Fritz Haeg
Fritz Haeg | |
---|---|
Born |
1969 Saint Cloud, Minnesota, USA |
Nationality | American |
Known for | Art, Architecture, Design, Gardens, Ecology, Dance, Performance |
Notable work | Sundown Salon (2001-2006), Sundown Schoolhouse (2006-present), Edible Estates (2005-present), Animal Estates (2008 - present) |
Fritz Haeg (born 1969) is an American artist whose work spans a range of disciplines and media including gardens, dance, performance, design, installation, ecology and architecture, most of which is commissioned and presented by art museums and institutions. His work often involves collaboration with other individuals and site specific projects that respond to particular places.
Life and work
Haeg's recent architecture projects have included the design for various residential and art projects including the contemporary art gallery peres projects and the Bernardi residence, both in Los Angeles, CA. He studied architecture in Italy at the Istituto Universitario di Architettura di Venezia and Carnegie Mellon University, where he received his B.Arch. He has variously taught in architecture, design, and fine art programs at California Institute of the Arts (CalArts), Art Center College of Design, Parsons School of Design, and the University of Southern California.
Haeg is based in a geodesic dome in Los Angeles, California.
Gardenlab (2000)
In 2000 he established Gardenlab, a loose umbrella for his ecology related art and design projects. This initially included community gardens for Art Center College of Design and later California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) where he was an instructor.
Sundown Salon (2001 - 2006)
In 2000 Haeg moved into a geodesic dome in the hills of Los Angeles, California, where in 2001 he established Sundown Salon,[1] a regular series of events, performances and happenings that attracted a diverse crowd, and galvanized a community of east side Los Angeles artists, designers, musicians, and performers. Those who presented work included artists Anna Sew Hoy, Yoshua Okon, Dean Sameshima, Alice Konitz, Pae White, Eve Fowler, Liz Larner, Christopher Peters, Pipilotti Rist, Katie Grinnan, and Jeff Burton; writers Slava Mogutin, Chris Abani, Trinie Dalton and Eileen Myles; and collectives My Barbarian, Los Super Elegantes, Assume Vivid Astro Focus, Lesbians to the Rescue (LTTR), Robbinschilds, and Janfamily. In 2006 the Sundown Salon events came to an end, to be replaced by Sundown Schoolhouse. First based in the geodesic dome as a seasonal self-organized educational environment spanning disciplines, it is now itinerant with programming connected to Haeg's various initiatives.
Edible Estates (2005)
In 2005 he began planting a series of gardens called Edible Estates, a revival of the Victory garden movement. Starting in the geographic center of the United States, Salina, Kansas, he selected a local family of willing gardeners to have their lawn removed and replaced with a kitchen garden, of his design. The first garden was commissioned by the Salina Art Center, with later editions in Lakewood, California (2006),[2] Maplewood, New Jersey (2007), London, England, (commissioned by Tate Modern in 2007), Austin, Texas, (commissioned by Arthouse in 2008), Baltimore, Maryland, (commissioned by Contemporary Museum Baltimore in 2008), and most recently a public demonstration garden at Descanso Gardens in La Cañada Flintridge, California. The book, "Edible Estates: Attack on the Front Lawn", was published by Metropolis Books in spring 2008. It is a call for the replacement of the front lawn with edible landscapes, featuring examples of his previous Edible Estate gardens accompanied by essays from Diana Balmori, Michael Pollan and Rosalind Creasy.
Sundown Schoolhouse (2006)
Sundown Schoolhouse is a series of classes hosted in Haeg's home in Los Angeles. The program started in 2006, just as his related event series Sundown Salons concluded. The school was "founded on the premise that artists, designers, performers and writers should be powerful and active agents in society, engaging in a rich and complex dialog that extends to the outside world. The Schoolhouse seeks to present an alternate model for educational and artistic practice, one in which public interaction, physical connectedness, and responsiveness to place are valued above all else." [3] In 2009, a book was published about the activities at then Salon and Schoolhouse.[4]
The Sundown Schoolhouse group presented classes such as Dancing 9-5, Library for the Future, and 'Practicing Moving.' Other activities considered part of the program have included casual meals and yoga sessions. The Schoolhouse responds to the general interests within its community, and often relates to Haeg's other exhibits and projects. Under the name of Sundown Schoolhouse, Haeg has worked with institutions such as Whitney Museum of American Art, Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
Visiting hosts and lecturers are invited to organize courses, seminars, and events. Participants and collaborators include Emily Roysdon, Andrea Zittel, Damon Rich, founder of the Center for Urban Pedagogy and Eileen Myles.
Animal Estates (2008)
Animal Estates proposes the strategic reintroduction of native animals into cities. Each edition of the project is commissioned and presented by a local museum which includes various combinations of related performances, displays, installations, exhibitions, documentary videos, and printed materials such as a local field guide. The project debuted at the 2008 Whitney Biennial featuring a designed beaver pond in the sunken courtyard, an eagle's nest perched above the museum entry.[5] Later 2008 editions are in Cambridge, Massachusetts (Center for Advanced Visual Studies at MIT), San Francisco, California (San Francisco Museum of Modern Art), Portland, Oregon (Douglas F. Cooley Memorial Art Gallery, Reed College), and Utrecht, The Netherlands (Casco Office for Art, Design and Theory).
References
- ↑ indexmagazine.com
- ↑ Patricia Leigh Brown, Redefining American Beauty, by the Yard, The New York Times, July 13, 2006.
- ↑ Fritz Haeg: Attack on the Front Lawn
- ↑ Sundown Salon Unfolding Archive, Evil Twin Publications, 2009. ISBN 0-9763355-1-4
- ↑ nytimes.com
External links
- New York Times: Art and Life, Steeping in a Teapot by David Coleman, March 16, 2008
- New York Times T Magazine A Fertile Imagination by Susan Morgan, 2008
- New York Times: Spanish-Modern Mashup in Los Angeles by Michael Cannell, June 26, 2008
- Financial Times: Turf Wars by Simon Busch, 2008
- The Independent: The urban farmer, One man's crusade to plough up the inner city by Kate Burt, 2008
- Frieze Magazine: Edible Estates by Bradley Horn, 2008
- Dwell Magazine: Emerging Designer: Fritz Haeg, video feature, 2008
- Men's Vogue - Greener than Grass by Tim McKeough, 2008
- Reed College Magazine: Canyon Meets Artist by Stephanie Snyder, 2008
- Time Magazine: The Incredible Edible Front Lawn, 2008
- City Radio: interview, 2008
- San Francisco Chronicle: Haeg - Cut the Grass, Plant and Edible Estate by Glen Helfand, 2008
- Whitney Museum of American Art: feature video, 2008
- Art Review: Go tell it on the Mountain - LA's New Nomadic Schools by Holly Meyer's, 2008
- KCET: Sustaining L.A., 2008
- Making Art a Team Sport by Holly Meyers, 2007
- Here and Now on NPR: Edible Estates, 2007
- Day to Day on NPR: Architect creates Estates for Wild Animals, 2008
- Eco Art Blog: Utopia and Failure: Eco Art Blog Interviews Fritz Haeg by Matthias Merkel Hess, 2008
- Creative Time: Interview with Nato Thompson, 2007
- The London Paper: Art that you can Eat by Lottie Muggach, 2007
- Archinect - Fritz Haeg : Small Revolutions by Amy Seek, 2007
- Frieze Magazine: Anyone Home? by James Trainor, 2006
- ABC World News Tonight: Front Yards 'Uprooted' for Greener Pastures, 2006
- TreehuggerTV: Edible Estates, 2006
- Fritz Haeg's official website
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