projects + announcements – Action Items http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems By Matt McCormick Wed, 04 Sep 2013 00:55:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 The Great Northwest http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2011/03/10/the-great-northwest/ http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2011/03/10/the-great-northwest/#respond Thu, 10 Mar 2011 21:55:18 +0000 http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/?p=232 Continue reading ]]>

I have a new project that I am very excited about called “The Great Northwest.”  A few years ago I found an amazing scrap-book that was made by four middle-aged single women from Seattle who went on an epic road-trip through the Pacific Northwest in 1958. They drove over 3,200 miles, through Washington, Idaho, Montana, and Oregon, taking photos and collecting postcards, brochures, menus, receipts, and all sorts of ephemera- all of which they carefully arranged in this scrap book at the completion of their journey.

“The Great Northwest” is a 76 minute experimental documentary and photo-series that chronicles my attempt at re-creating their road-trip.  I spent over a month on the road, following their route as closely as possible, and attempted to find and document every stop that they had documented. Here is a short excerpt that follows the women’s adventures in Yellowstone National Park.

There have obviously been many big changes since the ladies made their road trip, but at the same time much seems relatively intact. The most obvious and immediate change to have hit the natural landscape is the addition of the Interstate Highway System, as I-90, I-84, and I-5 have essentially carved out three new massive rivers through the region. Urban centers such as Seattle, Portland, and Spokane have sprouted sky-scrappers and hefty suburban growth, while other towns such as Vantage and Taft no longer exist at all; one being flooded by Columbia River damming and the other paved over by Interstate 90. But while many towns have experienced massive change, carefully preserved towns such as Wallace, Idaho, and steadfast tourist attractions such as the Oregon Coast’s Sea Lion Caves seem almost stuck in time except for perhaps a few new layers of paint.

This was a really fun project to work on. If nothing else it broadened my understanding of this region and made me ever more proud to call the Pacific Northwest home. My hope is that I have helped preserve and expand upon an important historical document. The scrapbook is a time capsule- it is evidence of memories that remind us how fragile history is. I think my ultimate ‘dream’ with this project would be to have someone re-recreate it in another 50 years.

I am often asked if I ever found the women who originally made the scrap-book, and I have to admit that I did a bit of looking around, but after finding death records for two of them I decided it was better to just leave it be. The scrapbook is full of mystery, and not all of it needs to be solved.

The Great Northwest will be on display in Portland at the Elizabeth Leach Gallery through April 2nd. The Project was made possible by generous grants from The Regional Arts and Culture Council and the Oregon Media Arts Fellowship. More info about the project can also be found on my website at www.rodeofilmco.com

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this goofy thing we made http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2010/11/09/this-goofy-thing-we-made/ http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2010/11/09/this-goofy-thing-we-made/#respond Tue, 09 Nov 2010 18:58:52 +0000 http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/?p=211 Continue reading ]]>

I made this funny little video with Bryan Boyce a couple weeks ago and since then it’s been making some rounds on the internetJames Mercer plays the “stunt-mouth.”  (no members of Hall and Oates or Broken Bells were harmed in the making of this video)

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outdated updates http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2010/02/13/outdated_updates/ http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2010/02/13/outdated_updates/#comments Sat, 13 Feb 2010 23:13:22 +0000 http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2010/02/13/outdated_updates/ Continue reading ]]> i have not been much of a blogger lately, but that doesn’t mean i haven’t been busy.
first off, i am very excited to announce that my film Some Days are Better than Others will be making its world premiere at the South X Southwest music and film festival. specific dates and times have yet to be announced, but the festival runs March 12-20 in Austin TX, and more info can be found at www.sxsw.com.  We also got a nice review from Filmmaker Magazine! http://www.filmmakermagazine.com/news/2010/03/matt-mccormicks-some-days-are-better-than-others-by-scott-macaulay/
also, I just completed a new music video for Eluvium (whose head dude, Matthew Cooper, just so happened to pen the soundtrack for the previously mentioned movie). check it out ——–>

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the 2009 PDX Film Festival is happening… http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2009/05/05/the_2009_pdx_film_festival_is/ http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2009/05/05/the_2009_pdx_film_festival_is/#respond Tue, 05 May 2009 23:59:39 +0000 http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2009/05/05/the_2009_pdx_film_festival_is/ Continue reading ]]> 3d_trick_pony.jpg
even though i am no longer running the PDX Film Fest, I can say with certain confidence that there is some super awesome stuff happening at this year’s festival. I mean, we got the Girl Talk documentary RiP! A Remix Manifesto, plus visiting artists Ben Coonely and Peggy Ahwesh, a super-rare screening of the films of Bruce Conner, the Experimental Filmmaker Karaoke Throwdown, and of course we have THE PERIPHERAL PRODUCE INVITATIONAL (which i am proud to say that i am still the bingo-caller for).
The fest starts Wednesday May 7 and runs through Sunday the 10th at the Clinton Street Theatre. for the entire lowdown visit www.pdxfilmfest.com. We will be live-blogging the fest for instant updates, but here are some things to be sure to watch for:


OPENING NIGHT! Bruce Conner: In Memoriam
Co-presented by PDX Fest, NWFC and Cinema Project
We are honored to open PDX Fest 2009 with a very special tribute screening to California artist and filmmaker Bruce Conner (1933-2008). Conner was the modern master of found footage filmmaking. During his 40-year career–first as a pioneer of assemblage art and then as a heralded moving-image maker–he created a unique body of work that examined American society with wit and clarity of vision. His carefully edited montage films, informed by his sculptural practice, draw upon sources as varied as educational films, newsreel footage and television commercials, finding new power and associations in discarded or forgotten images. We welcome Michelle Silva, a representative of the Conner Family Estate, for this special program of works that resonate in surprising ways with American popular culture. Clinton Street Theater May 6th, 7:30
Featured Artist: Peggy Ahwesh
Co-presented by Cinema Project
PDX Fest is incredibly excited to welcome avant-garde filmmaking veteran Peggy Ahwesh to Portland to present a mini-retrospective of film and video works from throughout her 35+ year career. Aptly described as a bricoleur, Peggy works in a combination of narrative and documentary styles, improvisational performance, found footage, noise and nonsense, utilizing a variety of obsolete, low-end and arcane technologies. Peggy will be sharing some of her rarely screened early super 8 work as well as some of her more recent forays into the digital realm. Her work as an actor will also be on display at the festival in Deliver, Jennifer Montgomery’s all-woman remake of Deliverance (screening May 10th, 1PM). Peggy plays the role made famous by Burt Reynolds in the original film. While in town for the festival, Peggy will also be teaching a workshop on techniques of improvisation for filmmakers (NWFC School of Film, May 10th). Clinton Street Theater May 8th, 7:30

Featured Artist: Ben Coonley

An evening of pranks, postmodern revisions and 3D fun will be in store as festival featured guest Ben Coonley presents an entertaining evening of his off the wall new media and video art pieces. Ben’s work dismantles and rearranges texts and subtexts of contemporary media culture, often to hilarious effect. Ben will share selections from his varied body of work including the world premiere of a documentary begun as a teenager in 1990 as well as a new “avant-PowerPoint” performance! Ben will also be teaching a Do It Yourself 3D moviemaking workshop over the weekend (NWFC School of Film, May 9th). Clinton Street Theater May 7th, 7:00
RiP! A Remix Manifesto
We are very excited to present Brett Gaylor’s very timely feature documentary exploring the concept of copyright in the era of Napster, Bit Torrent and peer-to-peer file sharing. Using mash up artist Girl Talk as the film’s protagonist, Gaylor takes us on an enthralling journey into the complex world of copyright protection in the midst of a rising generation of steady downloaders. Serving as a rallying cry for the pioneers of a new fair use culture of samplers, remixers, and reinventors, RiP! is an entertaining, upbeat and downright inspiring vision of an open source future. Clinton Street Theater May 7th, 9:00
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The Experimental Filmmaker Karaoke Throwdown! Take II! at Holocene
Co-presented by Disjecta
The Experimental Filmmaker Karaoke Throwdown is back for the sequel to last year’s premiere event. After the raging success of last year’s Throwdown – which featured a stand out performance of Xanadu by Tara Jane O’Neil as well as a full audience sing along to Total Eclipse of the Heart – we are taking the party to Holocene this year. We’re back with a brand new katalog of karaoke klassics featuring homemade karaoke videos from our favorite filmmakers including Shana Moulton, Ben Russell, Jeanne Liotta, and Bryan Boyce. Plus, we will also have Rush-N-Disco, Hooliganship and DJ BJ in the house to keep the party rockin’ till the breaka dawn. Ahhhh Yeahhhhh! Holocene May 8th, doors open at 9PM, 21+

