Bethany Collins, currently an artist at the Fountainhead Residency, is working at the Press this week completing a set of blind embosses which will be unveiled in Chicago in August.
From one of her artist’s statements:
” . . . each new body of work borders on an obsessive preoccupation with language- it’s ability and inability to negotiate a way of being in the world. But I have found in my practice a delight in these obsessive preoccupations. And in the solutions they slowly, ever so slowly, but inevitably offer.”
The two took numerous field recordings throughout South Florida, edited and selected the best among them and handed them over to various sound artists, who then created sound-works in a call-and-response format.
The calls and responses were released by Other Electricities both digitally and on vinyl. Wheeler Castillo and Milgrim expanded the project by also collaborating on a series of screenprints that draw upon the history of Florida dating to the era of its original colonization, vernacular architectural elements, and the native flora and fauna. The screenprints were created at Turn-Based Press and are included in a special, box-set edition (the boxes are also hand-made). The regular record also has a hand-screened slipcover, and at the release party, digital download codes were available for purchase as variable, hand-screened post-cards.
The prints are on view through June 21 at Clyde Butcher’s Coconut Grove Gallery, along with the chance to listen to some of the recordings. The record release party was held at the Miami Music Club in the Design District, and featured live performances by some of the Archival Feedback artists.
Archival Feedback has been reviewed and written about by several publications: