Carnegie Mellon University
June 17, 2020

"Looking Out"

Miller ICA responds to COVID-19 through artists' windows and to their wisdom

By Margaret Cox

Margaret Cox

Since March, life has been far from normal. The pandemic has opened up a space for reflection, a platform for awakening and as evidenced by the recent protests in support of the Black Lives Matter movement, this is a time when people are articulating how they are not interested in returning to "normal."

This is a time of making the invisible, visible.

Alex Young, in collaboration with co-workers at Carnegie Mellon University's Miller Institute for Contemporary Art, came up with an idea to view this time through the eyes of local contemporary artists. "Looking Out" is a photo and video program on Instagram and IGTV featuring new works by Pittsburgh artists.

"'Looking Out' was conceived as an empathetic space to make the experience of sheltering-in-place one less of isolation and more of collectivity and solidarity. Featuring local artists, this project asks participants to share the view from their window — meditating upon our simultaneous nearness and farness, sameness and difference, while providing profane illuminations for our times." Young said. "The artists in 'Looking Out' have risen to the moment in a manner that is as immediate as it is profound."

Miller ICA Director Elizabeth Chodos responded to the COVID-19 pandemic with a new ePublication called "Remote Control." "Looking Out" is a series highlighted on the platform.

"Artists have a real role to play in times of crisis, by processing the trauma caused by loss, revealing the unseen forces at play that impact our daily lives, and by making meaning out of the seismic socio-political shifts resulting from the global lockdowns," Chodos said.

The series has received attention in an article from WESA.FM and has featured works by artists Tony Buba, Shaun Slifer, Erin Mallea, Lindsey french, Chris Ivey, Steve Gurysh, Carin Mincemoyer and Kevin Clancy, with additional artists to come.

Local artist Carin Mincemoyer, who graduated from CMU in 1994 with a bachelor's degree in art, shares her work "Sky Notes, Looking Out #07." In this series of photographs the artist takes note of the sky.

"During a crisis making art takes on a restorative or healing quality because it reconfirms that this is what I do," Mincemoyer said. "I can see on social media other artists continuing to make art whether in their normal workspaces or on the kitchen table, and it confirms that this is what we do. Artmaking is an attempt to engage the world in a conversation about what it means to be alive in this moment, and the tools and skills to do that are just as important in bad times as in good."

"Since the inception of the project, worldwide demonstrations in support of the Black Lives Matter movement have taken hold and further confirmed the vital role contemporary artists play in social change," Chodos said.

Pittsburgh filmmaker Chris Ivey talks about his video "The Reality, Looking Out #05" and why its message is so crucial in this time of COVID-19 and the Black Lives Matter movement.

"Many of us in the black community are dealing with the pandemic more boldly because we are so used to everyday trauma." Ivey said. "Whether it be domestic violence, police violence or various other types of PTSD-inducing violence, the black community has been relatively quiet and resilient — until the tipping point of George Floyd's death. I believe it's because we are just used to rolling, literally at times, with the punches.

"We're living in an incredible time that has been brewing for decades. We're in a time where we need bold leaders who are not afraid to address the issues," Ivey said. "As an artist, I feel it's my duty to always bring art, activism and people together, through my work."

"During this time, while business as usual is paused, we can clearly see that we don't want to go back to what was once 'normal.' One concrete thing we can do is listen to the wisdom from artists' voices and their work as well as looking out for each other," Chodos said.

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“‘OTHER WORLDS ARE POSSIBLE’ seeks to be a radiant two-way mirror portal, simultaneously providing a prismatic lens through which to reexamine the world outside and a radiant point of reflection to augment our current reality, depending on your vantage point, time of day, and atmospheric conditions. It exists as a physical and virtual portal, with a similar duality. Simply, it is a motivational poster for passersby who could use a tiny bit of hope right now. It is in a second story window of 3598 Bethoven Street, if you want to include it on one of your distanced, masked walks.” Dichroic film on CNC routed acrylic, dichroic LED lighting, hardware, 47”x47”. Sound by Reggie Wilkins. Thanks to Lindsey Landfried, digiFAB lab, and Penn State University for fabrication assistance. @kevinclancy.studio #LookingOutPGH ‘L👀king Out’ features works by Pittsburgh artists created through their respective windows while sheltering in place. This on-going series envisions a new commons making our mutual experience of sheltering-in-place one less of isolation and more of collectivity and solidarity. This series is a Miller ICA project with prompt by @_lex_oung. -looking out from our windows and for each other #LookingOut #Pittsburgh #MillerICACMU #ContemporaryArt #StayHomeStaySafe #KevinClancy #OtherWorldsArePossible @carnegiemellon @nextpittsburgh @pghcitypaper @pittsburghmagazine