The 2009 Peripheral Produce Invitational

The Peripheral Produce Invitational (dubbed the ‘World Championship of Experimental Cinema’) will once again pit filmmakers from Portland and beyond against each other in a rock-em-sock-em, trash talkin’ competitive film showdown. Last year’s reigning champ Orland Nutt is back to defend his title but a gang of bloodthirsty challengers are ready to give him a run for his money. Who will walk away with the trophy this year? With all the filmmakers in attendance and the audience deciding who wins, you never know what will happen in this battle-royale of experimental film. Come join us and let your vote count in selecting this year’s winner! Clinton Street Theater May 9th, 8:30
CLOSING NIGHT! O’er The Land
PDX Fest closes with a loud BANG as we present the Portland premiere of Deborah Stratman’s new 16mm feature, O’er The Land. This gorgeous experimental documentary has been wowing audiences from Sundance to Rotterdam this year. Simultaneously a critique of violence, a rumination upon our national psyche, and a ritualized celebration of colossal forces beyond our control, Deborah Stratman’s new film explores the ways Americans have come to understand freedom and the increasingly technological reiterations of manifest destiny. Combining high school Friday night football games, Revolutionary War re-enactments, automatic weapon conventions, and a gut wrenching story of survival by a fighter jet pilot, Stratman has crafted a stunning and powerful portrait of our cultural psyche. Clinton Street Theater May 10th, 8:00

BUM EQUIPMENT: The PDX Fest Video Installation Exhibit at galleryHomeland

For this year’s PDX Fest, Peter Burr conjured a Cartune Xprez installation showcase featuring work by over 20 artists from around the world. Featuring over 50 monitors, this program takes place in three distinct parts equalling one heavy dose of the video-world unraveled. Single channel video loops, interactive homemade video games, and sculptural installation pieces all comprise this stunning exhibition of modern psychedelia. Opening night party will feature live musical performances and other surprises!
OPENING NIGHT PARTY: May 6th 7PM – 12AM with live performances starting at 9PM
REGULAR VIEWING HOURS: May 7th – 24th from 12PM – 6PM, Thursday through Monday
PLUS new films and videos from a ton of amazing filmmakers (many of whom will be in attendance!) including Lee Anne Schmitt, Michael Gitlin, Rebecca Baron, Adele Horne, Roger Beebe, Sam Green, and Jennifer Montgomery! PLUS PLUS workshops, parties, surprise performances AND MUCH MUCH MORE!!
For the complete PDX Fest 2009 Schedule, ticketing info and last minute updates head to: www.pdxfilmfest.com
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so much stuff (it’s been awhile) http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2008/10/24/so_much_stuff_its_been_awhile/ http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2008/10/24/so_much_stuff_its_been_awhile/#respond Fri, 24 Oct 2008 23:57:37 +0000 http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2008/10/24/so_much_stuff_its_been_awhile/ Continue reading ]]> oh how the blog has suffered these past couple months. i have been busy, on some things i can announce now, and some things that will just have to wait. here is a partial list of some upcoming and current stuff and things:
on monday october 27th i will be the featured guest at the PSU / PICA PMMNLS Monday Night Lecture Series. it is free and starts at 7:30 at Portland State University’s Shattuck Hall (Room 212, 1914 SW Park Avenue, at the corner of SW Broadway and Hall)

