Showing posts with label ELandF Gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ELandF Gallery. Show all posts

Saturday

re animations at Institute 193

re animations
reviving/revisiting
the performance art of
ELandF projects
february 16. 6-9pm
Institute 193
193 N. Limestone Street
          .
In Your Mind You Have Gone To The Land Of Ultimate Unquenchable Thirst - Lauren Argo
with thanks to Jane McCafferty and Al Edington and Latitude Artist Community
---
On February 16, 2012, Institute 193 hosted a retrospective of the work of ELandF Projects, one of the only organizations in Kentucky devoted to performance art.


---

Two pieces were chosen for recreation inside the gallery. In “The Book Reader” a participant (Mick Jeffries) read passages from a book that holds deep personal significance for him. “Lives Shaped by Boxes,” a repetitive box folding ritual performed by Caitlin Serey, examined the tedium and isolation associated with the forms of employment often held by people with disabilities. A television installed in the gallery played video footage of other
---

Meanwhile, performers enacted two other ELandF pieces outside the gallery. The artists Kremena Todorova and Kurt Gohde rode in a taxi with willing participants in 15-minute intervals, photographing each participant at a different location downtown. Doreen Maloney and Rikki Gard performed “Cloudwatchers,” sitting on a patch of Astroturf installed on the sidewalk and looked at the sky.

In additon, Louisville artist Lauren Argo performed a new work created by Bruce Burris and Jane McCafferty titled “In Your Mind You Have Gone to the Land of Ultimate Unquenchable Thirst,” part of a cycle called





Thursday

discomfort .....in progress

Discomfort, harsh preceptor of empathy and compassion, you appear when something is wrong, demanding our response. These days, a deep and massive discomfort is screaming from all continents and in every language, THIS IS WRONG; too many suffer for the benefits of the few; too many have grown comfortable with hate; too many mountains have fallen; and our feverish earth is thrashing in pain. With compassion and justice as guides, discomfort can transform and reform us, and the world we inhabit. We must listen to discomfort's call to action and not let comfort create complacency. 
Sue Massek
discomfort
ascension
you are invited
 

ground floor escalator
Lexington Center
Lexington Kentucky
Friday May 20th
12pm
                                

Discomfort can happen with fear and dread.  Knowing that you will get hurt because you’ve been hurt before.  Waiting for it to happen.  And everyone is there watching and waiting too hoping for some excitement or explanation or spectacle to release the uncomfortable tension.  But the tension is normal and releasing it is not normal and would cause discomfort.  So nothing happens.  Or almost nothing anyway.
Becky Alley

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhyOjm-96IsZsF9dTVGt7_T0Y7Qw5M8NoRf80_iypfrpOutVYIONspPqZAIqbEVGWDst0Ubjm3WM0Ntvn5MbwFHcMBylGk30jVBBIVyjX0FCtCkgqjjMp76GxWVJh0133qoAhkGT5T5EA/s1600/discomfort+067+-+current+ad.jpg 

















 
Wanted:
Are you willing to describe feelings related to the experience of profound personal discomfort while ascending an escalator with Becky Alley.
Artist Fee:
$50.00 for one (appx. 27 second) escalator ascension from first to second level of Lexington Center in Lexington Kentucky while recounting feelings of personal discomfort to/with Becky Alley who will eventually assemble and publish a no more than fifty word account of this interaction.
To Apply:
Please....  no more than one hundred words on why you wish to ascend on an escalator while describing feelings related to profound personal discomfort to Becky  Alley.

BEN FRYMAN...HALFWAY TO HAZARD... COAL DRAWING

Sunday

Lexington Town Crier (event summary)

Lexington Herald-Leader, photos/story by Jonathan Palmer
In a "town crier" event staged by ELandF Gallery on Thursday, Lexington actors Alex Johns, right, and Brittny Congleton declaimed the text of a letter written to the city government by developer Dudley Webb. The two strolled downtown while sharing the words of the man behind the CentrePointe project planned for a block where some of the city's oldest buildings had stood.

--------------------------

Recap May 28, 2009
Lexington Town Crier
Thanks to everyone who helped out on this event- as always it was a great success and lots of fun! Below are links to articles videos and pictures. Special thanks to our Town Criers, Brittny Congleton, Alex Johns and Elaine Parker.