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“Taking note of the sky outside my studio window is a practice I began in early April, after having been away for a couple of weeks, dealing with the onslaught of pandemic news and all of its repercussions. The framing of the window turns the activity of the sky into a drama, and I began a habit of consciously noting it and photographing it almost daily. In a time of uncertainty and lack of normalcy, it serves as a comforting bit of routine, a marker of time, and a reminder to be present.” @carin.mincemoyer #LookingOutPGH ‘L👀king Out’ features works by Pittsburgh artists created through their respective windows while sheltering in place. This on-going series envisions a new commons making our mutual experience of sheltering-in-place one less of isolation and more of collectivity and solidarity. This series is a Miller ICA project with prompt by @_lex_oung. -looking out from our windows and for each other #LookingOut #Pittsburgh #MillerICACMU #ContemporaryArt #StayHomeStaySafe @carnegiemellon @cmuschoolofart @nextpittsburgh @pghcitypaper

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“I've made a number of works that come into contact with the Allegheny, Monongahela, Ohio rivers. Each flow through my mind as I try to understand the history of Pittsburgh as a confluence (and contamination) of geological and engineered forces. This past fall, I traveled with a group of collaborators—Alex Young, Erin Mallea, and Lindsey french—to the towns of Warren, PA and Salamanca, NY, where we visited the site of the Kinzua Dam, a project built in 1965 whose reservoir displaced 10,000 acres of Seneca land, breaking a treaty signed by George Washington and the Grand Council of the Six Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy in 1794. This project, built by the US Army Corp of Engineers, was designed to control the Allegheny River and mitigate flooding in Downtown Pittsburgh at the devastating expense of the Seneca people and their sovereignty. Every citizen of Pittsburgh should learn this history of dispossession and displacement. Perhaps the best place to start is the Seneca Iroquois National Museum in Salamanca, NY who, thankfully, have an excellent digital archive on their website. As we look out into the next decade, how can we imagine restorative justice for those upstream?” @stevegurysh #LookingOutPGH ‘L👀king Out’ features works by Pittsburgh artists created through their respective windows while sheltering in place. This on-going series envisions a new commons making our mutual experience of sheltering-in-place one less of isolation and more of collectivity and solidarity. This series is a Miller ICA project with prompt by @_lex_oung. -looking out from our windows and for each other #LookingOut #Pittsburgh #MillerICACMU #ContemporaryArt #StayHomeStaySafe #SteveGurysh #Kinzua #KinzuaDam @carnegiemellon @cmuschoolofart @nextpittsburgh @pghcitypaper @pittsburghmagazine

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“The video was filmed out a window during another day for nature activity but can be seen as traumatic in ways to some. I thought it fitting to lay in audio from a discussion I held in November 2019 centered on black women's trauma in Pittsburgh. The discussion was held in part with the screening of my installation short The Silence When Black Women Die and Antwon about murdered teen Antwon Rose, from my video installation. The installation, We Are Here, is a four-channel video installation regarding social justice issues. The segment Silence tackles issues of visibility and identity for black women in Pittsburgh. In the installation, recently online through CMU's Center for Art in Society, advocate Tresa Murphy Green speaks bluntly of black women friends and several others whose deaths go unnoticed in the media and the city in general. The installation piece digs deep into the trauma experienced by Pittsburgh black women knowing that the value of their lives is fractional compared to those of white women. My goal is to foster inspiration in a screening environment that is conducive to constructive discussions led by passionate advocates. This piece was meant to be haunting in different ways. Hopefully, the audience will choose not to shy away from bigger issues in it as we often do now in our attention-deficit times.” @hyperboymedia #LookingOutPGH ‘L👀king Out’ features works by Pittsburgh artists created through their respective windows while sheltering in place. This on-going series envisions a new commons making our mutual experience of sheltering-in-place one less of isolation and more of collectivity and solidarity. This series is a Miller ICA project with prompt by @_lex_oung. -looking out from our windows and for each other #LookingOut #Pittsburgh #MillerICACMU #ContemporaryArt #StayHomeStaySafe #ChrisIvey #HyperBoyMedia @carnegiemellon @nextpittsburgh @pghcitypaper @pittsburghmagazine

