neighborhood: gowanus (and the world!) |
space type: art collective | active since: 2001 | links: website, blog, facebook, twitter
update, Nov 2011: Want to see some absolutely amazing photos
from Swimming Cities’ incredible trip down the Ganges in India? Check
’em out on their blog here.
***
With this post, I am thrilled to say that I’ve covered all the spaces that
inspired me to start this project! Not that I intend to stop; I’m just really
excited to have finally gotten to talk to everyone I’d initially set out to, and
to celebrate all their crazy brilliance.
So let’s talk about the crazy brilliance of Swimming Cities. They’re a nebulous
art collective of somewhere between ten and thirty people who build boats out of
found materials and sail them all over the world. The boats themselves are
essentially floating works of art, and the group does visual, musical, and
dramatic performances atop them as they go. The first project, started by Callie
(aka Swoon) and
assorted friends, was the Miss Rockaway
Armada (since splintered into its own collective), which went down the
Mississippi from Minneapolis to St. Louis in 2001. The next project, Swimming Cities of
the Switchback Sea, went down the Hudson River, from Troy to Deitch Projects in Long Island
City, in 2008. Then in 2009, Swimming
Cities of Serenissima sailed down the Adriatic Sea, starting in Slovenia
and winding up in Venice to crash the Biennale. And now, in
September 2011, Swimming Cities Ocean of
Blood is making their way down the Ganges in India, starting in
Farrukhabad and ending in Varanasi for the Diwali festival.
photo by Tod Seelie,
from Arrested Motion
They’re a well-connected group in the Brooklyn underground & art
communities. Over Swimming Cities’ history, all manner of artists and
collectives have taken part, including members of the Madagascar Institute, the Toyshop Collective, the Infernal Noise Brigade, GreenBusTour, Black Label Bike
Club, Flux Factory, and dozens more. Much of the initial work
on the Ocean of Blood boats was done at Serett Metalworks, and they throw crazy
themed fundraising parties at the Gowanus
Ballroom, Electric
Warehouse, Chicken Hut, the warehouse on Ten Eyck, 285 Kent, and lots of others. The
collective is also naturally involved in the Burning Man community and participates in
Maker Faire,
often winning awards for their ingenious floating creations. You can donate to
their Kickstarter
campaign to help them get home from India, but first check out my interview with
Orien (third from left) and crewmember Angie (far right).
Ocean of Blood crew
brooklyn spaces: How did this all get
started?
Miss Rockaway Armada
boat
Orien: I had a boat and was living on the
Gowanus Canal, and Callie lived a few blocks away. We met at Pratt, and she
would hang out on my boat and we’d talk about building a floating performance
art space. Then I left and spent some time in India, and she did Miss Rockaway
Armada with several other artists. After that we did the Hudson River and Venice
projects together, and then Callie was giving the project up, so I asked her if
I could keep it going. India was the obvious choice for me; it’s my favorite
place. But there was a lot of ambiguity about whether this would actually
happen. I’m not a famous artist, I don’t have any money, I don’t have backing.
But it gradually gained momentum, and now Swimming Cities has a presence beyond
its association with Swoon and the other projects.
boats in Venice, photo
by Tod Seelie, from Brooklyn Street Art
brooklyn spaces: Before we get too much into
India, what was it like being in Venice for the Biennale? How was the
reception?
Orien: Being in Venice with a boat is so
much fun. I don’t recommend going there if you can’t get a boat, it’s just going
to drive you crazy. And the reception was great, everybody loved it. Except when
we went into the Arsenale, which is a military base, like
a fortified marina, this big square with water and some sort of promenade around
it. We went in there with Dark Dark Dark playing on the roof we and
tied up the boats, and they came and cut our lines and told us to fuck off. But
come on, we basically came uninvited in junk boats, so of course they did that.
brooklyn spaces: Okay, so now tell me about
India. How many of you are going over, how many boats do you have, how did you
set it all up?
Angie: There’s five boats, eight people are
going, and we have a couple of Indian people there. We sent a scout a few of
months ago, and he lined up places for us to stay and to store stuff, and people
to help us, and institutions and permits and things like that.
Orien: They government wanted to know what
we were doing. They don’t want to be like, “Oh, you’re doing a performance?
Great!” and then you get there and quarter a cow or do something really
offensive. But we got a letter of support from the Ministry of Culture that says
something like, “Your project is not specifically offensive to us from a
cultural perspective.”
sketch for part of the
Diwali performance
brooklyn spaces: The highest praise. What
are the performances going to be?
Orien: We’ll be pretty far out on the
water, so it’s not practical or logistically possible to have sound or a plot.
It’s going to be a gradual, five-day visual performance with a very vague
narrative. It’s kind of like architectural puppetry.
Angie: We’ll have a big mechanical
sculpture involving lights and movement, and at the end the boats come
apart.
Orien: It sort of demonstrates the function
of what makes the object interesting.
five boats in radial
formation, photo by Ben Mortimer
brooklyn spaces: What do you guys do in
between trips?
Angie: We have a lot of events. Most of
them are fundraisers, but this summer we did the Battle for Mau Mau Island in Gerritsen
Beach, where we got all our friends to form boat gangs. There was a race, a
battle, and boat jousting.
West India Day
fundraiser, photo from Laughing Squid
brooklyn spaces: What’s your motivation for
doing this?
Orien: I’m really interested in boats as
pieces of architecture, as objects. I come from an industrial design background,
that’s what I went to school for. And all these people really enjoy being a
family and having a common goal that isn’t about money or the banality of the
homogenized world of bullshit. So I just keep doing it. It’s a reaction to the
alternative. To exist in the actual world isn’t really an option for me; if I
don’t do this, what the fuck am I going to do?
Bordertown party at
Electric Warehouse
“Caddywhampuss,” which
won Best in Show at the 2010 Maker Faire, photo from Makezine
brooklyn spaces: What’s next for you
guys?
Orien: We’re probably going to go to
Russia, down the Volga river to Moscow. I really want to go to Lake Baikal, which is one of the world’s largest lakes,
it represents one-sixth of the world’s fresh water. It’s got seals and
underwater caves, it’s insanely deep, and it’s in the middle of Siberia, there’s
nothing near it. And surrounding Moscow is the Golden Ring area, the oldest part of Russia, so you have
this really old architecture and culture.
welding pontoons with a
martini, photo by Mayra Cimet
brooklyn spaces: Are you inspired as an
artist by being in Gowanus, or in Brooklyn in general?
Angie: We were totally lucky to have Josh
get that shop on the Gowanus.
Orien: Oh yeah. We built the first boat in
this tiny place on Nostrand Avenue, and then Josh was like, “Guess what? I’m
getting a new shop and it’s insanely massive and it’s on the Gowanus Canal.” It
was just the most ridiculous luck we’ve ever had. This project wouldn’t have
happened without Josh and Serett, it literally would not have. But other than
that, I don’t find New York especially inspiring. It’s basically an impossible
place to get anything done.
brooklyn spaces: But overall, has this been
a rewarding experience?
Orien: Definitely. I have all the things I
was looking for. We have the best friends anyone could have. We have something
to do that isn’t awful, that doesn’t contribute to the greater horror, that
doesn’t hurt people. No one has gained anything from what we’re doing, except
maybe the beer distributors. Other than that, no one’s getting rich off us,
which is nice. That’s about all you can ask for.
photo from Pipe Dream
Museum
Like this? Read about more art collectives: Monster Island, Hive NYC, The Schoolhouse, Bushwick Project for the Arts, Flux
Factory