www.kanarinka.com
Saturday 10AM in NYC - "Funerals for a Moment"
If you are in the NYC area this weekend, please attend "Funerals for a
Moment":
Saturday, May 15, 10AM - 12noon (perhaps a bit longer)
Meet at Participant Inc, 95 Rivington St. (between Orchard and Ludlow)
If you miss us there, call 617-290-7967 to catch up
"Funerals for a Moment" will bring together collaborators across space
and time to commemorate the passing of inconsequential moments
(contributed online at www.funeralsforamoment.net) at particular
locations in New York City. The culminating event of the project at the
Psy.Geo.Conflux will be a collaborative performance of funerals across
New York City.
Best wishes,
Kanarinka
Funeral Director, Funerals for a Moment
http://www.funeralsforamoment.net
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
More info:
Funerals for a Moment - http://www.funeralsforamoment.net
Psy.Geo.Conflux - http://glowlab.blogs.com/psygeocon/
Funerals for a Moment description -
http://glowlab.blogs.com/psygeocon/2004/02/participant_17.html
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Funerals for a Moment is a project by kanarinka with anonymous, a.rios,
Andrea Moed, Cat L., Christy Georg, Daniel Ganin, Dave Raymond, Devin,
Dillon Paul, Dillon Paul, Holly Tavel, iSkot, jb, Jeremy Beaudry, jess
loseby, Jessica Poser, jhave, joseph and donna, Josephine Dorado, Kate
Armstrong, kurt braunohler, Lee Walton, M. River of MTAA, Maryan
Newbury, M Masuyama, Melissa, natalie loveless, Oren Bernstein, Ruth,
Teri & Owsley, Teri D'Ignazio, timothy cahill, Vic, wavelady, Zeke, and
others.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Tomorrow@MASSMOCA: Public Expedition for Infinitely Small Things (and some other stuff)
events:
1) Tomorrow @ MASSMOCA: Public Expedition for Infinitely Small Things
When: Saturday, April 24th, 1 - 5PM, come and go as you please
Where: entrance of MASSMOCA, North Adams, MA
Expedition Research Team: David Raymond, Heather Beard, Kanarinka,
Melissa Doucette, Natalie Loveless, James Bailey, Yori Sakakura
Join the research team! Visit MASSMOCA in North Adams, MA, and help us
collect samples of infinitely small things. This public expedition and
the samples we collect are part of spurse's "sans terre" for the
MASSMOCA exhibit "The Interventionists", opening May 2004.
more info: www.infinitelysmallthings.net
2) Become a contributor to "Funerals for a Moment"
When: now until May 7th, 2004
Where: http://www.funeralsforamoment.net
Contribute an insignificant, irrelevant, boring, inconsequential moment
that happened in NYC. These moments will be compiled into a limited
edition guidebook and will be used to perform funerals at the
Psy.Geo.Conflux in NYC on May 15, 2004.
(see http://glowlab.blogs.com/psygeocon/)
more info: http://www.funeralsforamoment.net
3) Also - Check out kanarinka's updated Artist Studio at turbulence.org:
http://www.turbulence.org/studios/kanarinka/
CALL2ALL: Funerals for a Moment
CALL to ARTISTS and ALL - forward far and wide
####
www.funeralsforamoment.net
Greetings All,
"Funerals for a Moment" will bring together collaborators across space
and time to commemorate the passing of inconsequential moments at
particular locations in New York City. The culminating event of the
project will be a collaborative performance of simultaneous funerals
across New York City as part of the Psy.Geo.Conflux
[http://www.psygeocon.org] on Saturday, May 15th, from 10AM - 12noon,
(meet at Participant, Inc., 95 Rivington Street).
Please CONTRIBUTE your NYC moments to the project today or WRITE FUNERAL
INSTRUCTIONS for moments contributed by others
[www.funeralsforamoment.net/submit.php] These moments will be compiled
into a Funeral Manual. Participants at the Conflux will commemorate your
moment with an elaborate funeral.
Your Moments should be:
- in New York City
- inconsequential
- boring
- unremarkable
- unusable
- non-functional
- commonplace
- prosaic
- routine
all moments deserve funerals,
kanarinka
www.funeralsforamoment.net
Re: Internet Art Survives, But the Boom Is Over -NY times
goodnight internet art! goodnight pixels! goodnight superfluous data
mapping! goodnight digitalia! goodnight perfunctory interactivity!
now let's do some interesting stuff.
