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Wednesday
Jul062011

NEW MEMBER WELCOME // Albert Wilking Sails NYC's streets

Say hello to one of our newest members, Albert Wilking.

Wilking makes interactive and educational art experiences, and one of his most recent endeavors has been a massive mobile piece for the Pirate Fiesta, which has recently participated in the Mermaid Parade at Coney Island and the Gay Pride Parade in the West Village.

Wilking's current approach began with some donation boxes that he created for the Figment Project on Governors Island last year. "I saw my art being interacted with and collecting money for an altruistic purpose and it changed me," he says. "Previously I had been expecting that my art would be seen in a museum or with my videos they would win the big prize. Now that doesn't matter to me. If people interact with my work and they enjoy it, that's enough for me!"

"3rd Ward has a good number of really creative people that also know their stuff," Wilking says. "It's really nice to share and help each other; it's a learning experience from beginning to end!"

Wilking's pirate vessel involves a lot of ingenuity. "It's about 10' tall and 10' long when assembled and yet it still fits into the back of the car," he says. "None of its parts are longer than 48", making it a real challenge to have a modular safe seaworthy vessel."

Check out a photo of Wilking's vessel after the jump and look for future voyages on the Pirate Fiesta's Facebook page.

Tuesday
Jul052011

TEACHER FEATURE // Alyssa Wood Lends Her Macrame Skills to Jay-Z's Pop-up Shop

Alyssa Wood, who taught our Machine Knitting 101 class last summer, recently finished up a pretty amazing project:

She created macrame pieces for the window display of the new Nolita pop-up store by Jay-Z's Rocawear clothing line. The pop-up store opened on June 27 as part of the brand's new focus on attracting a tech-savvy crowd. Rather than just selling merchandise, the pop-up store has invited celebrities, bloggers and other personalities to come record testimonials about the brand, according to WWD.

Set designer Gille Mills hired Wood to help give the pop-up store a unique hand-made touch. "I did two major pieces and consulted on the rest of the knots that were displayed at the event," Wood tells us. "I even macramed around a power outlet in the bathroom!"

The pop-up shop is located at the Open House Gallery at 201 Mulberry Street, between Spring and Kenmare.

Check out some photos of the display and Wood's work after the jump.

Friday
Jul012011

MAKER EVENT // Red Bull Creation Brings the Country's Best Creators to McCarren Park

Are you ready for the ultimate maker battle? We sincerely hope so, because it's happening very soon right here in Brooklyn. On July 7 some of the nation's best hackers, builders and makers will descend upon our borough to take part in Red Bull Creation, an intense 72-hour marathon of technology and creativity. On July 10 they will present what they've made at McCarren Park from 3-7pm. The event is totally free.

We caught up with Red Bull Creation producer Jason Naumoff to get the inside scoop. He's been working with Red Bull for a couple years to put on the event. "This is the year that we finally made it happen," he says. "And New York is the perfect place to do it. Such a great community exists here and has for quite some time. It's a celebration of New York and Brooklyn creativity in particular."

Out of the 16 teams from across the country that qualified for the event, there are naturally a few hometown competitors. NYC Resistor (birthplace of MakerBot) and Alpha One Labs will represent Brooklyn, and ITP, New York University's interactive technology graduate program, will also field an all-star team. Other teams hail from every corner of the U.S., from Texas's Innovation Thirst and Los Angeles' Double Wide to Baltimore's Harford Hackerspace and the Houston/Austin/Portland/San Francisco combo of the Effin Ladies.

While the teams will be scrambling to come up with the most amazing things that they can in their 72 hours, Naumoff says it's more about collaboration and creation than winning. "We're doing something kind of different, an 'uncompetition.' We're going to have a judged award based on some criteria announced the day of the event, but we're also doing a team's choice award, where we'll ask all of the teams which other team they'd really like to work with. We want to create an environment that represents what hacker spaces and build spaces are really about."

There's no doubt that Red Bull Creation will showcase some of today's brightest and most daring makers, but the most exciting part of the event is the unknown. "We just don't know what's going to be built and what's going to happen," Naumoff says. "We're putting out a broad topic, bringing together some really amazing people, giving them the resources to create something, and watching it unfold."

One of the summer's first official, must-see events. Mark your calendars: Red Bull Creation culminates July 10 from 3-7pm at McCarren Park!

Check out a video about Red Bull Creation after jump.

