


    This blog received a kind email from Flickr user Bacchruz, pointing to the photos she recently took of the wildflowers planted and tended to by the Metabolic Studio team, and located on the grounds of the Los Angeles State Historic Park, across the street from the Studio's L.A. River-side location.

    Above is one of those images from Bacchruz; here's a link to her other shots of the wildflowers, the junker gardens at the Metabolic Studio, and otherwise.
    Great thanks again to Bacchruz.


    Photo courtesy Bacchruz

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    Farmlab Public Salon
    Jesus Sanchez
    Friday, June 26, 2009 @ Noon
    Free Admission

    More info. TBA.

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    Farmlab Public Salon
    Karen Mack
    Friday, March 13, 2009 @ Noon
    Free Admission



    About the Salon

    Trekking Los Angeles: Local Adventures in a Global City is a marketing campaign, implemented by LA Commons and UCLA School of Urban Planning to promote and make more accessible the diverse neighborhoods of Los Angeles, and contribute to answering the question, how does culture contribute to community development? The campaign started in 2007 with series of cultural tours and activities featuring three neighborhoods – Leimert Park, Highland Park and Thai Town – and continued in 2008 with Trekking Los Angeles: BBQ Adventures in a Global City and the launch of the Trekking LA website (www.trekkingla.org). Trekking Los Angeles over the last two years has brought hundreds of people to these neighborhoods and made them more visible to thousands of others through coverage by major media including the Los Angeles Times articles and Los Angeles Magazine. The mission of LA Commons is to engage communities in artistic and cultural expression that tells their unique stories and serves as a basis for dialogue, interaction and a better understanding of Los Angeles. Key to the implementation of this mission are community-based art initiatives which employ local artists and art students in translating community stories into public art. Since the inception of LA Commons’ in January 2003, they have implemented 15 initiatives in eight neighborhoods, involving 28 artists, 160 youth and 900 community members in the art making process, and several thousand as audience members. LA Commons’ projects increase participants’ involvement in the civic landscape, leverage local cultural assets into increased tourism and economic activity and build bridges across the diverse communities of Los Angeles.

    About the Salon Speaker

    Karen Mack is founder and Executive Director of LA Commons, an organization dedicated to promoting Los Angeles' diverse neighborhoods through locally based, interactive, artistic and cultural programming. LA Commons has implemented community art projects, tours and classes in communities throughout LA and in partnership with organizations such as the Central American Resource Center, the South Asian Network, Thai Community Development Center and UCLA. Prior to work with LA Commons, she served as a Public Service Fellow at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University where she researched the role of culture in community building. Her appointment at Harvard followed work as the Vice President, Program Development and Planning at Community Partners, an organization that provides developmental support to start-up nonprofits throughout Los Angeles County. While on staff at Community Partners, she developed a wide-range of initiatives including the incubator services program and organizational partnerships with institutions such as the California Wellness Foundation and the California Endowment. She holds an MPA from Harvard University and an MBA from the John Anderson School of Management at UCLA. She is currently president of the board of the Los Angeles Neighborhood Initiative and an appointed member to the Mayor’s Advisory Committee on the Cultural Plan for the City of Los Angeles.


    Image above designed by Julie Ray, courtesy LA Commons

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    Goats Leaving Park on Wednesday Morning


    If you'd like to come down and see these goats, then Tuesday, March 10, 2009 is your last full day to do so.

    More info here.


    Metabolic Studio photo by Kate Balug

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    LA Observed's Burman Visits Anabolic Monument, Interviews Goats

    At LAObserved.com, columnist Jenny Burman visits the Anabolic Monument and files this playful dispatch, headlined, "Goats Workshop."

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    Local Newspaper Hales Goats, If Not Studio

    The current edition of the Los Angeles Downtown News features a photo of the goats brought to the Anabolic Monument by the Metabolic Studio.

    The Anabolic Monument is an ongoing artwork by Lauren Bon; it is tended by the multidisciplinary team at the Metabolic Studio in association with California State Parks.

    The New's shot was taken by the legendary L.A. shooter, Gary "Take My Picture" Leonard.

    The photo is accompanied by a brief text blurb. In that blurb, the Metabolic Studio's longtime friend and colleague from across the street, Sean Woods, of State Parks, is cited.

    (No mention is made in the blurb of the Metabolic Studio (Farmlab + Chora + AMI).)

    But for more information on the ongoing project, along with current updates, please feel free to visit here and here.

    And while visiting the goats in-person -- they will remain inside the Anabolic Monument at least through Wednesday, March 11 -- take in the surrounding wildflowers, now in bloom and likewise a planned legacy of the Not A Cornfield (2005-2006) artwork.

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    Farmlab Public Salon
    The League of Imaginary Scientists w/ visiting pyschogeographer Liz Kueneke
    Friday, June 12, 2009 @ Noon
    Free Admission


    “In League with Imaginary Science”


    About the Salon

    Selected for ApexArt’s 2009 Franchise project, The League of Imaginary Scientists has organized an exhibition on participatory mapping, entitled x, y, z, and u, at Outpost for Contemporary Art June 4-July 3. At the Farmlab salon, the League will present their past participatory projects, along with Barcelona-based artist Liz Kueneke, whose public map embroidery project will be created during x, y, z, and u, in cahoots with Highland Park.