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-list@rhizome.org [mailto:owner-list@rhizome.org] On Behalf
Of t.whid
Sent: Wednesday, March 31, 2004 9:04 AM
To: list@rhizome.org
Cc: Mark River
Subject: Re: RHIZOME_RAW: Internet Art Survives, But the Boom Is Over
-NY times
here's the link:
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/03/31/arts/artsspecial/31SISA.html
On Mar 31, 2004, at 8:36 AM, Mark River wrote:
> In a small article in the New York Times this morning
> (sorry, it does not seem to be online) entitled
> "Internet Art Survives, But the Boom Is Over", Cory
> Arcangel, Rachel Greene, Jonah Peretti, Mark Tribe and Lawrence Rinder
> talk about the death of Net Art. Yup, that's right, it's now
> officially officially, officially
> over and dead.
>
> Or, as Mark Tribe calls it and MTAA officially agrees, "Undead".
>
> So, let's all get together tonight to celebrate Undead
> Net Art at the Drinkin and Drawin' Championship, 2004
>
> http://tinjail.com/drinkAndDraw/
>
===
<twhid>http://www.mteww.com</twhid>
===
+
-> post: list@rhizome.org
-> questions: info@rhizome.org
-> subscribe/unsubscribe: http://rhizome.org/preferences/subscribe.rhiz
-> give: http://rhizome.org/support
-> visit: on Fridays the Rhizome.org web site is open to non-members
+
Subscribers to Rhizome are subject to the terms set out in the
Membership Agreement available online at http://rhizome.org/info/29.php
Re: Re: e-mails of some artists
#1 is Victor Liu at victor@n-gon.com.
Best,
kanarinka
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-list@rhizome.org [mailto:owner-list@rhizome.org] On Behalf
Of Neil Hennessy
Sent: Monday, March 22, 2004 8:57 PM
To: list@rhizome.org
Subject: RHIZOME_RAW: Re: e-mails of some artists
Hi Andrei,
You can reach the Prize Budget for Boys at pbfb@prizebudgetforboys.com
cheers,
nmh
Andrei Thomaz wrote:
> hello list,
>
> i would like to ask you the e-mail address of the authors of two
> proposals for Rhizome Comissions 2004. They are:
>
> 1) the author of Whiteout. Description: Whiteout is the flight
> simulator of your dreams.
> http://www.n-gon.com/rhizome/Whiteout.proposal/work-samples.html
>
> 2) the authors of Pac-Mondrian. They are Prize Budget for Boys, but in
> their site I haven't found any e-mail address.
>
> I also would like to point to an interesting "collateral effect" of
> Rhizome Comissions: reading the proposals, I have found some ones
> that
> are very close of mine or very close some interests I have. So, the
> collateral effect can be some collaboration happenning soon; i found
> some interesting works and artists that i would n't have found so
> easily, if it was not the Rhizome.org publishing the list of
> proposals
> in the web.
>
> good luck, and excuse me for my bad english,
> andrei
>
> --
> RGB Design Digital
> www.rgbdesigndigital.com.br
>
>
>
>
+
-> post: list@rhizome.org
-> questions: info@rhizome.org
-> subscribe/unsubscribe: http://rhizome.org/preferences/subscribe.rhiz
-> give: http://rhizome.org/support
-> visit: on Fridays the Rhizome.org web site is open to non-members
+
Subscribers to Rhizome are subject to the terms set out in the
Membership Agreement available online at http://rhizome.org/info/29.php
Erase the Border [Planned, Spring 2012]
Donate
“Erase the Border” is a project that will take place on the Tohono O’odham Indian Reservation in southern Arizona.
The Institute for Infinitely Small Things is currently seeking funding to complete the project in Spring 2012 (see detailed request below).
The project would be to physically “erase” the U.S.-Mexico border fence on the Tohono O’odham Nation in southern Arizona. The fence divides the Tohono O’odham community, disrupts ceremonial paths, desecrates sacred burial grounds and prevents members from receiving critical health services.
Ofelia Rivas and youth from the Tohono O’odham Nation will work with the Institute for Infinitely Small Things to create a series of drawings from performances on the U.S.-Mexican border in southern Arizona.