Mick Jeffries video of the dramatic conclusion
WTVQ brief video and article by Karla Wade
Photos from Kurt Gohde
-----------------------------------

Hear Ye! Hear Ye!
3 Lexington Town Criers to read and post Dudley Webb’s letter to Council – Thursday May 28!



ElandF Gallery small projects accelerator is pleased to announce that Alex Johns, Brittny Congleton and Elaine Parker have been selected to serve as Lexington Town Criers, below see a portion of their essays.
-----
Date/Time: Thursday May 28, 12pm-1pm
-----
Location: (12pm) Will begin by reading at Third Street Coffee (257 N. Limestone)then Criers will separate and read at various locations (CentrePointe crater, etc.) until 1:00pm at which point Lexington Town Criers will converge at Lexington’s last public Kiosk (corner of E. Main St. + Quality St.) where Town Criers will all read and then post Webb letter on the Kiosk.
-----
Information: ElandFgallery@yahoo.com
-----
Sponsored By:Ace Weekly
-----

--------------------
Help Wanted: Lexington Town Crier
to read publicly and then to post, developer Dudley Webb’s recent letter to Lexington City Council throughout Downtown Lexington.
-----
Brittny Congleton:
Hey there.... word on the street is that you need a town crier... well I just happen to want to BE a town crier... for this day in question... and perhaps many more times... and well... here's why:

"By confronting this ridiculous letter of irresponsibility, we bring to the public a rallying point and reminder of broken promises, as well as our responsibility as citizens to communicate. I am constantly looking for ways to connect to my community, and something that connects us all is the kind of history we share by walking the same sidewalks. As a comedic performer, I relish any opportunity to be devious in a public setting, but this performance will be one of a lifetime!! I plan, perhaps, on wearing a spectacular yellow dress- like a techni-color Alice and Wonderland (or a female Dick Tracy) searching the streets of Lexington for a purpose and a playground!"
-----
Elaine Parker:
It would be a great honor to serve as the Lexington Town Crier. I founded Lexington...Better Not Bigger... name is self-explanatory. I am possessed of a clear voice with great volume, strong opinions, and am capable of accents on demand. I can embellish the reading with snorts, groans, and eye rolling…
-----
Alex Johns:
The Centerpointe project was a huge blow to our local music scene. While both music locales and most the stores have found new homes, there is a different atmosphere and a lack of interest from the community.
I’m tired of being unmotivated about creating change. It seems that a few people make a very big difference in the overall interest of the public. I’d like to be one of them. I would dress professionally…..and while I plan to utilize the megaphone, believe me, my voice is quite loud…


-------------------------------

original post

Hear Ye! Hear Ye!
Help Wanted: Lexington Town Crier
to read publically and then to post publically, developer Dudley Webb’s recent letter to City Council throughout downtown Lexington.

No matter what your opinion of Dudley Webb and his notorious CentrePointe project is, most agree that his recent letter to City Council is one fascinating document. In it Mr. Webb fills six pages without ever really explaining where the project (currently a huge crater in the middle of downtown Lexington) is heading or how it will be financed. Lexington Herald-Leader Columnist Tom Eblen aptly compares it to Richard Nixon’s famous Checkers speech.

The Lexington Town Crier will be asked to read (as proclamation) a condensed version of Dudley Webb’s letter to City Council at various spots in downtown Lexington from 12pm- 1pm on Thursday May, 28. Action will culminate with a posting of this document on the public information kiosk, corner of E. Main St and Quality St (next to Gray Construction)
…….
Honorarium: $50.00
.........
Location: Lexington, Kentucky
.........
To Apply: No more than 100 words on why you would like to be Lexington’s Town Crier.

