Dragging the Seminar: a collaborative trans-institutional re:interpretion of Dragging the Archive – by students from Pratt Institute and Goldsmiths College, University of London
The aim of the seminar was to further explore and play with some of the ideas of the exhibition as a whole: what is it to encounter things online versus onsite? How can we interpret what we see? How can we communicate this with someone we have never met? And what is an archive anyhow? (This, in addition to all that the show contains and triggers in relation to performance and technology at the turn of the millennium.)
In the end, six archival fragments were selected and written about by the students – results of which are shared below, and indicated by new labels in the vitrines. In this way, these contributions become part of the hi/story and archive of the exhibition itself.
Kim Bobier is a Visiting Assistant Professor at Pratt Institute’s Department of the History of Art and Design. She specializes in modern and contemporary periods while her scholarship and teaching emphasize a social justice lens. She focuses on Black artistic and visual production, critical race studies, intersectional and transnational feminism, archives, and surveillance studies. As Bobier writes her solo book project Monitoring and Modeling Citizenship: Racializing Surveillance in Contemporary Art, for other work, she eagerly explores collaborative learning, research, and expression.
Elly Clarke has a practice that is extremely collaborative, which she applies to her teaching as well. She has been running her ‘Alter Ego Dinner Party Collaborative Script Writing Workshop’ in a variety of online & offline contexts since 2016. In terms of her practice as an educator, Clarke believes that the knowledge in the room should be acknowledged and built on. Collaboration and conversation can be a good way of unlocking this, in unusual and creative forms.
Aimee Cho & Nancy Nan
An awkward performance of two introverts by the name of Aimee Cho [left] and Nancy Nan [right] responding to Origins (Martha Wilson’s Rolodex.)
Lydia Rubin & Lily Herring
You were in Vitrine 2.4 on Floor 2 of the Dragging the Archive exhibit, the subject of cross-continental discussion. Unknown context. Only one book visible out fo 29. No name attached to the telephone logs. Only you. Lots of imagination in terms of who “YOU” refers to. [new paragraph] Who are you? Waht’s in what we cannot see? Absence means something as well.
David Liu & Li Li, inspired by a conversation with Grace Park
David acutely observed that the email lacked the interpersonal warmth that was otherwise naturally rendered in Martha’s handwritten material. In terms of Li Li’s personal associations, she immediately connected with this fragment through its poignancy, because she too had many times drafted emails on paper before transcribing them digitally. Since David was familiar with
the backdrop of this invitation, he felt it captured the ambivalent dynamics between a cheerful and excited Galinsky and nerve-wracked Martha.
Also see here for more writing
Helmet (Mir is Here)
1998
Irina Danilova
Helmet made for Franklin Furnace Netcast MIR IS HERE on 15th January 1999 and stored in various places since. This Helmet also made an appearance in the 2019 Live Netcast.
vitrine_3_3_helmet
AO
A location history of this object by Irina Danilova: This helmet was made for the Mir is Here performance at 2059 Colonial Ave. basement apartment in the Bronx in 1997/1998. It was flooded in the basement storage space in the nearby building in the Bronx and then stored at the extra space storage unit in the Bronx from the end of 1998 till 2000. In 2000-2003 is was placed in the Bronx River Art Center studio/storage space, then moved to new Hope, Pennsylvania, first to garage, then into storage/studio 2003-2023.
Elizabeth Feirstein, Youngin Seo, Ysabell I Wain
2023
As can be seen in the exhibition’s photographs, this helmet has been all over NYC, from out on the streeet, to public audiences, and of course to Franklin Furnace netcast perforramnces. In the specific perfornance linked below, the helmet was used to tell a story about a Russian cosmonaut and an American astronaut becoming entangled. As tehy struggle to type on the keyboards, they eventually type “HERE IS MIRE”, which translates to “here is peace.”