What we will do
We will walk the border fence in a ceremonial way.

We will drag and press large 30″ x 40″ sheets of fine art paper along the fence as we go.
The walking and pressure will create drawings that pick up physical matter – dirt, debris, bugs, rust – and remove it from the border fence.
A small part of the border fence will be removed forever.

The created drawings are abstract landscapes.
About the Tohono O’odham
The Tohono O’odham are an indigenous tribe that live on the second largest indian reservation in the U.S. Their lands straddle 75 miles of the U.S.-Mexico border in southern AZ. The O’odham lived on the land long before the US or Mexico or the Gadsden Purchase or Homeland Security.

The vehicle border fence, erected in 2008 by Homeland Security, stretches for 75 miles across the O’odham lands in the deserts of Arizona.
More Information
Please watch the below video for a full background on the Tohono O’odham’s situation on the border.
Seeking Funding
Originally slated to be performed in Fall 2011, this project continues to seek funding to be completed in Spring 2012. See below for more info.
Any contribution is welcome; our total need is $2,400, which would cover the following:
- Travel for 2 members of Institute for Infinitely Small Things from Boston to AZ
- Fine art paper
- Transportation for Ofelia Rives, O’odham youth and Institute members (distances on the reservation are great and gas is expensive)
- Honorarium for youth participants
- One day of meals for everyone involved
- Still photography, video documentation and post-production
Donate
The Border Crossed Us
The Border Crossed Us is a temporary public art installation by the Institute for Infinitely Small Things that transplants the US-Mexico border fence in southern Arizona to the UMass Amherst campus.
The Border Crossed Us Book is now available for order. See below for details.
What happens when we divide a territory that the community imagines as contiguous? How does the international border in Arizona, seemingly remote from a college campus in northern New England, touch all of our lives?
From April 20 to May 1st, the UMass Amherst campus was divided along its North-South boundary by a to-scale photographic replica of the vehicle fence that runs along the international boundary in southern Arizona. The particular stretch of fence being represented was erected in 2007 by Homeland Security and now divides the Tohono O’odham Nation – the second largest Native American reservation in the country – into two parts.


The fence will ran between a parking garage and the campus center. Over the course of two weeks it served as a provocation, a touchstone for conversation, and a site for talks and performances. Along with the fence’s insertion into daily life on campus, the project invited a delegation of Tohono O’odham, including a tribal elder and several youth to speak about their experience. In addition, the Native American Studies Certificate Program in the Anthropology Department held a panel discussion on Borders & Indigenous Sovereignty as part of the campus’ annual Native American Powwow. Border issues affect several other tribes, including the Mohawk and Abenaki. The delegation of O’odham spoke along with others about these issues during the conference and participate in the powwow.
This project was commissioned by the University Museum of Contemporary Art at UMass Amherst.
The following time-lapse video of the installation was produced using a motion-detecting camera designed for hunting purposes. Sounds are from the accompanying sound installation, which was installed inside the large, circular parking garage vent in the foreground:
The Border Crossed Us Book
This 42-page, full-color book uses maps, essays, photographs, and a variety of other rich graphics to communicate the background and results of The Border Crossed Us.
More info, images and dialogue on the project website:
No One Has Yet Determined What The Body Can Do
On Sunday, October 1 2011 the Institute joined with Occupy Boston in the 6th HONK! Parade to carry signs with two messages: “NO ONE HAS YET DETERMINED WHAT THE BODY CAN DO” and “#OCCUPYBOSTON”.
At 7AM Thursday, October 6 2011 the Institute strung banners over a Boston highway with the same messages. This was done as part of the multi-city Afghanistan War Tenth Anniversary Banners project.
Transgender Bathroom Dedication
Transgender Bathroom Dedication dedicates the men’s room at the MFA Boston to Dean Spade who was arrested in 2002 for using the men’s room in Grand Central Station and dedicates the women’s room at the MFA Boston to Chrissy Pollis who was the victim of a transgender hate crime in a Maryland bathroom in May 2011.
These two new works are gifts to the MFA Boston on behalf of the Institute for Infinitely Small Things. They were emplaced as part of “Boston’s Best 40-ennial”, a 19-minute historical and totally unauthorized exhibition in the bathroom of the MFA Boston organized by Greg Cook on June 20th, 2011.
