UB's Most Dangerous Artists Will Be Well-Represented at Buffalo Infringement Festival

UB creativity will be on the pavement in everything from cooperative street games to "hymns of the absurd"

Release Date: July 15, 2010 This content is archived.

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BUFFALO, N.Y. -- "Art Under the Radar," Buffalo's sixth annual infringement festival, featuring 350 art projects and 700 performances, concerts, exhibitions, films and plays, will take place July 22 to Aug. 1 in more than 50 venues throughout the city, and University at Buffalo artists will be in the thick of it, saving the city's historic Scajaquada Drain, offering comic books on demand and much, much more.

One of the biggest, boldest UB entries will be PLAY/SHARE BEYOND/IN: A City-wide Street Game, developed by two groups: the Intermedia Performance Studio, a collaborative initiative housed at UB that includes researchers, scientists and artists from the departments of Media Study, Theatre and Dance, and Computer Science and Engineering; and Beyond/In Western New York 2010, the international curatorial collaboration of 12 of Western New York's museums and galleries.

The PLAY/SHARE BEYOND/IN entry is a "pervasive game" that will be played on two days between the real streets of Buffalo and a fantastic alternative history city, using mobile phones, live performances, social web media and virtual constructs. Game Day One will begin at 10 a.m. on July 31 at Sugar City, 19 Wadsworth St., Buffalo. Game Day Two will be held Oct. 3, and will be an outreach event for the Beyond/In Western New York Exhibition that will showcase the work of more than 100 extraordinary artists from the region and beyond from Sept. 24 to the end of the year.

Between Game Days One and Two, the PLAY/SHARE BEYOND/IN's online network at http://www.playsharebeyondin.org will feature writing contests and a community of players and makers. Visit the website to learn how to play or to become a creator of alternate history.

A draft schedule of additional events being held as part of the sixth annual infringement festival "Art Under the Radar" is available at http://infringebuffalo.org/draftschedule.html.

UB's participation also will include performances by UB's Genkin Philharmonic, led by Jon Nelson, assistant professor of music. The orchestra features some of the finest student performers in the UB Department of Music and performs unique and complex arrangements of cover tunes, creations of original works and electronic arrangements of classical works.

Other UB events will include:

-- Media study graduate student and teaching assistant Jordan Dalton will present "Beyond the Multitude," a protypical sound installation for the "sonic daylighting" of the 3.5 miles of Scajaquada Creek buried beneath Buffalo's East Side (the Scajaquada Drain).

Dalton uses sound as a tool for scientific research and here he presents his prototype for a project designed to encourage the exploration and appreciation of the latent ecology of the Scajaquada Drain (built, historical, cultural, acoustic and otherwise) and advocate for the "greening" of the drain and the surrounding neighborhoods, leading to the eventual resurrection of the Scajaquada.

To this end, his long-term proposal calls for the modification or augmentation of 12 to 15 sewer covers, selected for location relative to green space as well as for their acoustic qualities using a variety of acoustical, amplification and broadcast methods.

-- UB Media Study MFA student Ron Douglas will present "Double Your Money or How to Make it in Tough Economic Times," which proposes two solutions: more TVs and more space in the street in which the destitute can ask for that free floating, constantly diminishing commodity -- spare change.

-- Anna Scime, a lecturer in the UB Media Study Department, will offer "Hymns of the Absurd," experimental short films and videos by herself and various local and once-local artists Liz Chow, Ekrem Serdar, Masha Shaw, Josh Strauss, Neil Terry and others.

-- Tim Goodman, an alumnus of the UB Department of Theatre and Dance and instructional support assistant, will exhibit "Self Choreography Projects," a set of unique dance works showcasing ballet, contemporary dance and the work of show girls, which is expected to delight and entertain audiences. Performers will include UB students.

-- From the UB Visual Studies Department come Alice Alexandrescu, Kyle Butler and Marc Tomko in "MommyDaddyBaby: Saving the Universe," an experimental work of theatrical performance-action that uses video, sound, dialogue, dance, props, mobile assemblages, inflatables and crab walking to fascinate and appall.

-- Also, from the UB Department of Visual Studies comes Katrina Boemig's "Community Installation Introduction," a live installation built in Buffalo using gifts and instructions mailed from around the world.

-- Local comic artist and visual studies student Caitlin Cass will present "Comics by the Cover," an art performance piece in which she will make short comics based on the covers of books people bring her, whether she has read them or not.

-- Carolyn Kaser, a visual studies fine arts major, will offer "Policy Makers," a series of seven drawings, each drawing representing the faces from one day's worth of news.

-- Jason Seeley of the Visual Studies Department will present "Project Free Collage," an installation consisting of a series of small collages, hidden in plain view in various locations throughout the festival grounds.

-- Shasti O'Leary Soudant, a UB graduate student in the Department of Visual Studies, will exhibit "Gender-Bent Buffalo," a series of portraits taken in the Gender-Bending Photo Booth at the Hallwalls Artists and Models Stimulus event held this spring.

The University at Buffalo is a premier research-intensive public university, a flagship institution in the State University of New York system and its largest and most comprehensive campus. UB's more than 28,000 students pursue their academic interests through more than 300 undergraduate, graduate and professional degree programs. Founded in 1846, the University at Buffalo is a member of the Association of American Universities.

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