Some reference to costume/presentation should also be included.
Megaphone provided on request
..........
Submissions/Information: (by email only)
ELandFgallery@yahoo.com
..........
Deadline: May 22 (Event to occur May 28)
..........
Sponsored By: Ace Weekly
*Applicants who wish to present the letter as an historical reading/performance based on Mr. Webb’s actual reading/performance before City Council will also be considered
* See Mr. Webb’s letter: http://tomeblen.bloginky.com/files/2009/05/webbstatement.pdf

Public Transportation Poetry Project with Kristie Kachler

Thanks to all those who participated in our poet on a Lextran bus project. Poet Kristie Kachler read the piece that she composed during her journey. In the near future we will publish that on this site. For now here a few pictures of Kristie and a short video.
The roar (song?) of a dozen idling buses was very loud, and though it was difficult to hear Kristie there was a certain kind of beauty to it all. Below is the poem that Kristie wrote on her journey which she also refers to as her "forty minute poem".

*
Kristie Kachler

Know Your Onions

Bird-watching's the noblest hobby I know,
well - it's tied with the other noblest hobbies.
Knowing the names of things -
that matters, keeps them from being
just inessential Thing & Thing.

Along the skyway
everything's essential, has a name
and poets line the skyway
keeping giving making finding names
they say. Welcome to the poetry suburb.

Well. Good & Bad are inessential
anyway......................the yogis say so
and Right & Wrong

................................the economists say so.
I'd like to believe this
in the Best Possible Way

so as to not kick
a Nobel-winning money-man
so as to wear more deodorant -

Nice weather today, if sneaky
if yellow, thank goodness
the sky's such a show-off
and we're all kept warm on the bus
singing air brake, thank you, ping.


** Know Your Onions is a line from A.R. Ammon's amazing collection The Snow Poems. I also borrowed the word "skyway" from this source.

*Listen to Kristie on WUKY's Tonic with Kopana Terry: www.publicbroadcasting.net/wuky/.artsmain/article/13/397/1447972/Tonic/Road.Poet/
and a fragment from her reading......

-------------------------------------------------------------------



LexTran Bus Ride = Poetry
Public reading with Kristie Kachler
Tuesday, December 30th, 2:30 pm
at Lexington Transit Center
200 E. Vine Street
*Listen to Kristie on WUKY's Tonic with Kopana Terry: www.publicbroadcasting.net/wuky/.artsmain/article/13/397/1447972/Tonic/Road.Poet/


We are pleased to announce the selection of Kristie Kachler as our bus riding poet. Kristie was selected from more than thirty wonderful submissions.Originally from Maysville, Kentucky, Kristie Kachler is a Zell Post-Graduate Fellow in poetry at the University of Michigan where she received her MFA and taught courses in composition and creative writing. She has won awards for her writing through the University of Michigan, Centre College, and the Academy of American Poets. Currently, she's preparing to teach a class about myth-making to elementary school students, and to run a mountain marathon.
Kristie will be riding and writing on the Richmond Road Route, followed by a public reading featuring work written during her bus journey as well as other poems she has written.
*
Kristie's Help Wanted: Poet essay.....

Lots of people say lots of people don't like poetry. That's natural, and I couldn't care a lick. What bothers me is the probability that some people like poetry without knowing it. So I favor sneaky poetries. Reading poems in a bus station would be very sneaky indeed, and might present poetry in a more engaging form than the page, which can appear intimidating and exclusive. In this venue, I'd hope to laugh with unsuspecting poetry-likers, to feel less lonely with them. Besides, on buses, I usually only chatter, or I study Lithuanian.


sponsors:Transylvania University Writing Center
the Morris book shop
Fryman's Landing, boat landing, bait, tackle and snacks
Special thanks to Mason Colby
-------------------------------------------------------------
*************


Original post November 2008
Help Wanted: Poet

Poet to compose a work written during the course of one round-trip bus ride (from the Lexington Transit Center and back) on a LexTran bus route of his or her choice. The writer’s journey is to be followed immediately on return to the Transit Center by a short (ten-minutes at least) public reading. The poet will read the work written on the bus ride as well as any other work that she or he wishes to share.
............
Honorarium: $50.00
...........
Location: Lexington, Kentucky
..........
To Apply: No more than 100 words on why you would like to compose a poem...etc, while riding public transportation and why you would like to share it with others
..........
Submissions/Information (by email only)
ELandFgallery@yahoo.com
...........
Deadline: December 8, 2008 (event to occur by January 9, 2009)
...........
Sponsored By: Transylvania University Writing Center
http://www.transy.edu/academics/writing.htm
...........
Friends: Morris Book Shop
www.morrisbookshop.com/
Fryman's Landing
boat rentals, bait, tackle, snacks and camping on Stoner Creek
near Paris, Kentucky
...........
Pick your route! LexTran:
www.lextranonthemove.org/
..........