    About the Salon Participants

    The League of Imaginary Scientists is a group of interdisciplinary thinkers and tinkerers who present participatory art events with playful engineering and scientific assertions. The League concocts micro-festivals for microorganisms and repurposes centuries-old physics apparatus for new experiments. The resulting diversions from the everyday celebrate the everyday, like their machine for reversing progress and returning viewers to childhood.
    http://www.imaginaryscience.org

    Pyschogeographer Liz Kueneke compels community members to create maps of their respective urban areas based on what they think about their city, resulting in personal thoughts elevated to the status of statistical science. Based in Barcelona, Liz Kueneke is mapping the world, city by city. Her community mappings result in public drawings, installations, and embroidery projects created in collaboration with community members.
    http://www.hangar.org/gallery/lizkueneke


    Images courtesy The League of Imaginary Scientists

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    Farmlab Public Salon
    Victoria Yust and Ian McIlvaine
    Friday, May 29, 2009 @ Noon
    Free Admission

    Click for more information

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    State Park Blog


    The Los Angeles state Historic Park (LASHP) has a blog.

    (The park is located across the street from the Metabolic Studio and is home to the Anabolic Monument and Studio-tended and planted wildflowers.)

    Here's one post and here's another post about the goats that the Metabolic Studio brought by.



    Screen grab from LASHP website

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    Farmlab is Polling Place For Today's L.A. City Elections


    Today, Tuesday, March 3, 2009, Farmlab is serving as an official polling place for the city of Los Angeles' elections.

    For address and suggested directions to Farmlab, click here. (Please note that the office and gallery hours listed on that webpage do not apply today. Instead, official citywide voting hours are in affect.)

    This marks the first time Farmlab has hosted voting in a city election.

    Last November, Farmlab served for the first time as an official Los Angeles County polling place.


    Farmlab Photo by Kate Balug

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    Facebook Groups

    Become a fan of Strawberry Flag on Facebook.

    Lauren Bon and the Metabolic Studio is working on this piece with both veterans and professionals at the West L.A. VA hospital. It is dedicated to the men and women in service to our country.


    See photos and read witness postings from the Metabolic Studio's March 14 open rehearsal of the Owens Valley Dry Lake Bed Glass and Water Orchestra and visit to meet “Oz” in the Emerald City.

    Search on Facebook for “The Tin Man Group.”


    You must be a Facebook member to join this group.

    _______________________________________________________________________________________

    See photos, videos, and read and make postings about the Anabolic Monument.

    Search of Facebook for "Anabolic Monument."

    You must be a Facebook member to join this group.

    _______________________________________________________________________________________

    Also:

    The old Farmlab Facebook page is inactive.

    The old Farmlab MySpace page is no longer updated.

    _______________________________________________________________________________________

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    Bleeeet!*


    Goats, visiting and working now through March 9, 2009, inside the Anabolic Monument, located on the northern side of the Los Angeles State Historic Park.

    New: More goat photos.

    iPhone Photo copyright and courtesy Julie Pittman 2009


    *This post was originally titled, "Baaaah!" -- This blog apologies for that onomatopoeic error.

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    Mas Chivas







    From top:

    A less-cropped view of a goats inside the Anabolic Monument photo; then, goats with the gold line, and the city skyline, respectively, behind them.


    Top: iPhone photo copyright and courtesy Julie Pittman 2009. Bottom: iPhone photos for Metabolic Studio by kate Balug

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    Wildflowers In Bloom**



    Pictured above: Another couple of shots of the wildflowers in bloom** on the northern side of the Los Angeles State Historic Park. The flowers are part of the ongoing legacy of the Not A Cornfield project. They were planted and, as needed, are tended to by Lauren Bon's Metabolic Studio team.

    Have a shot you'd like to share with this blog's readers? Send it our way to info at farmlab dot org.

    **updated information and an apology -- please see the comments section.


    iPhone photos copyright and courtesy Julie Pittman 2009

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    Public Forum: Climate Change and Water
    Friday, February 27, 2009 @ 5-9pm

    (Forum from 5-7pm; Reception from 7-9pm)

    Co-Sponsored by the Robert and Patricia Switzer Foundation, the Environmental Leadership Program and the Farmlab Public Salon Series. The panel presentation will be followed by a joint reception with Switzer Foundation and Environmental Leadership Program Fellows.

    About the Public Forum

    Examining the scale of the problem and environmental leadership solutions at global, national and local scales. Co-Sponsored by the Robert and Patricia Switzer Foundation, the Environmental Leadership Program and the Farmlab Public Salon Series. The panel presentation will be followed by a joint reception with Switzer Foundation and Environmental Leadership Program Fellows.

    Come join this lively discussion with four Switzer Fellows and ELP Fellows who are working to address the varying scales of impact of climate change on water resources. These environmental leaders will offer a global perspective on the impacts of climate change on water resources, the avenues of research on key scientific issues and mitigation responses at regional scales, the ways in which communities are adapting to shifts in freshwater systems and watersheds and finally, how one California water district is working to achieve multiple benefits by conserving its forest land and water resources.

