- Date & Time
Monday, April 14, 2025 9:00am to 5:00pm
- Cost
- Free
- Description
On Monday, April 14, from 9AM to 5PM Oliver Herring and UF Sculpture will stage a TASK event in the UF Sculpture area (Fine Arts Building C Room B1). We want to make this a good-sized party with lots of TASK activity. You are invited to please tell your students or students please tell your friends and have them drop by and join the sculpture classes by participating in the event. It is easy to participate, and you need not be an artist to join in.
Here is an article about last semester's TASK event at 4MOST: https://www.wuft.org/entertainment/2024-12-04/an-exploration-of-creativity-task-art-project-visits-gainesville
More info on TASK events: https://oliverherringtask.wordpress.com/ and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TlEYbZhuco8
TASK is a piece of art but also a simple structure that can be applied to many situations. One version of TASK can be a planned, more formal set-up with an application process and a pre-determined number of selected participants (TASK Events). Another version of TASK has a more open structure with few limitations of size or divisions between viewers and participants (TASK Parties). A third is tailored for use in classrooms (TASK Workshops).
All TASKs rely on the same basic infrastructure: a designated area, a variety of materials, and the participation of people who agree to follow two simple instructions. Those instructions are to write down a task on a piece of paper and add it to a designated “TASK pool,” then to pull a task from that pool and interpret it any which way he or she wants, using whatever or whoever is around. When a task is completed, a participant writes a new task, pulls a new task, and so on.
TASK’s open-ended, participatory structure creates almost unlimited opportunities for a group of people to interact with one another and their environment. TASK's flow and momentum depends on the tasks written and interpreted by its participants. In theory anything becomes possible.
Oliver Herring is a visual artist known internationally for his use of experimental techniques as a means to better understand human nature, individual behavior, and interpersonal dynamics. His work has taken on a variety of forms, but since 2000 has focused primarily on brief yet intensive collaborative encounters with volunteer participants. Herring directs and documents these open-ended performances, usually involving a series of improvised actions, which take place in different environments – public and private, cultural and educational – and feature groups of people interacting with each another. The resulting works not only record these impromptu activities, but also reveal the poignancy implicit in humanity when strangers expose their vulnerabilities and embrace trust.
His first solo exhibition in 1993 at the New Museum in New York featured hand-knit Mylar and tape sculptures inspired by the death of playwright and drag performer Ethyl Eichelberger, work which he continued for a decade. Herring’s creative practice later evolved to include videos, performances, drawings, three-dimensional photographic sculptures, and TASK, a simple performance structure that manifests itself as an ongoing series of parties and workshops.
Over the last nineteen years TASK has become established as an educational tool in schools at all grade levels, as an access point to contemporary art, and a social icebreaker. Performed in hundreds of classrooms all over the world, TASK has also taken place in partnership with large cultural and educational institutions and organizations including the National Art Educators Association; Turnaround Arts, (an initiative of the President’s Committee for the Arts and the Humanities); the school district of Melbourne, Australia; and Art21. A book on TASK was published in 2009 by Illinois State University.
Herring’s work is in the collections of many major institutions, and has been exhibited widely nationally and internationally, including the Museum of Modern Art, NY; the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum of Art, NY; the Whitney Museum of Art, NY; Performa 09, NY; the Hirschhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC; the Baltimore Museum of Art, MD; The Frye Art Museum, Seattle, WA; the Blanton Art Museum, Austin, TX; and the Denver Art Museum, CO. Elsewhere, he has exhibited at the Camden Art Center, London; Victoria and Albert Museum, London; Kyoto Art Center, Kyoto; He Xiangning Art Museum, Shenzhen; A4 Art Museum, Chengdu; McAM, Shanghai; OCAT-Xian, Xian; Xth Lyon Biennale, Lyon; Performa 09, NY; Configura II, Erfurt; 2010 Aichi Triennale, Nagoya.
Me Us Them, a fifteen-year survey of Herring's work, was organized in 2009 at the Tang Museum, Saratoga Springs, NY. Herring was featured on Season 3 of PBS’s program Art21, Art in the 21st Century. - Links
- VenueFine Arts Building C (FAC)
- Room #
- B-001 (Sculpture Area)
- Address
-
1370 INNER RD GAINESVILLE
FL 32611 - Phone
- 352-392-0201
- Website
- Fine Arts Building C (FAC) Website
Press Release : Mar 25, 2025
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