Visit Frymans Landing in Paris Kentucky for boat rentals, camping, bait, tackle, snacks, and more! Mention "ELandF small projects accelerator" and get 10% off live bait of your choice!

Friday

celebrate winter solstice at midnight... a conversation with Lexington artist Bill Santen

.....archive.....
Celebrate Winter Solstice at midnight... a conversation with Lexington artist Bill Santen
Thanks to all who participated in our Winter Solstice conversation with artist Bill Santen at Denny's Restaurant!


Midnight on the Solstice was the perfect time to enjoy a plateful of Denny's famous Silver Dollar Pancakes and a conversation with Bill Santen. The dialog was full of wintry twists and icy turns. When asked what Bill associates with winter solstice he said,


"Fur, I think solstice has always been about fur, which is why I wore this particular coat. I read recently too, that Michelangelo wore dog pelt pants, that after a time he literally grew into them".
solstice conversation snippet........

*************
--------------------Original Post--------------------
*************
......Celebrate Winter Solstice......
*
A conversation/interview with Bill Santen, Lexington musician, filmmaker, painter, performance artist.
*
(new locatation!)
at Denny's Restaurant
1949 Niclosville Rd. Lexington, Ky
Saturday, December 21, 12:00-12:30am (midnight)
First 12 Druids receive a free coffee courtesy of ELandF small projects accelerator!
*

Wednesday

Mourning and then moving on * Lexington Herald-Leader 8/27/o8

Mourning and then moving on
Tom Eblen columnist Lexington Herald-Leader
August 27, 2008

How do you mourn the loss of a historic building or a favorite nightspot?
That's what artist Bruce Burris wanted to know last month when he sent out a call for mourners.
Burris asked how people would like to mourn the ­demolition of 14 old ­buildings on the downtown Lexington block being cleared to make way for the CentrePointe development.
Sound a little goofy? That's what I thought, too.

However, Burris got 18 proposals from people who wanted to mourn the buildings, which included Morton's Row, built in 1826 and one of Lexington's oldest commercial structures, and the century-old building that housed The Dame, a popular music club.
One of Burris' ongoing art projects is called Greengrief. Its mission is to provide "compensation to mourners for grieving, praying, singing and for giving thoughtful consideration and sincere apologies to our Earth for the environmental and cultural devastation wrought by us humans to it in the Commonwealth of Kentucky."

Usually, Burris said, Greengrief doesn't focus on real estate development, or even large sites of destruction, such as strip mines. It looks at small places where human activity has hurt the environment — such as Wolf Run Creek along Southland Drive. "Little projects that hardly no one notices," he explained.

CentrePointe wasn't a typical Greengrief project, but after hearing a lot of people upset about it, Burris said, "What the heck?"

He chose three mourners from the 18 applicants, each of whom will receive $100 from his pocket to help fund their projects. They're now seeking the necessary city permits for their events, which are all planned for Sept. 12 and 13.

"The three of them are very different. And not anything like what I ­expected, either," said Burris, who operates the Latitude Artist Community on Saunier ­Alley, which works with adult ­artists who have disabilities. "I really couldn't decide, so I just went for three."
Jenny O'Neill, an English teacher at Tates Creek High School, decided to apply right before the Aug. 1 deadline. She's writing a historical novel set in Lexington in 1833, when the oldest of the recently demolished buildings were in use. She also was touched by the destruction of The Dame, because her three children — ages 30, 28 and 22 — all loved to go to shows there.
"I was so angry about the way this thing (CentrePointe) has come down," she said. "But anger is one of the stages of grief. And I'm in grief. We were so insensitive to our history, and our young people."

Her idea is to have a ­public funeral at 10:45 a.m. Sept. 13 in Phoenix Park. She will ask those who come to write about what they'll miss most about the block the way it was. "I'm giving people a way to grieve in a public way for what they've lost," she said.
O'Neill plans to ask those who attend to then walk three times around the block — the first time expressing their grief, the second time in silence "in respect for what has died," and the third time with music. She hopes to recruit some musicians who will begin by playing a dirge, then end with New Orleans-style jazz. "That's the time for moving on," she said.

