FLIGHT PATHS, 2018

In Flight Paths participants were invited to walk together, considering significant moments of departure.

Whether actual or metaphorical, departure – with its twin, arrival – asks us to give up something in order to find the new, but we aren't always ready to go. Beginning our walk at the Kulturcentrum in Ronneby, we walked through the narrow streets of the oldest part of the city, making our way to the town square. In the square participants traded stories about departure and leaving. (photo: Simone Aersoe).

Created for the Kulturcentrum, Ronneby, Sweden in partnership with the AIR Blekinge.

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IF ON A WINTER'S NIGHT…

Platform Projects/Walks invites you on a winter walk in the woods and storytelling adventure to trade tales about winter travel. Saturday, February 10: 2 pm. Evergreen Cemetery, meet inside the entrance. Portland, ME

 

Stories about winter travel hold a certain qualitative flavor: the silence of snow in the woods, the world asleep beneath your feet, the caw of a crow, the fast approach of night. Ice builds on the street and your car begins to spin. The deep crack of a shifting lake, or the thunder of an avalanche in the next valley over, expand your sense of the space around you. The world seems to slow down perceptibly and the prevalence of darkness drives us to engage more meaningfully with night. What stories do you have of winter travel?

Italo Calvino's book, If on a Winter's Night A Traveler, is structured as a frame story, each narration diving deeper into mystery, picking up threads and moving them forward. Let's dive deep into the winter woods and see what we find.

WALKING, AN ART HISTORY

During Fall 2017, I taught WALKING, AN ART HISTORY to undergraduate students at Maine College of Art. Students learned about and researched art works that intersect with walking practices, and created their own works. The course was also offered to a group of community members during 2017. Visiting Artists included Katarina Weslien, Geert Vermeire, and Moira Williams. A catalogue of student writings and projects was produced and available here.

The revelatory power of mobilizing the entire body transforms us as well as the spaces we pass through. Modifying the sense of space crossed, walking has been claimed our first aesthetic act. Walking, an Art History will regard walking as methodology, performance and practice within the history of 20th and early 21st century art. Following lines established by early Surrealist wandering and the dérive of the Situationist International; and connecting to earlier histories of pilgrimage, aboriginal mapping, and the notion of the flâneur; students will investigate a cross-disciplinary arts history that engages questions of mark-making, mapping, historical memory, spatial politics, measurement and myth. In addition to readings, discussions and lectures, the course will include walks led by the instructor, students and visitors. 

Students mapping their daily trajectories on the Eastern Prom, Portland ME

Students mapping their daily trajectories on the Eastern Prom, Portland ME

Spring Walk and Catalogue Release: Sunday, April 23

Stories about the Eastland sign across from the Portland Museum of Art

Stories about the Eastland sign across from the Portland Museum of Art

Meet at Western Prom & Pine Street, 3pm

Congress street, like the spine of a book, bisects the northeastern part of the Portland peninsula, Pine and other streets continue through the West End. Come walk the spine of Portland, end to end, and tell your stories in the "book" of Portland. Quirky, surprising, intimate, odd, mournful, bracing, revelatory, ghostly, historical and, most importantly, unknown! We'll make stops along the way to hear your tales. Afterwards, swing by Julie's studio for libations and to get a copy of the new Platform Projects/Walks catalogue chronicling the summer 2016 projects.