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“‘many wreaths for violets’ approaches the window as a surface for desire. The window is the surface for gazing, lingering, and languid fantasy, it holds the touch and the swipe as much as it holds the eye. During the short duration of this project, a small cluster of violets grew beneath two maple trees on the other side of my window. These particular violets were not the same violets that Sappho strung into wreaths, nor were they as strong or smooth as a symbol. Anne Carson’s translations of Sappho offered me a form for absence in expressions of longing, and I offered to these violets a few gestures of soft attachment at the surfaces of glass - as layers of opacity, as molecules of scent, as gestures of poetry - many wreaths for these violets.” @ellemeff #LookingOutPGH ‘L👀king Out’ features works by Pittsburgh artists created through their respective windows while sheltering in place. This on-going series envisions a new commons making our mutual experience of sheltering-in-place one less of isolation and more of collectivity and solidarity. This series is a Miller ICA project with prompt by @_lex_oung. -looking out from our windows and for each other #LookingOut #Pittsburgh #MillerICACMU #ContemporaryArt #StayHomeStaySafe #Lindseyfrench #Sappho #Violets @carnegiemellon @nextpittsburgh @pghcitypaper @pittsburghmagazine

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“‘Reflection Meditation’ includes videos taken from (and of) my window over the course of three days. The videos were then played on all the screens in my apartment and reflected in the window at night to be viewable on either side of the glass. The audio compiles sounds playing both inside and outside the window while recording footage.” @erinmallea #LookingOutPGH ‘L👀king Out’ features works by Pittsburgh artists created through their respective windows while sheltering in place. This on-going series envisions a new commons making our mutual experience of sheltering-in-place one less of isolation and more of collectivity and solidarity. This series is a Miller ICA project with prompt by @_lex_oung. -looking out from our windows and for each other #LookingOut #Pittsburgh #MillerICACMU #ContemporaryArt #StayHomeStaySafe #ErinMallea #ReflectionMeditation @carnegiemellon @cmuschoolofart @nextpittsburgh @pghcitypaper @pittsburghmagazine

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“If I swivel to the right in my desk chair, to take a break from the screen, this is what I see. Typically the bridge and the road below are congested with vehicles from 3-7pm on almost any day, but the last few weeks have seen traffic trickle off in a welcoming way. At night, in the summer, I can watch the bats and nightjars hunt the sky in the floodlights. At all hours, including the middle of the night, it’s common to hear the freight trains pulling around the big bend in the rail down in the hollow below, a prolonged industrial scream ringing around the neighborhood from the valley. Recently, pigeons have started coming over to the window, peering in and giving my cat some new wildlife to stalk.” @mulchthief #LookingOutPGH ‘L👀king Out’ features works by Pittsburgh artists created through their respective windows while sheltering in place. This on-going series envisions a new commons making our mutual experience of sheltering-in-place one less of isolation and more of collectivity and solidarity. This series is a Miller ICA project with prompt by @_lex_oung. -looking out from our windows and for each other #LookingOut #Pittsburgh #MillerICACMU #ContemporaryArt #StayHomeStaySafe #ShaunSlifer #DIYDPW #justseeds @carnegiemellon @nextpittsburgh @pghcitypaper @pittsburghmagazine

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“I have been obsessed with the coronavirus outbreak. Some of the obsession is because of my age. I am 76 and I will be 77 in October. People in my age group have extraordinarily little chance of survival even without having been subjected to breathing the polluted Mon Valley air their whole life. I am preparing for my death. Making out a will, living will, naming an executor, etc., all that crap even shipping all my material to be archived at the University of Wisconsin in Madison. So, death will not totally catch me off guard, but I have at least two new films I want to finish. The thought of dying before finishing another Braddock film and a film about my family is frightening. Why, I am not sure. The films could be dreadful, and nobody would watch them but that does not matter. I need to finish them. Another reason was the devastating outbreak in Italy where I have a lot of family and friends. Would I ever get to see them again? Of course, more selfishly would I be able to get back and get more material on my mother’s and father’s village. This piece was shot over a two-day period and it is structured with my COVID 19 obsession. The shots in seconds are 3,15,22,9,4 and 19 repeated seven times. The two days are blended, like my life. The audio is constructed, sometimes the sounds are synched, sometimes not, also like my life is now. I want to thank Alex Young and the Miller ICA team for asking me to participate in this project. It has given me an opportunity to focus and really appreciate the beauty of a Baltimore oriole.” #LookingOutPGH ‘L👀king Out’ features works by Pittsburgh artists created through their respective windows while sheltering in place. This on-going series envisions a new commons making our mutual experience of sheltering-in-place one less of isolation and more of collectivity and solidarity. This series is a @millericacmu project with prompt by @_lex_oung. -looking out from our windows and for each other #LookingOut #Pittsburgh #MillerICACMU #ContemporaryArt #StayHomeStaySafe #TonyBuba #BraddockFilms @carnegiemellon @nextpittsburgh @pghcitypaper @pittsburghmagazine

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