Lyndsey Fryman, 26, of Paris, has a much different plan, scheduled for noon on Sept. 12.
"Dressed in Victorian-era mourning clothing, I will create a dollhouse-size replica of the buildings during that time," she wrote in her ­proposal. "I will walk around the block while creating ­paper flowers on stems and other mementos that will be left as I pass the replica ... . The arrangement will hopefully evoke symbolic attachments to the process of mourning (being a form of memory), and a spiritual ­rebirth of those things gone."
Fryman said she comes from a military family, so has lived many places. "I have a great appreciation for this history and the architecture that has been lost," she said. "It was part of history, a part of Lexington."

Brittany Clark, 23, who works for a marketing ­company, hopes to re-create one last '80s party like the ones she enjoyed at The Dame. She hopes to begin this one at 1 a.m. Sept. 13 in Cheapside Park.

Clark says she went to the Dame once a week for more than a year. "It was a very big part of my life," she said. "It was a dive bar. It wasn't the same genre of people you run into at other bars. You ran into people from all different groups. I was more comfortable there than anywhere else."

She also is angry about the way CentrePointe was sprung on the public. "I felt like everything was done in the worst possible way," she said. "No one took any time to listen to anyone. I wanted to let people know how I felt about it."

It should be an interesting weekend.
Reach Tom Eblen at (859) 231-1415 or 1-800-950-6397, Ext. 1415, or at teblen@herald-leader.com.

Thursday

ElandF Gallery SUGARHOLE! 9/21/07


9/21/07
SUGARHOLE!
ELandF Gallery small projects space

Presents SUGARHOLE!

SUGARHOLE! will be on view within an area created by a missing brick in the exterior wall of Third Street Coffee. The installation is a collaboration between Pittsburgh author Jane McCafferty and Lexington artist Bruce Burris.

SUGARHOLE! consists of sugar cubes/bricks arranged to seal a hole created by a missing brick, sealing the space/wound with a material known as much for its sweet and delightful goodness as for the arduous and often dehumanizing demands placed upon those who grow and process it.

A corresponding narrative written by Jane McCafferty reconciles the sticky sweet compressed granules with the punitive/oppressive spaces associated with reform and our overriding impulse for companionship.

SUGARHOLE!
By Jane McCafferty

These bricks, they dream of melting on your tongue.
These bricks, they could be sweet if you’d let them.
Just look how they made room!

See how they say,
Get in here, sugar!
You can sleep here forever or until
The tongues of hungry bugs remove your crystal body.
Get in here, sugar!
Teach us how to melt.
Teach us how to be sweet among bricks.
We’re so tired of being bricks among bricks.
We’re so tired of not getting licks.
We’re so tired of standing up straight.

Hey, pass the sugar, Sugar.
Pass me a dream where sugar in the bricks
Becomes an answer to the question:
How can I go on?
Or: Can I be a horse in my next life?
Just take it easy, people.

You’ll get your chance.
Plenty of dark spaces in walls like these
will always, always need your sugar.

About Jane McCafferty:
Jane McCafferty was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship for a section of One Heart. Her stories have appeared in Glimmer Train, Story, Witness, and other publications, and her short story collection, Director of the World, was awarded the 1992 Drue Heinz Literature Prize as well as a $100.00 Honorarium from the ELandFGallery. She teaches at Carnegie Mellon University and lives in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Installation located in exterior wall of Third Street Coffee
257 North Limestone Street, Lexington
September 21, 2007, 5- 8pm
ELandF GalleryLexington, Kentucky
Contact: ELandFGallery@yahoo.com
--------------------------------------------------
The Lexington Herald-Leader 9/21/07
It's All About...
By Jamie Gumbrecht
*
SUGARHOLE: for a sweet twist on tonight's Gallery Hop check out the exterior wall of Third Street Coffee, 257 North Limestone St.
*
There's a brick missing in the building and rather then leave it colad, alone and empty, Pitttsburgh writer Jane McCafferty submitted a poem that inspired as installation in the tiny space. Lexington artist Bruce Burris will help install the itty bitty artwork made of sugar cubes.
*
The narrative that inspired the piece ties it back to the sweetness of sugar, but also the workers who labor to nake it available to our sugary cofee drinks.
*
Not only is the artwork very small, but its available to view for only a short time.: Sugarhole will be on display only during Gallery Hop hours, from 5-8 tonight. Yum.