    The Fellows are:

  • Amy Luers, Environment Program Manager, Google.Org, San Francisco, CA (Switzer Fellow 2000)

  • Brenda Rashleigh, Research Ecologist, US EPA Office of Research and Development, Athens, GA (ELP Senior Fellow)

  • Charles Hernick, Associate, The Cadmus Group, Watertown, MA (ELP Senior Fellow)

  • Betsy Herbert, Environmental Analyst, San Lorenzo Valley Water District, Santa Cruz County, CA (Switzer Fellow 2001)

  • About The Public Forum Speakers

    Betsy Herbert, Environmental Analyst
    San Lorenzo Valley Water District
    Boulder Creek, CA

    Betsy Herbert earned her doctorate in environmental studies in 2004 from the University of California, Santa Cruz. Her research interests include forest management for water quality protection and carbon sequestration, and issues of civil engagement in natural resource management. Her research has been published in the Journal of the American Water Works Association. In 2006, Betsy Herbert was awarded a Robert and Patricia Switzer Leadership Grant to facilitate the San Lorenzo Valley Water District’s public acquisition of the Felton water system from California-American Water, on behalf of the community of Felton. The District successfully completed this acquisition in 2008. This grassroots effort to municipalize a private water system received national attention, and serves as a model for other communities throughout the nation who are trying to buy back their water systems from multi-national corporations. She is now employed as the environmental analyst for the San Lorenzo Valley Water District, where she administers an education grant program, manages the District’s forested watershed lands, and inventories the District’s greenhouse gas emissions for the California Climate Action Registry. Since 2001, she has served on the Board of Directors of Sempervirens Fund--the oldest land trust in California--preserving redwood forest land in the Santa Cruz Mountains since 1900. Since 2007, she has served on the Santa Cruz County Commission on the Environment, which advises the County Board of Supervisors on issues of climate change and reduction of greenhouse gases.

    Charles Hernick, Associate
    The Cadmus Group
    Watertown, MA

    Charles Hernick is an Associate at The Cadmus Group, Inc. He works primarily for government and non-governmental organizations on issues related to making drinking water more sustainable. His research focuses on economic and environmental issues, including climate change mitigation and adaptation, and ecosystem services. Mr. Hernick also works on best management practices for drinking water systems. He received his master’s in International Relations and Environmental Policy from Boston University, and his bachelor’s degree in Ecology, Evolution and Behavior from the University of Minnesota.

    Amy Luers, Environment Program Manager
    Google.Org
    San Francisco, CA

    Amy Luers is the environment program manager for Google.org. Prior to joining Google.Org, Amy managed the Climate Program for the Union of Concerned Scientists California\'s office and spent 10 years working on water resources management in Latin America and California. Amy is co-founder and former executive director of a small NGO dedicated to supporting rural water supply in Latin America. Her research and publications have focused on issues of vulnerability and adaptive capacity to global environmental changes and on climate policy. She holds a Ph.D. in environmental science and an M.A. in international policy studies, both from Stanford University, and a M.S. and B.S. in environmental resources engineering from Humboldt State University.

    Brenda Rashleigh, Research Ecologist
    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
    Athens, GA

    Brenda Rashleigh works as a Research Ecologist for the U.S. EPA Office of Research and Development, using statistics and modeling to understand the relationship between environmental stressors and the health of aquatic ecosystems. She has served as a Board President for the Georgia River Network and currently serves as President of the Upper Oconee Watershed Network and Regional Coordinator for Georgia's Adopt-a-Stream program. She recently spent two months as an Embassy Science Fellow in Pretoria, South Africa, working on issues of freshwater conservation. She has published articles in peer-reviewed journals including Ecological Modeling, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment, and Ecography.

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    Photo Taken Just North of Anabolic Monument


    This image was sent in to info at farmlab dot org by Catherine Cummings.

    The shot was taken, we think, from just north of the Anabolic Monument, located in the Los Angeles State Historic Park. Great thanks to Catherine for sending our way.


    Photo copyright and courtesy Catherine Cummings.

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    Farmlab & The South Central Farm -- Revisiting KCET.org and NAC Stories



    Last year, KCET.org's "Web Stories" series included Farmlab in a multi-media piece called, "Sustaining L.A." Writer Bill Kelley Jr.'s essay accompanied a slide show and a filmed interview with Lauren Bon.

    With Kelley coming to participate in an (unrelated, about Tijuana) Public Salon at Farmlab on March 6, 2009, this seemed like a good time to revisit the KCET work.

    As Kelley wrote: "[Farmlab's] genesis should be situated within the very public battle for the preservation of the South Central Farm and the Not-A-Cornfield art project…"

    He also wrote that Bon, among others, was a "key player, although unsuccessful in the end, in trying to save the community organized South Central Farm from commercial development."

    And that: "Farmlab grew out of these two experiences and has been a year-long attempt to catalyze the different organizations and specialists in the field of environmental sustainability, urban planning, and community activism."

    On a related note, author and Occidental professor, Robert Gottlieb, reported in Next American City magazine about at least one small part of the behind-the-scenes organizing and negotiating work that Bon and her teams at Farmlab and the Annenberg Foundation -- where she is a trustee -- were doing:

    "A group including the Trust for Public Land and the Annenberg Foundation came up with $16 million to repurchase the property, saying they intended to keep the farm going and create soccer fields.