More information about the exhibition:
Failure Support Group
Is there, actually, a recipe for failure? Are certain methodologies more prone to failure than others? How? What is at stake in acknowledging failure in one’s process, one’s community, or one’s career?
Failure Support Group from Infinitely Small on Vimeo.
In April 2011, The Institute for Infinitely Small Things sent out an open invitation to discuss failed processes and failed projects. Consisting of 5-7 minute presentations by the Institute and invited participants, the event addressed the ways in which failures can and cannot be currently discussed in the world–and how we may be able to imagine to new ways to perceive, view and characterize what “failure” is.
This was the second part in a series started by Platform2.
The World’s Largest Potluck Ever
The World’s Largest Potluck Ever would stage a mile-long potluck dinner on the Cambridge Street Corridor in Cambridge, MA, in an attempt to break the Guinness record, showcase the diversity of the businesses and residents, build community, publish a recipe book and display a dazzling array of home-cooked meals. For one Sunday afternoon, the whole street would be transformed into a giant neighborhood block party with food, performers and fun.
The World’s Largest Potluck Ever was inspired by Cambridge Street’s history as a commercial corridor of independently-run businesses and as a meeting place for people from diverse regions. Cambridge Street has seen significant waves of immigrants from Ireland, Poland, Italy, Portugal and Brazil. While the street has numerous festivals and special events (such as the 84-year-old annual Feast of Saints Cosmas and Damian or the Inman Square summer movie nights) there is no special event that celebrates the corridor specifically.
The World’s Largest Potluck Ever was part of a competition for the Cambridge Street Public Art Commission in Cambridge, MA, in 2010. It was on display in the city’s art gallery in Spring 2010 and three local residents were commissioned to create homemade dishes for gallery visitors to taste. Unfortunately the project was not selected for the commission but this idea is still worth doing! (Who does not want to attend the world’s largest potluck ever??) Contact me if you are interested in reviewing the full proposal.
Art & Cartography
An article for the International Encyclopedia of Human Geography, published by Elsevier Press. Download article.
Synopsis:
Art has taken a distinct “cartographic turn” in the last century. This period represents a veritable explosion of artwork that takes on cartography in order to critique, subvert, and reimagine territory. Artists have made maps, subverted maps, performed itineraries, imagined territories, contested borders, charted the invisible, and hacked physical, virtual, and hybrid spaces. There are three loose groupings of important mapping impulses that have characterized the artistic appropriation of cartographic strategies, both literally and metaphorically, from the early twentieth century to present times: 1) Symbol Saboteurs: artists who use the visual iconography of the map to reference personal, fictional, utopian, or metaphorical places; 2) Agents and Actors: artists who make maps or engage in situated, locational activities in order to challenge the status quo or change the world; and 3) Invisible Data-Mappers: artists who use cartographic metaphors to visualize informational territories such as the stock market, the Internet, or the human genome. This article outlines and contextualizes these three impulses with numerous examples.
It takes 154,000 breaths to evacuate Boston
kanarinka ran the entire evacuation route system in Boston and attempted to measure the distance in human breath. The project also involves a podcast and a sculptural installation of the archive of tens of thousands of breaths .
The project is an attempt to measure our post-9/11 collective fear in the individual breaths that it takes to traverse these new geographies of insecurity.
The $827,500 Boston emergency evacuation system was installed in 2006 to demonstrate the city’s preparedness for evacuating people in snowstorms, hurricanes, infrastructure failures, fires and/or terrorist attacks.
It takes 154,000 breaths to evacuate Boston consists of:
- a series of running performances in public space (2007)
- a web podcast of breaths (2007)
- a sculptural installation of the archive of breaths (2008)
Running Performances
Website & Podcast

Project Website: www.evacuateboston.com
Archive of Breaths (sculptural piece)
Medium: custom-made table, 26 jars, 26 speaker components, wire, 13 CD players
Dimensions: 45″x72″x16″
I created a sculptural & audio archive of the collection of breaths. There are 26 jars on a custom-made table which correspond to the 26 runs it took to cover the evacuation routes. Each jar size corresponds to the number of breaths from that run. The speaker inside the jar plays the breaths collected from that run. (Better documentation coming soon)
This piece is on view in Experimental Geography, a traveling show curated by Nato Thompson and produced by ICI.