Wednesday

GreenGrief Louisville Courier-Journal 8/1/08

Louisville Courier-Journal
Mourners wanted: Whole historical block to die soon
By Diane Heilenman • August 1, 2008


Lexington artist Bruce Burris sent me copy for an unclassifiable ad. It goes like this:
"Help Wanted: Mourner.

"GREENGRIEF The Kentucky Mourning Project provides compensation to mourners for grieving, praying, singing and for giving thoughtful consideration and sincere apologies to our earth for the environmental and cultural devastation wrought by us humans to it in the Commonwealth of Kentucky.

"Mourner Wanted to grieve for loss by demolition of irreplaceable historical/cultural and architecturally unique block in downtown Lexington Kentucky (the Dame block), to apologize for our culture's sad lust for profit and to offer prayers of healing and hope.

"Mourner is asked to articulate these expectations while walking around the block for a period of one hour … during a weekday on a date yet to be decided in August/September 2008.

"Honorarium: $100.00.

"Location: Lexington, Kentucky.

"To apply: No more than 100 words on what mourning means to you and why you would like to mourn for the loss of this cherished block.

"Deadline: August 1, 2008.

"Applications/information by e-mail only ELandFGallery@yahoo.com."

Now for the backstory.
It's architecture.
Burris said the proposed CentrePointe tower in Lexington is a bigger ecological/cultural disaster than he usually tackles with mourners. He likes "pint-size, overlooked ecological disasters," such as streams bordering shopping malls. However, the controversial $250 million project -- a 35-story hotel, retail, condo and office complex due for completion in time for the 2010 World Equestrian Games in Lexington, requires destruction of an entire city block.

Late last month, while Burris was composing and preservationists were asking Fayette Circuit Court for a temporary injunction against razing the structures (they lost), the University of Kentucky College of Design held a marathon two-day design session, inviting architects from Los Angeles, Chicago and Kentucky to work with UK students on what turned out to be exciting alternatives.

After publication of the designs, some 1,500 people weighed in on their favorites, and the demolition controversy is shifting to a controversy over the public's right to have something to say about the design of a project receiving public funds. It has sparked a notion for an international competition by Lexington Vice Mayor Jim Gray.

Burris said his project floats outside all these bits of breaking news. He said he would have hired a mourner with or without demolition because the project has a negative cultural and environmental impact and also, he confessed, "another part of this is a reflection/exploration on various ways/means of ritualized mourning, which is something that is just darn interesting."

GreenGrief Ace Weekly 8/13/08

GreenGrief
Ace Weekly August 13/08
Applicants selected to mourn for Dame Block
---------
In April 2005, the Courier-Journal (that would be the daily
newspaper in Louisville) published a story, “Mourning
walk—Lexington artist hires an apologist for urban sprawl.” In the article, Katya Cengel wrote, “How do you go
about hiring a mourner? Do you ask friends for references,
wait for a sign from above, or place a classified advertisement
in Lexington-area newspaper Ace Weekly? If you are
Bruce Burris, you do the latter. For several weeks this year,
the artist from Lexington ran a classified that offered applicants
$100 to ‘mourn for loss of natural habitat, meditate on
the reasons for its destruction, apologize for our culture’s
behavior and offer prayers of healing.’ More than 30 people,
mostly women, applied. Some sent poems, some sent manifestos—
way over the 100 words Burris requested—and some
asked paranoid questions, like ‘Who are you working for?’”
The article went on to detail the designated mourner’s walk
out at Beaumont Circle.
---------
Earlier this summer, Burris took out a similar classified in
Ace, reading, “Help Wanted: Mourner. GREENGRIEF The
Kentucky Mourning Project provides compensation to mourners
for grieving, praying, singing, and for giving thoughtful
consideration and sincere apologies to our earth for the
environmental and cultural devastation wrought by us humans to
it in the Commonwealth of Kentucky. Mourner wanted to
grieve for loss by demolition of irreplaceable historical/cultural
and architecturally unique block in downtown Lexington
Kentucky (the Dame block), to apologize for our culture’s sad
lust for profit and to offer prayers of healing and hope.
Mourner is asked to articulate these expectations while walking
around the block for a period of one hour (noon to 1pm)
during a weekdate yet to be decided in September 2008.”
---------
In August, three mourners were selected. Lyndsey
Fryman, Brittany Clark and Jenny O’Neill’s mourning proposals
were selected from the eighteen submitted.
(And once again, Louisville’s Courier-Journal covered it.
Diane Heilenman’s story was published August 1,
“Mourners wanted: Whole historical block to die soon.” It’s
in their online archives.)
The designated mourners’ proposals are re-printed
below.