    "Though that amount was triple what Horowitz had been paid three years earlier, Horowitz refused."


    See the full KCET.org work here.

    Read more here about Farmlab's work to create a monument at the Huntington to the trees, of the trees, and by the trees of the South Central Farm.

    And here's a bit about Ag Bin Ramblas, another Farmlab project with direct SCF origins.

    Farmlab photo by James Goodnight

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    African Daisies, Bright Yellow on a Rainy Gray Day



    The African daisies, located inside the Ananbolic Monument, across the street from Farmlab, on the northern end of the Los Angeles State Historic Park.

    Today's rain showers are anticipated to bring, yup, many more such flowers.

    Photo by Sarah McCabe

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    Aerial View of Anabolic Monument



    Taken on the day of the most recent harvest, here's a look from above at the anabolic monument, by Lauren Bon, located on the site of the Los Angeles State Historic Park.

    Photo by Joshua White

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    Time Banks USA Founder To Speak At Metabolic Studio

    Dr. Edgar S. Cahn is scheduled to appear Wednesday, March 11, 2009 @ 7-9pm.

    This program is not presented nor sponsored by Farmlab, but by The Echo Park Time Bank.

    For more information, visit the EPTB website.

    Farmlab greetings, by the way, go out to former colleague Autumn Rooney, an EPTB founder.

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    Farmlab Public Salon
    Edgar Arceneaux
    Friday, February 20, 2009 @ Noon
    Free Admission



    About the Salon

    Watts House Project (WHP) is an on-going collaborative artwork in the shape of a neighborhood redevelopment.

    Located on E. 107th St. across from the historic Watts Towers, the WHP enhances community through an artist-in-residence program, exhibition spaces, educational and social programming, and residential housing.

    Directed by artist Edgar Arceneaux, WHP engages art and architecture as a catalyst for expanding and enhancing community. The neighborhood surrounding the Watts Towers presents a stark contrast to the well-maintained aesthetics of this national monument, and currently the residents have limited means to capitalize socially or economically on this cultural currency. WHP operates with the understanding that social and economic challenges are tied to basic ecological problems and aims to develop an incremental, nuanced and sustainable model that marries ecological concerns and practice with social and cultural remedies. By creating a physical and social infrastructure for creativity, WHP will catalyze artistic production and community pride of place, forming partnerships that can lead to real solutions, hope, and change.

    The initial phase of the Watts House Project is being completed as a part of the Hammer Museum's Artist Residency Program. The Hammer Museum's Artist Residency Program was initiated with funding from the Nimoy Foundation and is supported through a significant grant from the James Irvine Foundation.

    The initial phase of Watts House Project is an LAXART Public Art Initiative.

    About the Salon Presenter

    Edgar Arceneaux is an American artist living and working in Los Angeles. His multivalent practice includes drawings, collaborative installations, community-based social sculpture initiatives and large-scale film projects. His recent solo shows include The Agitation of Expansion at the Contemporary Art Center of Virginia (2008), Snake River at the REDCAT Gallery in Los Angeles, CA (2006), and The Alchemy of Comedy…Stupid at ArtPace in San Antonio, Texas and Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects (2006). He's participated in various group exhibitions at the Studio Museum in New York, the San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art, MOCA in Los Angeles, CA, and completed a residency at Project Row Houses in Houston, TX. Arceneaux was included in the 2008 Whitney Biennial, and the 2008 California Biennial. He received his MFA from California Institute of the Arts, Valencia, CA in 2001, his BFA from Art Center College of Design in Pasadena in 1996, and also studied at Skowhegan School in Maine and the Fachholchschule Aachen, in Aachen, Germany. Arceneaux was awarded the USA Broad Fellowship for 2007 by United States Artists.


    Photo copyright and courtesy Edgar Arceneaux, 2000.

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    Farmlab Public Salon
    Nasrin Tabatabai and Babak Afrassiabi
    Friday, June 19, 2009 @ Noon
    Free Admission


    Practice of Eventuality


    About the Salon

    Join Nasrin Tabatabai and Babak Afrassiabi for a discussion about their collaborative project, Pages. Started since 2004, Pages consist of different activities, such as the publication of a bilingual Farsi/English magazine, video and installation works and editorial re-articulations.

    With Pages they try to pursue possibilities of reflection between various localities and conditions of artistic and theoretical discourses. With maintaining always a link to the contextual and historical realities of the issues addressed in each project and editions of the magazine, they generate spaces and instances of criticality and negotiation regarding the aesthetics and politics defining current artistic and theoretical practice and production.

    About the Salon Presenters

    Nasrin Tabatabai and Babak Afrassiabi live in Rotterdam, with an art practice they pursue both in Iran and the Netherlands. Their work has been featured in solo and group exhibitions in Latin America, the United States and throughout Europe. In 2004, they initiated a long-term collaborative project called Pages. (www.pagesproject.net)


    Images credit: Desire & Change, Pages magazine issue 3, 2004

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    four: music and dance improvisation
    Monday, February 16 & Tuesday, 17 2009 8:00pm

    Featuring: Tatsuya Nakatani (Percussion); Michel Doneda (Saxophone); Kaoru Watanabe (Flute) and Oguri (Dance).

