Tuesday, 18 May 2010

EVOKE! An Introduction to the Series

In 1967, Founder of the Situationist International, Guy Debord, said the following: ‘’What changes our way of seeing the streets is more important than what changes our way of seeing painting’’. In his book ‘The Society of the Spectacle’ Debord raised important questions about the ownership over the design of City and how its restrictions render the public as passive observers merely passing through, which he referred to as ‘The Spectacle’. Debord stressed the importance of breaking this state of passive consumer, that we inherit when using the city, by creatively involving the public in active participation. Debord believed this could be effectively achieved by challenging these rules of public space to shake the passerby from passivity.


“The very principle of the spectacle — nonintervention — is linked to the alienation of the old world. Conversely, the most pertinent revolutionary experiments in culture have sought to break the spectator’s psychological identification with the hero so as to draw him into activity by provoking his capacities to revolutionize his own life.” (Debord:1967)


I believe Debords idea of the passive spectator is even more so relevant in todays experience of the City. The city is specifically designed to prevent people from integrating with it. Creative participation in the design of the city is forbidden and playfulness is discouraged. There are certain unspoken rules of the city that are evident when looking at the way the citys are designed. We are constantly being communicated to, or more so communicated at, by corporate advertisements, and billboards, logos, and signage. Within this environment a one-way conversation is formed. We are expected to receive these messages and keep quiet, and sadly the only active form of interaction with the city usually involves consumption. What is there fun to do in the city without money? That’s just it. As users of the city our purpose is to consume. But what if self-expression was permitted and the public could talk back. What if creative play within the City was permitted?


EVOKE! is a series of Interactive Urban Interventions, or Street Art Installations, that aim to practice these very ideas. Over the space of a couple months, Street Artist Contra has introduced, in various parts of Central London, ten interactive installations that evoke a response from city users. Each Urban Interventions aimed to provide an opportunity for individuals to become creatively engaged within the urban environment, evoke questions about the ownership of so called “public space” and prove what might be possible if people were allowed and encouraged to participate in the city they share.


Each installation was documented through a series of hidden cameras, covertly recording and photographing the responses that they evoked. The pieces were all designed evoke a sense of fun and lightheartedness that would inspire a double take and desirably engage passers by in an active experience, allowing them to communicate, creatively express, or physically interact with the piece.


This Blog hosts the series of documented material for your entertainment.


Enjoy!!

EVOKE! 10: Public Art Space, Trafalgar Square, London 3/5/2010


Completing the series the Public Art Space consisted of four gold framed white boards of different sizes, with attached dry wipe pen and duster similar to the Interactive Gordon Brown earlier in the series. Underneath the four frames sat individual engraved copper plaques similar to Vanity Point reading Public Art Space. This installation was placed in a key location, beside the National Portrait Gallery in Trafalgar Square, London. This interactive urban intervention gave the public the oppurtunity to openly and publicly create artistic expressions that would then be viewed as a gallery by passers by.

Watch the video documentation below to see what happened!


EVOKE! 9: Public Voice Box, Tottenham Court Road Station, London. 3/5/2010

The second to last installation of the series, The Public Voice Box, installed in a temporary scaffolding board tunnel by Tottenham Court Underground Station in London, came complete with embedded motion activated recorder module the Public Voice Box gave a few everyday people the oppurtunity to record a message that would be played to passers by when they walk past the device. The Installation was documented by both an in built hidden camera and a hidden camera facing the box.


Watch the video documentation below to see what happened!


EVOKE! 8: Public Expression Sticker Board, Covent Garden, London. 25/4/2010


Number eight in the series, The Public Expression Board, installed in Covent Garden in London aimed to provide a fun and playful experience, and a platform for self expression and creativity for everyday people within a public urban environment where it was denied before. This unique urban intervention was comprised of two elements, an Expression Board and a Sticker point. The Sticker Point gained form from an industrial toilet roll dispenser holding a large roll of peel-able white sticky labels. Mounted on the front of the dispenser was six Sharpie permanant markers mounted on the front. The Expression Board was made with four black A2 mountboards with a decal banner running across the top reading Public Expression Board: Place Your Stickers Here. The boards were stapled together to make one large board for members of the public to interact with. The Installation was documented by both photography and recorded by a hidden video camera facing the board.


Watch the video documentation below to see what happened!

EVOKE! 7: Public Wish Box, Covent Garden, London. 24/4/2010


Number seven in the series, The Public Wish Box, installed in Covent Garden in Central London, aimed to provide a fun and playful experience for everyday people within public space. This unique urban intervention, A Public Wish Box complete with pens and paper, involved members of the public in a chance to make a wish that could potentially, with the laws of superstition, come true. The wish box also came complete with a motion sensor sound module that would play a magical noise that played whenever a wish was placed in the box to create the feel of the wish being generated. The Wish Box was documented by both an in built hidden camera and a hidden camera facing the box. The wishes were later retrieved from the box for documentation.


Watch the video documentation below to see what happened!

EVOKE! 6 : Happy Honking, Leicester Square, London. 24/4/2010


Honk if you are Happy” This interactive installation, was placed in Leicester Square, a buzzing part of central london, on a sunny saturday afternoon. This installation aimed to encourage laughter and bring a smile to peoples faces and engage the public by inviting them to interact with the piece. The installation included four large metal bike horns of different tones. mounted onto a brightly colored board, along with a large banner plaque reading “Honk if you are happy”. Within seconds of being installed, people where drawn to it, and the compulsive honking began.

This part of the series encouraged people of all ages to do something they can’t usually feel comfortable doing in public space. This interactive urban intervention allowed passers by to engage in the unhibited freedom of play in a public space. The installation gave people a chance to express themselves publically by honking the horn, and aimed to break peoples passivity and bring smiles and laughter to peoples faces. Once on person had honked the horns, the sound would then atrract the attention of others. Soon, the silence of passivity was replaced with sounds of laughter, chatter, and constant honking, involving people in a light hearted, active participation in a public city environment.


Watch the video documentation below to see what happened!

EVOKE! 5: Public Message Box, Bond Street, London. 21/4/2010


The fifth in the series, The Public Message Box aimed to provide a playful experience for everyday people within restricted environments where it was denied before. This unique installation, a Public Message Box reading Receive a message from a stranger, leave a message for a stranger, consisted of a wooden box with a door. When the door is opened a light sensor activated sound recording module plays a message that has been previously recorded by the last person who visited the installation. On opening the box the viewer will find instructions on how to leave a message themselves which will be played to the next person who opens the box. For documentation, a hidden camera was also installed inside in the message box to capture the response from the public.


Watch the video documentation below to see what happened!