I will also be doing a week-long tour through New York state in early November.
here are the dates:
sun nov 2: Rochester, NY: Dryden Theatre
mon nov 3: Auburn, NY: TBD
tue nov 4: Binghamton, NY: Binghamton University Cinema
wed nov 5: Troy, NY: The Sanctuary
thur nov 6: Anondale, NY: Bard College
fri nov 7: New York City: School of Visual Arts noon time lecture
fri nov 7: Brooklyn, NY: Light Industry
I also have a new 4 channel video installation called ‘Satellites’ that was commissioned by the fancy new Portland Hotel The Nines. The Nines just opened and has lots of artwork on display made by many awesome Portland artists including Storm Tharpe and Melody Owen, so you should definitely go loiter in their lobby sometime.
and lastly, XLR*R magazine recently did a profile on me, complete with on camera interview. you can check it out here.
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future so seattle http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2008/01/23/future_so_seattle/ http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2008/01/23/future_so_seattle/#respond Wed, 23 Jan 2008 20:09:02 +0000 http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2008/01/23/future_so_seattle/ Continue reading ]]> fsbhedreen.jpg
SEATTLE PEOPLE: two installments of my project ‘future so bright’ (motor hotel and western edge) are currently on display in Seattle through the end of March at the Hedreen Gallery. You can read more about the project here, and the show got some good press from the Seattle Stranger and the Seattle PI.
If you are in Seattle please check it out!!!

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live blogging you are here: CLUI http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2007/12/04/live_blogging_you_are_here_clu/ http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2007/12/04/live_blogging_you_are_here_clu/#respond Tue, 04 Dec 2007 18:12:21 +0000 http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2007/12/04/live_blogging_you_are_here_clu/ Continue reading ]]> cluihouston4.jpg
now it’s time for the headliner. Matt Coolidge, founder of the Center for Land Use Interpretation is up and giving an overview of CLUI’s history and trying to explain just exactly what it is (which is no easy task). Matt talks about how the Center looks at “man made geography,” or essentially how humans choose to interact and use the land they inhabit. CLUI is one part scientific research, one part sociologic research, and (by default) one part art project. In many ways CLUI is one big, very impressive, amateur geography project.
Matt talks about how the act of ‘pointing out’ is also an act of unintentionally ‘un-pointing out’ everything else. He shows a series of images of scenic overlook or points of interest signs, showing only the pointing sign but not what the sign is actually pointing to, and talks about how society as a whole has sectioned out pieces of the landscape as interesting; national parks and scenic byways, historical markers, and the like, and constantly redirects its attention to these places as vacation destinations and fodder for postcards and coffee table books. CLUI’s mission, on the other hand, is to look at the spaces inbetween, and to explore, map, and catalog the places that society as a whole has deemed uninteresting.
CLUI does a lot of really interesting work, and it is by far one of my favorite things (art or otherwise) going on these days. It is very difficult to explain in a nut-shell what they do; in some ways it is extremely simple, but it only makes sense if you take a little time looking at the larger picture. CLUI is the group behind the residency i did in Wendover UT a few months back which i detailed here in the ‘wendover reports’.
UPDATE:
so my live blogging of Matt’s lecture didn’t really pan out, i got too interested in listening to him talk, and then the evening quickly turned into a social event and i was distracted by human interaction. But now, a couple days later, i find myself out on the Buffalo Bayou and shipping canal on the southeastern edge of Houston helping Matt hook-up plumbing and electricity to a recently donated construction trailer that will become home to CLUI’s newest research facility.
With help from the University of Houston and the Buffalo Bayou Restoration Partnership, CLUI is setting up a mobile research facility not unlike the one in Wendover (they also have them in the Mojave Desert and Troy, New York). In many ways, this whole weekend is sort of the kick-off event to get that started, and now I am here with Matt helping to set up a new UNIT. This will be a place for students and CLUI researchers to collect data about the Bayou and the surrounding area, and eventually create a large and on-going series of exhibits.
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CLUI’s new research unit, on the site of an old ‘you-pick’ scrap-yard.
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the view across the bayou from the unit.
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Matt Coolidge in front of the soon to be new CLUI research unit.