    Location: Ignite, at the Metabolic Studio.

    More information: Click here

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    No Optimists' Breakfast on Friday, March 13, 2009


    Please don't take this as a sign of pessimism.

    Due to an out-of-town project happening that same date and requiring the participation of many members of the Metabolic Studio team, there will be no Optimists' Breakfast on Friday, March 13, 2009.

    There will be a regularly scheduled noontime Pubic Salon that same date.

    The next Optimists' Breakfast is scheduled to place Friday, November 13, 2009. More information will be posted once the theme and speakers are confirmed.


    Photo: Participants in the 2/13/09 Optimists' Breakfast.
    Farmlab photo by Kate Balug, 2009

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    New Postcard Features Glass Orchestra Rehearsal at PPG, in Owens Valley



    The new Public Salon Series postcard -- available for free at the Studio warehouse -- features an overhead view of a recent rehearsal of the Owens Valley Dry Lake Glass & Water Citizens Orchestra.

    The photo was taken at the Pittsburgh Plate Glass factory, in Bartlett.

    Photo by Joshua White, 2009.

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    African Daisies, Bright Yellow on a Rainy Gray Day

    The African daisies located inside the Ananbolic Monument are already in bloom.

    Photos coming soon. In the meanwhile, please come see and enjoy for yourself at the Monument, which is located on the northern end of the Los Angeles State Historic Park, across from the Farmlab warehouse.

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    Friday, February 13, 2009
    @ Metabolic Studio (Farmlab+Chora+AMI)

    The following will occur -- or in one case, not occur -- 2/13/09 at the Studio:

  • 8am: The Chora Prints 2008 raffle takes place. To be eligible to win, prints must be purchased prior to the drawing. More info.

  • 8am: Optimists' Breakfast happens. More info.

  • Noon: There is no Public Salon today. More info.

  • 5pm: The Chora Prints 2008 exhibition concludes. More info.

    (All times are PST.)

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    About the Anabolic Monument

    Read the PDF here:

    about%20the%20anabolic%20monument.pdf

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    Chora Prints 2008 Exhibition Closes Friday

    This is Final Week to Enter Raffle to Win Box Suite of Prints


    Metabolic Studio's exhibition of the Chora Prints 2008 project concludes this coming Friday, February 13, 2009.

    Also concluding this week: the chance to win a complete handmade box suite of all 22 prints in the project.

    The drawing of the winning raffle ticket for the suite will be held Friday morning, February 13, 2009 @ 8am during the Optimists' Breakfast.

    Purchase one or more prints prior to that date and time, and you'll be entered in the raffle.

    Prints can be purchased this week at the Metabolic Studio (Farmlab + Chora + AMI), located here, or online, by visiting the Chora Prints 2008 website's "purchase" page and following the links.

    The raffle winner need not be present Friday morning, as long as the Chora team has your contact information on file to let you know you've won.

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    'What Patriotism Means to Me'
    Optimists' Breakfast
    Friday, February 13, 2009 @ 8am



    Please RSVP to info at farmlab dot org. Put "2/13/09 RSVP" in subject line

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    Farmlab Public Salon
    Chris Carlsson
    Friday, February 6, 2009 @ Noon
    Free Admission



    Nowtopia: How Pirate Programmers, Outlaw Bicyclists, and Vacant-lot Gardeners are Inventing the Future Today


    About the Salon

    Outlaw bicycling, urban permaculture, biofuels, free software, even the Burning Man festival, are windows into a scarcely visible social transformation that challenges politics as we know it. As capitalism continues its inexorable push to corral every square inch of the globe into its logic of money and markets, new practices are emerging that are redefining politics. In myriad ways, people are taking back their time and technological know-how from the market and in small under-the-radar ways, are making life better right now. In doing so, they also set the foundation—technically AND socially—for a genuine movement of liberation from market life. The social networks thus created, and the practical experience of cooperating outside of economic regulation, become a breeding ground for new strategies and tactics to confront the everyday commodification to which capitalism reduces us all.

    Nowtopia uncovers resistance and rebellion amidst fractions of a slowly recomposing working class in America. Rarely self-identifying as mere 'workers,' people from all walks of life are doing incredible amounts of work in their "free" "non-work" time. This unpaid work is creating immediate practical improvements in daily life. More interesting still, these myriad initiatives constitute a more thorough-going refusal of politics and economics as usual.

    Building on the investigative methodology developed by autonomist Marxists in Europe and the U.S.A., Carlsson recontextualizes the so-called "middle class" as an example of working class recomposition. The practical rebellions outlined in this book embody a deeper challenge to the basic epistemological underpinnings of modern life, as a new ecologically-driven politics emerges from below to reshape our assumptions about science, technology and human behavior.

    The semi-conscious war between these life-affirming, self-emancipating behaviors and the coercive domination of money, property, and survival amidst contrived scarcity is the core investigation of this book.

