Home    Internatural 1.1-1.3    Internatural 1    LEI: Music Center    LEI: Rosebowl    LEI: 18 Street Arts Center    LEI: Hammer Museum    Intelligence Moves    Play in 3 Acts    'Til You Drop    Orange we...    Rhythm Exchange    Futures Project    ISEA 2012    Zero1/Montalvo    MOLAA: Play With Me    CalArts Workshop    LaMama    California Biennial    CUBO:Impediment    Space Shifter 2.0    Phantoms Too    FILE/São Paulo    PDCON/MIS    Between Bodies    Cubo: MediaWomb    Between    Lament    Wave Action    PITMM at SDMA    PITMM in Berlin    Cascando    Training/Dictation    Displacement     Around     Quinine    Buddy     Buddy-Apache    Freetime    CV
 
     
   
 

internatural 1.1 - 1.3
3 tales
Archival prints by Nina Waisman

Related image-tales can be sent on request. Please email info@ninawaisman.net if you are interested in buying or exhibiting images from this series, or if you wuld like more information.

A small group of aliens arrive at Mono Lake. Where they come from, the way to learn about something is to synchronize with its rhythms and behaviors, to let it tune them from the inside out.

Can humans similarly learn more sustainable ways from our elders, i.e. every other life form on the planet - before we extinguish most of them?

These images connect to live performances.
Info on the performances is here

Produced by:
Forest Island Project Residency
in collaboration with U.C. Santa Barbara’sThe Sierra Nevada Aquatic Research Laboratory. For the Forest Island Session "Avalanche Dynamics"

The Forest Island Project is an arts and cultural organization in the Eastern Sierra promoting original cultural production through it’s residency and programming. www.forestislandproject.com

Upcoming Video / Fundraising:
This performance will feed into a longer sci-fi/dance/nature-nurture/art film created by Nina Waisman and collaborators who’ve contributed to the multi-disciplinary research it relies on. The film will draw on scientific and non-western research into nature, intercutting scenes capturing a wide range of everyday human activity, with scenes conveying the rhapsody of giving full attention to the earth’s other-than-human members. We are excited to pursue an artistic investigation of intelligence across species - in hopes of finding ways to counter the lack of intelligence that has led us to push the earth’s 3.5 billion year experiment with life close to the breaking point.

If you are interested in supporting the video, please consider donating what you can. Thank you!!! Contact Forest Island Project: forestislandproject@gmail.com or Nina Waisman: info@ninawaisman.net

Thanks:
The artists are very grateful for support of all kinds offered by Kiersten Puusemp, Christopher James, Dr. Carol Blanchette, Annie Barrett, Michael Light, Dr. Penelope J. Boston, Dr. Sharmila Bhattacharya, Corina Sanchez, Eric Tymstra, Sherryl Taylor, Kate and Paul Page, Chris Orr, Brian O’Connell, Alice Konitz, Valentine Eastern Sierra Reserves and The Mono Lake Committee.

Avalanche Dynamics

Artists Alice Könitz, Brian O’Connell, and Nina Waisman have been invited by Forest Island as participating resident artists for the 2019 Program. Over the course of a one-year fellowship, each artist will make visits to explore the Eastern Sierra, using SNARL as a basecamp, in order to research and develop artistic projects in conjunction with scientists at SNARL. The fellowships are structured to build towards a three-week residency period in late Spring 2019, followed by a final presentation of the artists’ work near the end of the fellowship term that Fall..

For the Forest Island Project’s third residency session, FI and UC Santa Barbara’s Mammoth Lakes based Sierra Nevada Aquatic Research Lab have formed a partnership to investigate the shared interests of artists and scientific researchers working in the Eastern Sierra. Developed by FI, SNARL, and artist Brian O’Connell, this year’s program brings together three artists to collaborate with SNARL scientists under the title Avalanche Dynamics.

Avalanche Dynamics considers how artists and scientists combine procedural rigor with the pursuit of something more felt than already known — a hunch, a nascent hypothesis, inspiration even. In the pursuit of knowledge, a tension develops between process and intuition. When the two come into alignment an intellectual, emotional, and cognitive avalanche of insight can be released. The artistic projects developed through Avalanche Dynamics hope to achieve such moments through interaction with the basic forces that inform the evolving natural, cultural, and lived environment of Mammoth Lakes, California.


 

zebraNarrative













dancers, left to right second image from top: Paola Escobar, Hyosun Choi, Samantha Mohr, Hyoin Jun. vocalist: Carmina Escobar. Same dancers in all images