Jennifer Allora and Guillermo Calzadilla

Artist Residency ![]() |
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In February 2003, Jennifer Allora and Guillermo Calzadilla's Charcoal Dance Floor--a highly detailed floor drawing of young clubgoers that slowly disappeared as the shoes of gallery visitors scuffed it--was featured in the Walker exhibition How Latitudes Become Forms: Art in a Global Age. Since then, they've visited twice more as artists-in-residence. Against the backdrop of evolving and controversial media ownership rules by the Federal Communications Commission and possibly the most media-dominated presidential campaign in United States history, they are working in collaboration with the Walker Teen Arts Council (WACTAC) to build a citywide network of independent radio transmitters broadcasting from homes, offices, cars, and even bikes.
Starting July 1st and running until the November 2nd election, the Walker and its community partners will hold workshops, screen films, and present speakers around the issues of radio access, independent media, free speech, and democracy. To get involved in this free radio project, see below under Related Events.
Response-Ability: An Interview with Jennifer Allora & Guillermo Calzadilla
In a recent interview with Walker staff members, the artists discussed their practice.
For your residency, you will be collaborating closely with WACTAC. Several of your past projects have included similar elements. What do you find interesting about this mode of working?
There is something very exciting to us about the idea of creating open and dynamic structures that lead to unpredictable results. Because we are two people working together, our process is fundamentally an economy of exchange--of ideas, thoughts, observations, etc.--so it seems natural to us to extend and permeate the boundaries of our collaboration with new inputs from others. We like the idea that collaborating allows for different positions to come into contact and conflict with each other. . . .
Starting July 1st and running until the November 2nd election, the Walker and its community partners will hold workshops, screen films, and present speakers around the issues of radio access, independent media, free speech, and democracy. To get involved in this free radio project, see below under Related Events.
Response-Ability: An Interview with Jennifer Allora & Guillermo Calzadilla
In a recent interview with Walker staff members, the artists discussed their practice.
For your residency, you will be collaborating closely with WACTAC. Several of your past projects have included similar elements. What do you find interesting about this mode of working?
There is something very exciting to us about the idea of creating open and dynamic structures that lead to unpredictable results. Because we are two people working together, our process is fundamentally an economy of exchange--of ideas, thoughts, observations, etc.--so it seems natural to us to extend and permeate the boundaries of our collaboration with new inputs from others. We like the idea that collaborating allows for different positions to come into contact and conflict with each other. . . .
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Related Links
How Latitudes Become Forms: Art in a Global Age
http://latitudes.walkerart.org/artists/index.wac?id=269