--------
Brittany Clark wrote, “Mourning has taken on an entirely
new meaning for me following the announcement of the
loss of the Dame block. It engulfs utter despair and sorrow
for the city—for my friends—for myself—for generations to
come. Not only was this block historic and beautiful; it was
also the heartbeat of the city. It was a common union among
the masses of individuality. It united even the oddest of pairs.
When your hearts beat the same pulse, no other differences
matter. I will forever long for that connection, like a soul
searching for my matching pulse.” Clark has included plans
for her mourning project on her facebook page.
--------
Jenny O’Neill wrote, “I am truly aggrieved by the callousness
of the Webb brothers and the cupidity/stupidity of
our civic leaders who have—with the exception of Jim
Gray—just gone along. I am mourning—for the loss of our
past, for the greed that drives so much of our decision making,
and for the lack of vision and concern for the generations
to come that CentrePointe reflects. I too am fascinated by the
process of mourning—both the individual and the societal.
CentrePointe is urban mountain top removal.”
---------
Lyndsey Fryman wrote, “Everything has a history, traditions,
cultures people and even places. For this reason I have
a great interest in this project. To mourn something that has
been lost traditionally has been our societies way to cope
with death, and give memory to the deceased. These mourning
rites embedded in our culture would allow one to ceremonially
satisfy the concept of separation and bring together
the community for the support of the griever. As an artist I
have a great respect for these historic practices; particularly
for the Victorian era which incorporated an element of creation
in mourning art. I find it interesting the downtown
Lexington block which was demolished, lived through such
an era and beyond. And through its time experienced traditions
come and go, wars in and outside our country, the
beginnings and endings of lives and finally its own. Some
would say is strange to grieve something opposed to someone,
it is unheard of, why do it? For me, it is a loss of life, or
loss of a chapter of history in Lexington, or even a loss of a
block that represents the down town Lexington commercial
and entertainment community at its beginnings. Now that it
is gone, this history has no rent, it is irreplaceable and the
future of it is dead. The rubble which remains, lies as a body
of the deceased, no longer holding its eternal spirit only at
this funeral, it is the enjoyment and profit of the people in the
community. By 2010 that history will not be known by those
who visit the CentrePointe Hotel, and the cultural scene that
was once indigenous to the people of Lexington will no
longer be as it was. My intentions would be to give memory
to the block by paying tribute through mourning in the
Victorian manner. It seems fitting being the block was a witness
to the era. And during my performance I will grieve the
loss of history, but cope though constructing a memorial from
what is left of the once living block. Although my performance
would be temporal, my hope is the memory of the
remains will keep the spirit alive.” ■
--------
The Kentucky Mourning Project events will occur on Friday
and Saturday, September 12th and 13th at the CentrePointe site.
For more information and to contact mourners: Bruce Burris
ELandFgallery@yahoo.com

Lexington artist hires an apologist for urban sprawl, Louisville Courier- Journal 2005

The Louisville Courier-Journal March 20, 2005
Mourning walk
Lexington artist hires an apologist for urban sprawl By Katya Cengel
LEXINGTON, Ky.


How do you go about hiring a mourner? Do you ask friends for references wait for a sign from above or place a classified advertisement in Lexington-area newspaper ACE Weekly? If you are Bruce Burris, you do the latter. For several weeks this year, the artist from Lexington ran a classified that offered applicants $100 to "mourn for loss of natural habitat, meditate on the reasons for its destruction, apologize for our culture's behavior and offer prayers of healing.

