Pretty yellow dressess strolling in Manhattan
The outdoor art installation season is upon us. The sculpture garden on the roof of the Metropolitan Museum of Art is the Big Fish, but you can catch performances and exhibits all throughout the city from now through September.
Kate Gilmore's performance art piece, Walk the Walk, just opened in Bryan Park. It runs for five days during office hours. In it, seven women in bright yellow dresses (when it's chilly, they don pink sweaters) pace back and forth along the top of a 10-by-10-foot plywood box. It's suppose to represent a microcosm of the nearby busy midtown intersections. I think. I'm never exactly sure what the deeper meaning is. I just go along for the ride.
The girls randomly stomp their feet and if you step inside the cube, it sounds like a stampeding herd of buffalo. I don't know if you can consider this choreographed, since the girls are walking randomly. Sometimes, they collide into one another and their energy ebbs and flows.
Does it work? Yeah, I suppose so. It was fun but I got a bit exhausted just watching them for :15 minutes. There's no real beginning or end. They were pacing when I got there and still pacing when I left. They're probably pacing as you read this. (I love that I happened to catch a police siren in this second clip. The soundtrack of my city.)
Kate Gilmore's performance art piece, Walk the Walk, just opened in Bryan Park. It runs for five days during office hours. In it, seven women in bright yellow dresses (when it's chilly, they don pink sweaters) pace back and forth along the top of a 10-by-10-foot plywood box. It's suppose to represent a microcosm of the nearby busy midtown intersections. I think. I'm never exactly sure what the deeper meaning is. I just go along for the ride.
The girls randomly stomp their feet and if you step inside the cube, it sounds like a stampeding herd of buffalo. I don't know if you can consider this choreographed, since the girls are walking randomly. Sometimes, they collide into one another and their energy ebbs and flows.
Does it work? Yeah, I suppose so. It was fun but I got a bit exhausted just watching them for :15 minutes. There's no real beginning or end. They were pacing when I got there and still pacing when I left. They're probably pacing as you read this. (I love that I happened to catch a police siren in this second clip. The soundtrack of my city.)
Labels: NYC: A Users Guide
20 Comments:
They're not wearing flatties either.
exactly how it feels at work some days. without the pretty yellow dresses.
You can't know how freeing your statement about the deeper meaning is to me.
I have struggled to find meaning, and now I can just say, meh, I'm not sure, I'll just look at it and not decide.
Thank you. Thank you.
the cynic in me wonders if those women are getting paid in cash or is it just the honor of being part of a performance piece. i am a philistine these days, i know. xoxoxox
Pat: Flatties wouldn't have made the big stomping sound they were after.
Daisy: That's exactly what it feels like to walk through the Times Square subway station. In case you've ever wondered.
EG: I didn't start to really enjoy art until I abandoned the whole "deeper meaning" shtick. I look at art on a very base level and if that makes me a base individual, so bit it. I'm happier this way.
Savannah: I've wondered that myself and couldn't find anything in the articles about whether or not the girls got a stipend. If I'm nearby before it closes, I'll just go up to one of them and ask.
Some of the stranges things fall into the category of art.
Performance art can be an odd thing.
And a lot of odd things can be performance art. I like this. :¬)
Huh. My first thought is that some people will do anything for a buck. Do those gals really think they're performance artists? I mean, there's no skill involved there.
It's weird. Why does our society admire unusual and useless stuff like that? In the guise of "art"?
I want a yellow dress
They must be exhausted!
yeah. i could watch that for about 3 seconds before it annoyed the bejeesus out of me.
Eva: That's true! Sometimes, "art" can go horribly wrong.
SAW: It can be pretty great, too. I've seen some very effective performance art.
Map: I liked it too, but the luster wore off pretty quick.
Rob: I don't think it has anything to do with skill. I think it's more the conception and execution.
Nurse: I'd like to see you in a yellow dress. Wink.
Rose: I was there for a while and you could actually see them start to slow down their pace. It WAS exhausting!
Tulpen: Annoying? Perhaps. But I'm glad they attempt this stuff. Nice avatar, by the way.
Imagine how popular it would be if the roof of the box was made of transparent polycarb?
Ah, art with a capital A. My favorite.
Once when I was at the Banff Centre for the Arts, some of the artists put on a performance piece in the pool with pretty colored lights and ethereal music. It was Art, but I have no friggin' idea what it meant.
Great that this stuff is on the streets, this piece looks good.
"I'm never exactly sure what the deeper meaning is. I just go along for the ride"
- me too! except for the times that such mysteries completely give me the shits, like a 5min video loop of a twig on the ground or something...
But why YELLOW?
kykn: You *always* leave the most clever comment. If they constructed the cube per your suggestion, you would have red about it in your local paper.
Keely: But did you like it? That's the $10,000 question.
Lulu: I may not always appreciate it, but I'm always glad I bump into it. As always, A+ for effort.
Ruby: I give the artist a lot of leeway but, like you, I have my limits.
Dolce: I LOVE the shade of yellow they chose! Don't you? Perhaps it's a good contrast for the background? I dunno.
Oh gosh. Imagine spending years and thousands of dollars studying dancing only to end up walking around in a yellow dress atop a box.
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