—John Ruscher

Tuesday
Jun282011

FREE EVENT // Photographer Thierry Van Biesen Talks Vision on Wednesday

Join photographer Thierry Van Biesen tomorrow for a special session of Branding Your Vision. This event—free and open to the public (spread the word!)—offers the amazing opportunity to learn about his 20-year career and catch a highlight of instructor Elizabeth Waugh’s otherwise sold-out course. (Stay tuned for details about the Advanced Vision course starting in August.)

Beirut native Van Biesen, who shoots fashion and advertising in Paris and New York, received an intensive education in finding his own vision during the summer of 1989 when he was a teaching assistant at Art Kane Photo Workshops. There he learned from masters including Ralph Gibson, Art Kane, Sarah Moon, Len Jenshel, Duane Michals, Arthur Elgort, Uli Rose and Jay Maisel. Tomorrow he’ll share those tips, including a few words on lucid dreaming (!), which has been an influence on his absurd, vivid and gorgeous work.

“New York City is full of photographers, so it's important to have unique positioning—an awareness and understanding of what separates you from the rest,” says Waugh, who also teaches Intro to Digital Photography and Studio Lighting: Product Photography. She describes her involvement with 3rd Ward as “…incredibly fulfilling. It’s like nothing else in the city; Brooklyn at its best!”

Wed, Jun 29, 7—10pm
345 Eldert St, Suite 214, Brooklyn
Free and open to the public
RSVP required; email alex@elizabethwaugh.com 

Photo by Thierry Van Biesen-- Cara Cannella

Tuesday
Jun282011

MEMBER PURSUITS // Oriel Poole's "Bleeding Hearts," a 9-room Walk-Through Album Installation

An amazing and innovative event has been taking shape at 3rd Ward, and on Thursday, June 30 it will come to life at Rebel NYC on West 30th Street.

"Bleeding Hearts" was conceived and curated by Brooklyn indie rock band Futurist as a walk-through experience for their album War Is Yesterday. It will include nine rooms featuring a wide array of artists and performers.

Looking for someone who could lead such an ambitious production, Futurist turned to 3rd Ward member Oriel Poole. "This is truly a new form of art, where gallery meets concert, where design meets improv, where human experience is the root of the work and the vision is the driving force," Poole says. "Together we are curating 42 of New York's finest hearts - through mediums of live music, set design, installation, interactive technology, experiential theatre, aerial silks, and a couple funky house DJs to close the night."

Poole describes the production as similar to a haunted house. "We are offering you an experience that you walk-through—9 rooms of stimulating visuals and performance art," she says. "Except we are not here to scare you. We are here to reveal you."

With Poole at the production helm, 3rd Ward has served as a hub for "Bleeding Hearts," with the co-working space providing a great place for her to work and host meetings and the studios serving as an ideal space to create promotional material for the production.

"Bleeding Hearts" takes place June 30 from 8-11:30pm at Rebel NYC (251 W 30th Street, 2nd Floor) and music and performance will keep going until 4am. Grab your tickets here!

Watch a video of Poole talking about the production of "Bleeding Hearts" after the jump.

Mention 3rd Ward to get a discount on tickets! $10 off before the show and $5 off at the door. Just use the promo code: 3rdWard here.

Monday
Jun272011

MEMBER EVENT // Sip Cocktails For a Good Cause at DRINK

3rd Ward member Les Brown has put together a great event called DRINK, and it's taking place this Tuesday, June 28 at Brooklyn Brewery as part of Edible New York's Eat Drink Local Week.

You'll be able to enjoy signature cocktails from local bars including Dram, Maison Premiere, The Richardson, Rabbithole, Manhattan Inn, Brooklyn Winery and The Drink, as well as tasty bar snacks from Nita Nita, Urban Rustic/Lodge, Fat Goose, Fornino, Adamba Imports, Bahn Mi, Brooklyn Ice Cream Factory and Brooklyn Brine.

There will also be an "Iron Bartender"-style battle between local bartenders, who'll square off to create cocktails using secret ingredients. Plus tunes from neo-tango/gypsy jazz band Djangos and Tangos

All proceeds from DRINK will benefit the Northside Town Hall Community and Cultural Center, a joint project of two North Brooklyn non-profits, Neighbors Allied for Good Growth (NAG) and The People's Firehouse, Inc (PFI.) The center, at the former location of the Engine Company 212 firehouse, will be the new home of the two organizations and will also provide a "flexible cultural exhibition and community meeting space on the ground floor and serve as a place for all to celebrate and build community."

DRINK starts at 8pm at Brooklyn Brewery. Sips are limited to the quantity at hand, so get there early! Grab your tickets and RSVP on Facebook!