"More than 30 people, mostly women, applied. Some sent poems, some sent manifestos -- way over the 100 words Burris requested -- and some asked paranoid questions, like "Who are you working for?" Then there were those, like Annette, who sent resumes."When I looked into it, it is a profession, and I thought he's paying me to do a service so I'll apply with a resume," said Annette, a 47-year-old Lexington-area administrative assistant. On it, she listed crying and gnashing of teeth, wailing and indignation (as needed) and outrage (as warranted) as her qualifications. Under "experience," she mentioned mourning the loss of a loved one and sprinkling wildflower seeds on an industrial park."Like you would hire a maid to clean out the fireplace, they are hiring me to perform a service," she explained.Putting tree hugging and sorrowful silence on a resume is usually not advised.

But then mourning the loss of natural habitat near an office complex is not a usual job description. And deciding to offer a mourner's job after noticing a sad circle of grass while driving to the dentist is even less run-of-the-mill. But then Burris, 49, who co-owns an art program and is a founding member of the environmental arts collective EcoLifeForce, never claimed to be typical. He also never claimed to be a great environmentalist -- his family is in the construction business -- or a spiritual guru. But that doesn't mean he can't apologize for urban sprawl -- or at least hire someone to do it, he says. Someone like Annette, whose resume showed a mix of hilarity and sensitivity that Burris said, was perfect for a mourner hired to apologize to and mourn for the Earth."I hope there is this possibly larger force -- which I don't believe in -- that's going to feel somewhat better about the people that have harmed it," said Burris.

Although Burris hired Annette to mourn the 54-acre Beaumont Circle -- a patch of land soon to be developed near the Beaumont Centre, a residential, retail and commercial complex in Lexington -- he said the ritual could have been done almost anywhere."Whoever is developing it doesn't seem to be any better or worse than the rest of us," said Burris.Actually, Haymaker/Bean Commercial Real Estate, which is developing the area, was recognized by the Lexington-Fayette Urban County government two years ago for improving the local environment. "I've developed this whole 705 acres (Beaumont Centre), and I'm very conscious of the environment," said Haymaker/Bean agent Tim Haymaker. "We've planted seven or eight thousand more trees than were here when we started."Haymaker said Beaumont Circle would be filled with office buildings, townhouses, restaurants and plenty of pedestrian walkways, similar to one that now stretches around the circle.

The one Hook, Burris, his 6-year-old son, Doug, and his wife, Robynn Pease, walked around on a recent windy and cold Saturday morning. But before setting out, Hook transformed herself into "Ash the Weeping Woman." In the parking lot of the shopping complex, a Supercuts hair salon in the background, Hook slipped fingerless black lace gloves over her hands, then placed a black hat and a black mourning veil over her short dark hair. From head to toe, she was dressed all in black -- her blue eyes barely visible under the veil."I was trying to find something Victorian, because Victorians were obsessed with death," said Hook. "But many Victorian outfits tend to drag, so I went with Edwardian, because it's rainy."Although hiring people to mourn has been typical of various cultures at different times, it is hard to find examples of people being hired to mourn a piece of land bordering a strip mall and office complex. Hook looked, she said, but the paid mourners she read about were mentioned in ancient Greek and Roman society and in the Bible -- long before office complexes and Applebee's restaurants existed.In some cultures, Hook said, mourners were paid to mourn in public, while the family mourned in private. "One reference I read said you could call it performance art," she said.That is probably what you would call Hook's half-hour-plus walk. It began around noon with Hook boldly striding across the street to reach the island of land for which she was mourning. A few minutes later a young EcoLifeForce member wearing Ugg-like boots and carrying a video camera ran circles around Hook, documenting her performance.

"Some cultures believe when a strong spirit passes that it takes a strong wind to carry the spirit away," said Hook, the wind whipping her veil around her face. "So I find it rather fitting that this wind came up about the time we decided to do this." She took a few more steps."I'm trying not to step on worms," she added. The life of an environmental mourner is filled with obstacles.As Annette finished, her head bowed toward a cluster of what looked like sewer pipes on the grass, she uttered one last silent prayer, then left to buy her husband lunch.

___________________________