ART & CULTURE / WHO, WHAT, WHY
Field Experiments
A step by step guide to highlights across fashion, art and culture
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Who? What happens when you put three creative guys on an island together for three months to make art? This is the premise behind multi-disciplinary art collective Field Experiments’ debut show that opened in New York over the weekend. Field Experiments is a resourceful art concept by three designers – American Benjamin Harrison Bryant (industrial designer), Karim Charlesbois-Zariffa (graphic designer/creative director) and Australian Paul Marcus Fuog (graphic designer) – who use ongoing research and development projects to explore traditional craft using designers and local craftspeople from various locations around the world.
"Field Experiments use ongoing research and development projects to explore traditional craft using designers and local craftspeople from around the world"
Why? A very improvised style is a conscious theme through Field Experiments’ work, seen in over 50 objects such as a row of toilet plungers with colourful textiles wrapped around them, plastic and woven basket sculptures, fruit stall signs cut out of stone, wood carved donuts (that reference floaty pool tires), and kites made of plastic shopping bags. “We wanted to create these objects within their cultural context so we could make them with the locals, and also so we weren’t influenced by our own cultural signifiers back home.”
Field Experiments launched over the weekend at Sight Unseen OFFSITE to coincide with NYCxDESIGN, and runs until May 20.
Field Experiments, a New York based art collective, moved to Indonesia to reimagine the souvenir. Here are the results
Text by Caroline Clements
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