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Water Spot

Water Conversations - Ghana, West Africa

Water Spot, 2009

Sculpture intervention, discursive space and site of exchange.
Curio Kiosk Project for The Kumasi Symposium, Tapping Local Resources for Sustainable Education through Art.Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST), Kumasi, Ghana, West Africa. July – August 2009.Curated by Prof. Barthosa Nkurumeh. July – August 2009.

Locations: KNUST Campus and Museum, 6°40’59.53”N, 1°34’28.36”W. Ayigya Village, Tech junction, Kumasi. 6°41’14.33”N, 1°34’24.56”W.

SPURSE | OCEA(n)

OCEA(n)

The Kitchen (512 West 19th Street, New York City). UNDERCURRENTS: Experimental Ecosystems in Recent Art. Organized by curatorial fellows Anik Fournier, Michelle Lim, Amanda Parmer and Robert Wuilfe, May 27th – June 19th. spurse collaboration. 2010

At the Water Table | Parsons The New School for Design

Parsons product designers transform a campus gallery into a fine dining room where professors, alumni, and friends discuss global water issues and design solutions. The next day, the students repurpose the dining tables as work benches for a 24-hour design slam exploring water and infrastructure. Its another weekend at the School of Constructed Environments at Parsons, where building environments and building community go hand in hand.

School of Constructed Environments at Parsons | http://www.newschool.edu/parsons/sce

Ritual and Weather

PRACTICE
___________

Till Design was founded while making a collaborative drawing in 2001 on an asphalt parking lot surface with two friends. Using paint on rollers and completed over a six month period this drawing was an experiment into a shared question about the shape our body makes in movement, the marks we can make in movement and our perception of those marks in time. The experience of doing this drawing was similar to the act of tilling, that is clearing a ground in which to work, reflect and make a difference.

Urban Rain

The Roosevelt Community Center in San Jose, A, a LEED gold building, was completed in Fall, 2008. My two installations here detain and filter storm water runoff from the roof.

Laughing Brook

Salway Park is one of the pilot projects for the Mill Creek Greenway system in Cincinnati, Ohio. I worked with the Mill Creek Restoration Project and Human/Nature landscape architects in partnership with the Cincinnati Parks and Recreation Commissions and the Cincinnati Contemporary Arts Center to create Laughing Brook. This park, a series of playing fields serving lower income communities, is situated next to Mill Creek, one of North America’s most endangered rivers.

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