Work by Groundswell

Published April 1, 2011 Features, Topos 00 - Reclamation, Work by Groundswell
James David Morgan

106 Artists Contribute to Madrid Street Advertising Takeover (MaSAT)

masat installation 500x333 106 Artists Contribute to Madrid Street Advertising Takeover (MaSAT)
The Madrid team installs MaSAT

MaSAT (Madrid Street Advertising Takeover) is the third in a series of civil disobedience projects by Public Ad Campaign intent on changing our expectations of public behavior in our shared environments.

Groundswell MaSAT 500x270 106 Artists Contribute to Madrid Street Advertising Takeover (MaSAT)Groundswell’s contribution to MaSAT

Groundswell joined 105 other artists in contributing to this international effort that targeted ads in Cemusa bus shelters in four heavily populated locations around Madrid. Jordan Seiler of Public Ad Campaign explains further:

This time, at the request of our Madrid based collaborators, participants were asked to submit only text based works. This fantastic idea allowed us to open up the submission request process to a wide range of individuals including sociologist, teachers, lawyers, gallery owners and anyone with a concern for the curation and participation in public space.

In total, on March 3oth, 106 posters – all printed with black text on white paper – were installed in 53 locations, by a small ground team. Cemusa did not interrupt their efforts, but responded quickly – within 5 hours – and began removing the new signs. Still, most of the posters were documented before removal, and can be seen at the MaSAT website.

Space Hijackers MaSAT 500x263 106 Artists Contribute to Madrid Street Advertising Takeover (MaSAT)
Work by the Space Hijackers for MaSAT

Groundswell’s contribution to MaSAT (pictured above) is meant to interrogate the idea of the commons, which has been a popular topic of discussion and point of organizing for the left these past two decades. MaSAT contributes to this trend by seeking to make public space – particularly the terrain of visual communications therein – more common. While much has been done to open space, and to start dialog, a question few have addressed is what is done to keep that space open.

Centuries ago, when the commons was still a recognizable part of everyday life, the custom of beating the bounds was an annual ritual to mark the territory held in common and to beat back encroachment into that space. After the custom of beating the bounds was made Christian, the parishes would recite Psalms 103-104 while walking the boundaries of the church grounds. The quote used for the MaSAT poster – “There the ships go to and fro, and Leviathan, which you formed to frolic there.” – takes from Psalm 104:26. These early Christians were using a stolen (formerly Pagan) tradition to mark supposedly commonly held territory, and the ritual involved much violence – some parishes beat their young men against the earthen boundaries of the church property.

Desire Obtain Cherish MaSAT 500x279 106 Artists Contribute to Madrid Street Advertising Takeover (MaSAT)
Work by Desire Obtain Cherish for MaSAT

With MaSAT, we’re doing something similar – stealing back territory and a tradition of visual communication – to establish a temporary commons that is particularly constituted. Like the parishioners, the artists involved have gathered to delineate boundaries, but in this case, we must first create the terrain we aim to protect. The territory being defined is not ours by deed, but temporarily becomes ours while we use it. At the same time, however, using the Psalm suggests that with MaSAT, we are performing the same ritual in a radically different context. MaSAT opens a commons of a kind, but more accurately it reacts to encroachment. However anachronistic the practice in this context, our beating of the bounds wards off the monetization of public space, albeit temporarily. Groundswell’s MaSAT poster highlights this tension and plays with the ambiguity of vaguely defined public(s) and the boundaries of permissible action in both the temporary commons and the space it chooses to defend.

The 26nd verse of the Psalm was chosen to allow a second possible reading of the work. Including the portion about Leviathan, being the Biblical beast after which Thomas Hobbes named his treatise on social contract theory, allows us to ask questions about the degree of allowable violence in shifting culture, especially as this kind of violence is normalized by neoliberalism and set to work in the regenerate city. This isn’t to suggest a return to Hobbes, but the opposite, to point out the lack of viable responses, and that so many suggested courses of action rest on the same antiquated ideas (about the self, citizenship, and so on) that undergird Leviathan as a text.




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Issue 00 contributors respond to the inherent and overlapping crises that form the surface of our smoothed-out world, from the climate to vacant land and home foreclosures.

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Published March 13, 2011 Work by Groundswell
James David Morgan

Celebrate People’s History Closing at Toronto Free Gallery

toronto free gallery logo Celebrate Peoples History Closing at Toronto Free GalleryCelebrate People’s History, an ongoing poster exhibit at Toronto Free Gallery, comes to a close this Saturday, March 19th.  Join us as the posters come down for a chance to purchase the works, as well as the hardcover book that documents the full collection.

Proceeds from the sale will benefit Dara Greenwald, an artist and activist living in Brooklyn and recovering from cancer.  Dara is the partner of Josh MacPhee, who has coordinated the Celebrate People’s History project.

The sale starts at noon, and posters will be sold on a first come, first served basis.  Posters can be reserved at the gallery prior to the event.

Over ninety artists contributed to the Celebrate People’s History series, creating more than a hundred original pieces to honor the hidden histories of social movements.  The collection is the culmination of 12 years of work by Josh MacPhee of the US-based radical print collective Just Seeds.

Published February 1, 2011 Work by Groundswell
James David Morgan

Celebrate People’s History at Toronto Free Gallery Opens February 10, 2011

Toronto Free Gallery and Groundswell present Celebrate People’s History!, a show of poster art created by over ninety artists – including many of Toronto’s own – to document the hidden history of social justice movements.  The Celebrate People’s History series is the culmination of 12 years of work, a massive collection of 110 posters, the complete set of which has just been released as a hardcover book by Feminist Press.  The full collection will be on display at Toronto Free Gallery from February 10 – March 19, 2011, and you’re invited to the opening on Thursday, February 10th at 7:00PM.

celebrate peoples history small Celebrate Peoples History at Toronto Free Gallery Opens February 10, 2011

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Published December 11, 2010 Work by Groundswell
James David Morgan

Download: Notes for a People’s Atlas of Greater Boston

Groundswell’s collaboration with AREA Chicago and the Design Studio for Social Intervention on Notes for a People’s Atlas of Greater Boston has come to a successful close, and to celebrate, we are making the maps available for download.

notes for a peoples atlas of greater boston title Download: Notes for a Peoples Atlas of Greater Boston
Download the atlas [23MB PDF]

In all, fourteen maps were created. Subject matter ranges from family lineages to the student migration of this city with multiple institutions of higher learning.  Most are personal, illustrating highly subjective ways of seeing the city, but some include hidden histories, the mysteries of infrastructure, and the intricacies of what makes the city tick without many of us paying any attention.

Keep your eye on AREA Chicago for news about a forthcoming publication on the Notes series.  The template for Boston’s atlas is still available for download, and we encourage you to use it.

Published November 18, 2010 Work by Groundswell
James David Morgan

Book Review: The Turbulence Collective’s “What Would it Mean to Win?”

The wonderful folks at Turbulence were gracious enough to send a review copy of What Would it Mean to Win? our way.  What follows is a much delayed review of the book.  Should you want to spend some time with the text yourself, which we recommend, PM Press has copies.

turbulence logo 300x50 Book Review: The Turbulence Collectives What Would it Mean to Win?

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