    Chris Carlsson is a San Francisco author, Nowtopian, outlaw bicyclist and wannabe vacant-lot gardener. He has edited four collections of political and historical essays. His most recent book is After The Deluge, a utopian novel of post-economic San Francisco. He was one of the original founders and long-time editor of Processed World magazine. He also helped to start the Critical Mass bicycling movement in San Francisco (and the world!!! Bwahahahaha!).

    About the Salon Presenter

    Chris Carlsson, executive director of the multimedia history project Shaping San Francisco, is a writer, publisher, editor, and community organizer. For the last twenty-five years his activities have focused on the underlying themes of horizontal communications, organic communities and public space. He was one of the founders, editors and frequent contributors to the ground-breaking San Francisco magazine Processed World. He also helped launch the monthly bike-ins known as Critical Mass that have spread to five continents and over 300 cities. He has edited four books, "Bad Attitude: The Processed World Anthology" (Verso: 1990), "Reclaiming San Francisco: History, Politics, Culture" (City Lights: 1998, co-edited with James Brook and Nancy J. Peters), "Critical Mass: Bicycling's Defiant Celebration" (AK Press: 2002), "The Political Edge" (City Lights Foundation: 2004). He published his first novel, "After The Deluge," in 2004, a story of post-economic San Francisco in the year 2157 (Full Enjoyment Books: 2004).

    Carlsson makes his living as a book designer, editor, and typesetter. He is a member of Media Workers Union Local 100 in San Francisco. He is past board president of CounterPULSE, a San Francisco-based arts organization, where he has been producing a series of public Talks since January 2006, and conducting award-winning bicycle history tours. Check his website for updates on this and links to his blog and other activities: www.chriscarlsson.com, or email him directly at cc@chriscarlsson.com.

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    Mujeres de Maiz / La Sagrada
    Sunday, March 8, 2009 6-10pm

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    Farmlab Public Salon
    Sandow Birk
    Friday, April 3, 2009 @ Noon
    Free Admission


    Screening of the film, "Dante's Inferno" -- With a discussion with artist, art director, writer, and producer Sandow Birk


    About the Salon

    The Salon Series today screens the film, "Dante's Inferno."

    From the film's website: Melding the seemingly disparate traditions of apocalyptic live-action graphic novel and charming Victoria-era toy theater, Dante’s Inferno is a subversive, darkly satirical update of the original 14th century literary classic. Retold with the use of intricately hand-drawn paper puppets and miniature sets, and without the use of CGI effects, this unusual travelogue takes viewers on a tour of hell. And what we find there, looks a lot like the modern world.

    Sporting a hoodie and a hang-over from the previous night’s debauchery, Dante (voiced by Dermot Mulroney) wakes to find he is lost — physically and metaphorically — in a strange part of town. He asks the first guy he sees for some help: The ancient Roman poet Virgil (voiced by James Cromwell), wearing a mullet and what looks like a brown bathrobe. Having no one else to turn to, Dante’s quickly convinced that his only means for survival is to follow Virgil voyage down, down through the depths of Hell.

    The pair cross into the underworld and there Virgil shows Dante the underbelly of the Inferno, which closely resembles the decayed landscape of modern urban life. Dante and Virgil’s chronicles are set against a familiar backdrop of used car lots, strip malls, gated communities, airport security checks, and the U.S. Capitol. Here, hot tubs simmer with sinners, and the river Styx is engorged with sewage swimmers.

    Also familiar is the contemporary cast of presidents, politicians, popes and pop-culture icons sentenced to eternal suffering of the most cruel and unusual kind: Heads sewn on backwards, bodies wrenched in half, never-ending blowjobs, dancing to techno for eternity, and last, but certainly not least, an inside look at Lucifer himself, from the point of view of a fondue-dunked human appetizer. Each creatively horrific penance suits the crime, and the soul who perpetrated it.

    As Dante spirals through the nine circles of hell, he comes to understand the underworld’s merciless machinery of punishment, emerging a new man destined to change the course of his life. But not, of course, the brand of his beer.

    About the Salon Presenter

    Sandow Birk:
    Art Director, Writer, Producer
    Raised on the beaches of Southern California and currently living and working in Los Angeles, Sandow Birk is a product of California culture. With an emphasis on social issues, frequent themes of his past work have included daily life in L.A.’s barrios, inner city violence, graffiti, various political issues, surfing, and skateboarding. His work has been shown extensively throughout the U.S. He was a recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1996, and a Fulbright Fellow to Rio de Janeiro for 1997. In 1999 he was awarded a Getty Fellowship for painting. Birk’s epic, pseudo-historical series of the “The Great War of the Californias”, in which Los Angeles and San Francisco wage all out war for control of the Golden State, was featured at the Laguna Art Museum in 2000. His latest project, a rewriting (with co-author Marcus Sanders) and illustrating of Dante’s The Divine Comedy set in contemporary urban America has culminated in three books, currently out from Chronicle Books: Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. An exhibition of the project was organized by the San Jose Museum of Art in 2005.

