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Hidden City: The Sounds of Brighton Beach
Submitted by todd on Wed, 08/11/2010 - 8:28am
"Hidden City: The Sounds of Brighton Beach"
Monday, August 09, 2010 - 06:00 AM
By Jennifer Hsu, Carolina A. Miranda
photo: Carolina A. Miranda
video: Jennifer Hsu
Remaining silent turns on all the other senses. Colors come into sharp focus. Smells intensify. We become accutely aware of the squeals of the elevated subways in the distance, which give off an industrial-musical note.
It isn't the average walking tour that asks you to observe silence for 90 minutes straight. Or pick up trash in a small park. Or listen to the rattle and hum of air conditioners while walking down entire city blocks with your eyes closed.
But we're not on an average walking tour at all. We're on an artist-designed soundwalk with Todd Shalom of the performance group Elastic City. Our group's mission is to observe the sounds all around us, make note of them and on a couple of occasions, produce sounds of our own. (The latter exercise results in a great deal of clucking and popping noises — to the chagrin of the old Ukrainian men chilling out in Brighton's Babi Yar Triangle.)
The walk is part of a callout we did at the station last month, in which eight WNYC listeners — Deirdre, Craig, Meral, James, Patrick, Stephanie, Abigail and Christian — joined us to experience an aspect of the city that so many of us work hard to forget, be it the roar of garbage trucks or the echo of a neighbor's too-loud television set.
Shalom guides us through a variety of listening exercises that leave us attuned to our environment. Colors come into sharp focus. Smells intensify — be it garbage or simmering garlic. We become accutely aware of the squeals of the elevated subways in the distance, which give off an industrial-musical note. By the end of the walk, we all realize that almost every aspect of urban life is set to an inescapable thrum of air conditioning.
The most poignant moment, however, comes early on: At one point we find ourselves inadvertently surrounding a blind man who is going on about his business on Brighton Beach Boulevard. Our artistic experiment is, for some, a way of life.
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Peep Elastic City Show
Submitted by todd on Mon, 08/09/2010 - 12:29pm
What a day. Elastic City turned heads this past Saturday at Brooklyn Flea with our Peep Show. It was free to enter and visitors emerged from the hot black tent forever changed. Conceived by: Juan Betancurth, Riley Hooker and Todd Shalom. Special thanks to Riley Hooker and Juan Betancurth for making the damn thing, and to Paige Fredlund for luring in wary shoppers. See below for video. It's pretty safe for work.
"Last Address" by Ira Sachs
Submitted by todd on Sun, 06/27/2010 - 10:56pm
"An elegiac film made up of exterior images of the last residential addresses of a group of New York City artists who died of AIDS."
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Moving Monuments with Niegel Smith
Submitted by todd on Wed, 06/02/2010 - 8:47am
Here's some video from Niegel Smith's "Monumental Walk" on May 25, 2010
Monumental Walks
Submitted by todd on Sun, 05/23/2010 - 10:45am
We spoke with Niegel Smith about his walks, “Follow the Leader” and “Monumental Walk” in the middle of Times Square hoopla.
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by Jon Cotner
A slideshow of Andrea Polli's walk from participants' perspectives
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- elasticcity: We just finished our walks for AMERICAN REALNESS. The participants were so gracious and we're so thankful to have... http://t.co/1PsWaROy
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