Monday
Jun272011

OPEN CALL FEATURE // Samantha Y. Huang

Samantha Y. Huang

Today's 3rd Ward Open Call featured artist takes discarded paperback books and transforms them into intricate sculptures. Meet Samantha Y. Huang and "read" something new in her unexpected and arresting work that merges motion and the everyday.

Open Call is still accepting submissions... get started today. This one's the biggest and best yet. Learn why here.

Friday
Jun242011

Registration Discount // Sunday's DIY Business Association Conference

 

What: Brooklyn DIY Business Association Conference—“a talent show for productivity, a swap meet for arty types, a crucial meeting of the minds, a think tank for the Creative New Economy.”

Who: You and all sorts of aspiring and established creative entrepreneurs. Participate in networking groups and learn from expert panelists including Grace Bonney (founder and editor of Design*Sponge), Andrew Wagner (ReadyMade editor-in-chief), and Chris Kaskie (president of Pitchfork). Click here for a full line-up.

When: Sunday, June 26 with light breakfast, lunch, and beer-and-wine evening reception

Register for HALF DAY: 
Brooklyn DIY Business Association Conference for the Music Industry (3–6:30 pm)
Register for FULL DAY: 
Brooklyn DIY Business Association Conference (10:45am–6:30pm)

Take advantage of a discounted full-day pass ($99; regular price $125) by entering "3rdward" at registration checkout. 

Where: The DUMBO Loft (55 Water St, Brooklyn) and Etsy Labs (55 Washington St, Brooklyn)

Why: “It takes a community to do it together,” says DIYBA founder Amy Schroder. We couldn’t agree more! 

Friday
Jun242011

Go Here Now // Parallelograms: In It Together

Since Leah Beeferman and Matthew Harvey met at Virginia Commonwealth University in 2007, they’ve made the move to New York as individual artists and collaborators. Much like 3rd Ward itself--where Leah participated in a 2006 group show--they aim to collectively serve as an incubator for opportunity and possibility. It’s that like-mindedness that makes us want to shine a spotlight on the latest installment in their joint oeuvre, the thought provoking online publication and multi-artist project Parallelograms, which explores the relationship between images and interpretation.

Each week, they provide an artist, writer, designer, or collaborative team with an image found online. The contributor, in turn, creates a unique web project in response to the image. “We ask our contributors to make a site-specific piece where the ‘site’ is the Internet,” Leah explains. 

The project, which started in late 2010 and will run for a year, was a natural extension of Tessellations, a blog where Leah and Matt had a one-year image posting conversation which had started just for fun on MySpace. They notify Parallelograms subscribers about new projects via straightforward weekly e-mails which include a short bio for the contributor and occasionally, a brief description of the project.

Parallelograms project by Pierre Le Hors

“We let our contributors decide how much they want to reveal about their piece. Our impulse has always been that there should be little to no information on the site itself—just the name of the contributor, the image, and the project. It's been like this since day one. We really liked the fact that there was something left to be desired and some confusion about what the site is or does.  It forces one to think about what’s there and to form a response to it,” Matt says. “The Internet isn't really set up for that kind of mystery. Here, we present the beginning and the result with no answers about the in-between. We think the in-between is better left unexplained.” 

To get a sense of what they’re up to with the site, check out one its most well received projects, a response by artist and computer programmer John Houck. 

“We work hard to invite a diverse group of contributors working in different artistic fields: 2-D art, sound, graphic design, video, programming, writing, etc. This range of contributions has brought these various artists together in a way that doesn't often happen, and has created the potential for a varied audience that might not normally interact or look at all of these types of work,” says Matt. “And we certainly don’t claim ownership over any of the works made for the site, although they do feel ‘site-specific.’ We’re happy when the artists take our projects elsewhere. It was great to hear that one of our early contributors included his piece in his application for graduate school.”

The two share all decision-making for Parallelograms, from contributor selection to image selection to site design. As for their individual work, Leah is currently finishing up a residency at Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Workspace and participating in a few group shows around the city, and Matt is an understated photographer who takes “a few quiet photographs with my cell phone when I can.” Together, they’re changing the way we experience the constantly evolving medium of the Internet.

-Parallelograms project by Neil Freeman- Cara Cannella 

Friday
Jun242011

OPEN CALL FEATURE // Carolyn Wong + William Du

Carolyn Wong and William DuAttention to color patterning, the delicacy of paper, and reverence for traditional craft are just a few reasons why we love these Mashi (Japanese paper) installations. The collaborative team Carolyn Wong and William Du have shown themselves to be  both deft artisans and innovative thinkers. 

There is still time to submit to Open Call. Enter today and you'll qualify for the $1,000 Early Entry Award. Get started here.