    Sean Meredith: Director, Writer, Producer, Editor
    Born and raised in New Jersey, Sean Meredith studied film at Emerson College in Boston. His senior film won the school’s Evvy Award for Best 16mm Film. After toiling away the years as a vintage dishware expert, he has finished directing his first feature film, “Dante’s Inferno.” He directed and produced the 2003 film “In Smog and Thunder: The Great War of the Californias.” After premiering at Slamdance in 2003, the California Civil War mockumentary went on to play at twenty film festivals. It was released on DVD in 2004 and had it’s broadcast premiere in 2005.


    Image courtesy Sandow Birk

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    Public Harvest Of
    Xempoalxochitl / Marigolds
    Saturday, January 31, 2009 @ Noon

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    Farmlab Public Salon
    100TH ANNIVERSARY SALON!
    Newton & Helen Mayer Harrison
    Friday, January 30, 2009 @ Noon



    "Four Works on the Culture of Extraction"


    About the Salon
    Considering the contemporary condition that they describe as the Culture of Extraction, the Harrisons present four of their projects: the Serpentine Lattice, the Endangered Meadows of Europe, Green Heart of Holland, and Greenhouse Britain.

    This is the 100TH SALON IN FARMLAB'S *PUBLIC SALON SERIES.*

    About the Salon Participants

    "There is a gentle beauty in their work, and much charisma in the otherworldly maps and text panels that are poetic and personal rather than dryly official. The exhibition is, of course, a call to action, but it is foremost a lyrical meditation on what ecological disaster and collective recovery might one day look like."
    Elizabeth Mahoney, The Guardian, 2008


    Among the leading pioneers of the eco-art movement, the collaborative team of Newton and Helen Mayer Harrison have worked for almost forty years with biologists, ecologists and urban planners to initiate collaborative dialogues to uncover ideas and solutions which support biodiversity and community development.

    The Harrison's concept of art embraces a breathtaking range of disciplines. They are historians, diplomats, ecologists, investigators, emissaries and art activists. Their work involves proposing solutions and involves not only public discussion, but extensive mapping and documentation of these proposals in an art context.

    Past projects have focused on watershed restoration, urban renewal, agriculture and forestry issues among others. The Harrisons visionary projects have often led to changes in governmental policy and have expanded dialogue around previously unexplored issues leading to practical implementations throughout the United States and Europe.

    "Our work begins when we perceive an anomaly in the environment that is the result of opposing beliefs or contradictory metaphors. Moments when reality no longer appears seamless and the cost of belief has become outrageous offer the opportunity to create new spaces - first in the mind and thereafter in everyday life."



    Further information about the Harrisons: www.theharrisonstudio.net
    And:Harrisons.pdf

    Image: A vision for the Green Heart of Holland, Installation at Gouda. Image courtesy the Harrisons

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    Farmlab Public Salon
    Joel Reynolds
    Friday, January 23, 2009 @ Noon
    Free Admission

    "Whales, Dolphins, Sonar, and the U.S. Navy"

    About the Salon

    Winter v NRDC was the name of the recent controversial U.S. Supreme Court case that challenged the U.S. Navy's use of sonar off the coast of southern California. At this Salon, Joel Reynolds of the Natural Resources Defense Council (the "NRDC" in the court case name) will discuss the outcome of the case, the reasoning and the science behind the NRDC's arguments, and perhaps hypothesize about what 2009 may bring regarding the matter.

    From a Joel Reynolds blog post the week prior to the arguments:
    "As I wrote about previously, NRDC challenged the Navy's refusal to comply with federal environmental laws when using mid-frequency active sonar during fourteen long-planned exercises in southern California. There is no question that sonar injures and kills whales and dolphins. The Navy admitted as much in its official "Environmental Assessment" of the exercises, estimating that the exercises would significantly disturb or injure an estimated 170,000 marine mammals, including causing permanent injury to more than 450 whales and temporary hearing impairment in at least 8,000 whales.

    "Nonetheless, in planning its exercises, the Navy refused to adopt common-sense measures to protect marine mammals from the effects of its dangerous sonar technology. The Navy's failures led both the district court and Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals to conclude that the Navy had violated federal environmental laws. To remedy the Navy's violations, while still allowing the Navy to effectively train, the district court required the Navy to adopt additional safeguards protecting whales and other marine mammals."

    About the Salon Speaker

    Joel Reynolds is the Director of National Resources Defense Council's (NRDC) Urban Program, the Marine Mammal Protection and So. California Ecosystem projects.

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    Designer / Developer
    For Web + Print
    (Los Angeles)

    The Metabolic Studio (Farmlab + Chora + AMI) is seeking a collaborator who's into: Information as art, technology as art, big conceptual ideas, and when the time comes, hitting deadlines.

    Things we like include: Cabinets of wonder, antiquarian books, scientific journals, hypertext, mind-mapping (flow charts as well as brain scans), the work of Gordon Matta-Clark, Manuel Castells, Edward Tufte, the Center for Land Use Interpretation, seed vaults, bees, lightning, social sculpture, general experimentation, and people who know things that we don't.

    Know someone who might be interested? Then please pass along our contact info to them, or ask them to contact us via:

    info [at] farmlab [dot] org

    Please include "Web/Print" in the subject field.