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live blogging you are here: The Institute for Applied Autonomy http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2007/12/01/live_blogging_you_are_here_the/ http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2007/12/01/live_blogging_you_are_here_the/#respond Sat, 01 Dec 2007 20:21:07 +0000 http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2007/12/01/live_blogging_you_are_here_the/ Continue reading ]]> Rich Pell from the The Institute for Applied Autonomy is talking about engineering and how the job of the engineer is more about solving problems for their funders then solving real problems. The ‘Institute’ is very interested in the design and evolution of technology, and is behind actions such as TXTmob, the GraffitiWriter robot, the Streetwriter vehicle, and the surveillance camera tracking I-See. Rich started the lecture with showing this amazing video and then went into an overview of several of the group’s projects. IAA does some pretty awesome stuff and i highly recommend watching the video and spending a little time on their website: http://www.appliedautonomy.com/index.html
After giving an over-view of IAA, Rich went on to talk about their new project Terminal Air, which looks at how amateur plane spotters using the internet have become the scourge of the CIA in noticing, mapping, and logging the flights of private aircraft run by companies that appear to be fronts for covert, and possibly illegal, activity. They make frequent flights to Gauntanamo Bay and the Middle East, yet have no publicly traceable data. IAA is creating a dense database of these planes and flights hoping to draw attention to this mystery and wonder who is running the secret CIA travel agency.
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i also just learned that Bree Edwards is also live blogging the symposium here

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live blogging you are here: Nato Thompson http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2007/12/01/live_blogging_you_are_here_nat/ http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2007/12/01/live_blogging_you_are_here_nat/#respond Sat, 01 Dec 2007 19:13:54 +0000 http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2007/12/01/live_blogging_you_are_here_nat/ Continue reading ]]> here we are at day two of the YOU ARE HERE symposium at the Aurora Picture show and presented by the University of Houston. I rocked the house last night with future so bright, and today comes the smart stuff.
first up is Nato Thompson giving a lecture about his upcoming show Experimental Geography and talking about artists who look interrogate their environments. Nato is a curator artist who currently works at Creative Time and curated the The Interventionists show at MassMoCa and recently produced Waiting for Godot in New Orleans with artist Paul Chan. I like this idea of experimental geography; “Geography benefits from the study of specific histories, sites, and memories. Every estuary, landfill, and cul-de-sac has a story to tell. The task of the geographer is to alert us to what is directly in front of us, while the task of the experimental geographer—an amalgam of scientist, artist, and explorer—is to do so in a manner that deploys aesthetics, ambiguity, poetry, and a dash of empiricism.”
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“your finger nails grow at the same rate that the tectonic plates move.”

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you are here http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2007/11/29/you_are_here/ http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2007/11/29/you_are_here/#comments Thu, 29 Nov 2007 19:26:00 +0000 http://urbanhonking.com/actionitems/2007/11/29/you_are_here/ Continue reading ]]> I AM HERE
On Friday November 30th I will be performing the live version of future so bright at the Aurora Picture Show in Houston as part of the You Are Here symposium. Other artists involved include The Center for Land Use Interpretation, Nato Thompson, and the INSTITUTE FOR APPLIED AUTONOMY, and the show looks to explore how contemporary artists and researchers are using maps and tactical media to document and understand their environments. I am very stoked to be a part of this show.
THEN I WILL BE HERE
After a couple days in Houston I will then proceed to Miami for the Miami Art Basel Art Fair, where the installation version of future so bright is part of the official program and VERY STEREO will be rocking out at a secret dance party. I also plan on drinking a pina colada.
If you happen to be in either of those locals please drop me a line. Below is a video clip of me performing future so bright at Holocene a couple months back that my pal Dalas shot…


Future So Bright from dalas verdugo on Vimeo.

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