February 23 - April 5, 2020
A collaboration with artist Andy Coolquitt and writer and editor Alix Browne. The project opens on Sunday, February 23rd with a public reception from 3 to 6PM.
The opening reception will take the form of a performance paying tribute to the house; a birthday party for the house, or to be more specific, for the remodel of the house. In 1981-82, Laurence Miller hired Renfro and Steinbomer architects to design the remodel/additions to the house. Let’s celebrate its 38th birthday! Come dressed as your favorite po-mo architect! Bring a period-inspired potluck dish! King Ranch Chicken, anyone? Toasts will commence! Toasts to Laurence! Toasts to Judy! Toasts to the architects! Toasts to 1982! To the history of Post-Modernism! A most special gift will be offered with docent-led tours of small groups donning foot-booties to view the second-floor rooms, providing the community a rare view of Laurence’s amazing collection of books, the Lawrence Wiener posters, and the yellow-tiled guest bathroom. Our hope is that dear viewer will walk away with a smile upon their face, a belly full of food and drink, and a more nuanced awareness of the site as a complex and contradictory residence offering communal comfort, intimate mystery, safe harbor…the civilized home.
Research as Design
The house itself is the subject of Coolquitt’s inquiry. The work is about the house…how a house works. Its primary audience is the community of art lovers who frequent Laurence’s house for these occasions. They, as seen through Coolquitt’s own experience, typically do not pay close attention to the architecture. They are focused on the art works which are situated within the three front rooms; the foyer, living room and dining room. The other rooms and passages are “erased” by white screens pulled down over closed double doors. Coolquitt had been to several openings and hadn’t even noticed that Maggie’s office was a room. Laurence has orchestrated these three rooms, and their relationship to the rest of the house, as somewhat of a blank-slate container for the artists’ projects. His subtle exposure of the rest of the house is revealed in a carefully composed pattern of denial and permission. Coolquitt’s gift is to offer the viewer a rare opportunity to experience the house as the autotopography of daily life.* To amplify the structure as sense of place, in its specifics; its tools for the production of food, of heat, of shelter and comfort.
The Center for the Identification of Architectural Micro-Aggressions, Molestations, and Assailments
The C.I.A.MAMA project is a design consultancy focused on the “darling sins” of domestic homeownership. Coolquitt has been developing this idea for many years and will push forward with a specific business plan website, power-point presentation, and video. The identification process is assisted by an uncanny sensitivity to problematic domestic situations through a number of proprietary techniques, key among them is a process he calls the “insecurity of dislocation”. Over the past 30 years of his professional life, he has been invited to hundreds of residencies, and has lived, for short periods of time, in many different types of domestic structures…from humble, hand-made sheds to extraordinary châteaux. Typically, during the first few days of dislocation, in this state of heightened awareness, he is ultra-sensitive to his physical surroundings. He is able to identify specific aberrations, both of the spatial and chattel categories. The text will be further developed and incorporated into a graphic document designed both as a project catalogue, and power-point presentation. There will also be a video element in the form of a karaoke about the lighting scheme titled “The cans and the tracks and the dimmers and the switches.”
In a 1995 essay, art historian Jennifer A. González coined the term “autotopography”* to articulate the ways in which aspects of biography can be revealed in the creation of one’s environment. See: https://www.jmkac.org/exhibition/2019/mise-en-scene/autotopographers.html
Artist talk: February 23, 2020 | 3–6 pm
502 West 33rd Street
Austin, 78705 TX
(512) 453-3199
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