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    Classes -- Upcoming + Past



    February 7 & 8: Sat 9am-5pm, Sunday 10am-5pm
    March 7 & 8: Sat 9am-5pm, Sunday 10am-5pm

    6th Annual Los Angeles Permaculture Design Course

    A Certificate Course for Homeowners, Land Managers & Design Professionals,

    This course has something for everyone...

    This training includes the most inspiring examples of sustainable land use and human ingenuity from around the world.

    Part III: Community & Green Business... EcoVillage Design and Community Celebration.

    Learn how to apply Permaculture's principles-the indicators of sustainability-to the design of healthy regenerative businesses and communities...

    For more information or to register see http://earthflow.com/LAPDC0708.php

    Taking Place at Farmlab -- Not Sponsored by Farmlab

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    Happy Holidays & New Year
    Farmlab Open By Appointment Only December 25-January 4

    Dear Friends,

    The Metabolic Studio -- Farmlab and Chora included -- will be open by telephone appointment only** to the public from Wednesday evening, December 24, 2008, through Monday morning, January 5, 2009.

    [The Public Salon Series resumes Friday, January 9, 2009 @ noon. And the Chora Prints 2008 installation reopens Jan. 5 @ 10am.]

    On behalf of everyone here, here's wishing you and yours a great holiday season and a happy new year!

    We'd also like to take a moment to offer our great thanks to each of you for the support, inspiration, comraderie, suggestions, participation, and so much more that so many of you have shared with us during these past twelve months.

    We look forward to seeing you all again soon, we'll have more news about the Studio's structure and various projects in the coming months, and, best of all, here's to a great 2009.

    Sincerely,
    The Farmlab Team
    (323) 226-1158


    **Chora Prints may be purchased online at www.chora.info

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    Seed Harvest Giveaway
    Saturday, December 20, 2008 @ Noon



    A note from Farmlab's Olivia Chumacero:

    "Please bring your own containers to take your seeds home, as well as your own eating and drinking utensils. This GiveAway is
    potluck, bring your favorite dish to share and do please RSVP.

    "ALL OUR SEEDS ARE FROM HEIRLOOM STOCK MARIGOLDS, HOPI CORN, PIPICHTLE, PAPALO, AMARANTH

    "At The Metabolic Studio / Farmlab
    1745 N. SPRING AVE., L.A. 90012
    office #: 323.226.1158
    info [AT] farmlab [DOT].org"

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    Not A Cornfield and Farmlab in 'Actions' Exhibition


    Not A Cornfield and Farmlab are among the works featured in, "Actions: What You Can Do With The City," a survey exhibition curated by the Canadian Centre for Architecture, in Montreal, and on display at that institution through April 19, 2009.

    Also included in the exhibition are many individuals and groups familiar to readers of this blog. A short list includes past Farmlab Public Salon participants such as Fallen Fruit, Los Angeles Urban Rangers, Parking Day, and Islands of L.A. Fellow Public Salon participant Fritz Haeg wrote for the 'Actions' catalog.

    Here's the link to the interactive online component of the 'Actions' show.

    Not A Cornfield (2005-2006), of course, was a work by Lauren Bon. Bon then created Farmlab (2006-).

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    Studio Participates In Good Space Launch

    The Studio was invited by the good folks from Good magazine to participate in the ongoing December, 2008 launch of the Good Space, located on Melrose Avenue near Orange. The Studio's Janet Owen Driggs spent time on opening nights with mag folks, Islands of L.A., and other invitees, discussing public space. The Good Space launch continues through December 19.

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    'The Water Tanks Are Here'


    "The Water Tanks Are Here."

    That was the excited subject line of an email sent by one Farmlab team member to her colleagues late last week.

    What purpose will the tanks serve? And where will they serve them? Check back with this blog in the coming days and weeks for more information...

    Farmlab Photo by Sarah McCabe

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    The Metabolic Studio presents
    The Moth: It Takes Two To Tango
    Thursday, December 11, 2008 @ 7pm (food), 8pm (stories)

    FOR MORE INFO: CLICK HERE


    Please join us for a night of storytelling, dance performed by casebolt and smith, and live tango music at The Metabolic Studio.

    Hosted by Jonathan Ames

    Featuring Stories by:
    novelist Jonathan Ames, writer Brian Finkelstein, comedian Anthony Griffith, filmmaker Ellie Lee and Los Angeles Times columnist Steve Lopez

    Doors open at 7pm
    Stories start on stage at 8pm

    $20 tickets (which include complimentary drinks and Mexican food!) are on sale NOW at

    www.smarttix.com or by calling (212) 868-4444.

    Born eleven years ago in the New York living room of George Dawes Green, THE MOTH features simple, old-fashioned storytelling on thoroughly modern themes by wildly divergent raconteurs. Each show is cast with five carefully selected individuals, who have been coached to share real tales from their lives with no script and no notes. Past storytellers at THE MOTH have included Pulitzer-prize-nominated writers, a pick-pocket, fire-fighters, a professional black jack player, a voodoo priestess, and an astronaut, among many others.

    Email, amshumate@hotmail.com for more info.

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    'Chora Prints' Exhibition Closed Monday
    Dec. 1 is International Day Without Art


    In honor of the upcoming international Day Without Art, the Chora Prints 2008 exhibition at Farmlab / The Studio will be dark on December 1, 2008.

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