Friday, August 30, 2013

Apparitions in Moriarty

In October, EbM has the pleasure of working with artist Travis Somerville from Oakland, California, to install his new work, Rainbow Warriors.

Somerville's project will a permanent installation on our site in Moriarty, New Mexico, that will use light and the surrounding atmosphere to create high desert apparitions at night.  The self-contained solar powered project will project a rainbow light upward from the earth, appearing and disappearing as dust, rain, snow and other particulate matter flow through the air.  While not only responding to the physical environment, the installation makes reference to a Native American legend of the Warriors of the Rainbow that Somerville states, "are promised to restore purity to the Earth and justice to Mankind, ending the current state of environmental destruction."



In the video above, Somerville talks about his practice and the project he will be creating with the assistance of lighting engineer, Dan Dodt.  The video is part of Somerville's Kickstarter campaign to raise the needed funds to complete the project.  Please consider donating to make this project happen.  The full Rainbow Warriors kickstarter page can be found here:
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/987729825/rainbow-warriors-legend-led-light-installation-new

Thursday, August 29, 2013

Weekly Meetings

Since the fall installs are coming up quick, we've started up our weekly meetings via video conference, bringing together members that are spread out across the U.S.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

A New Horizon in Rio del Oro

This fall we have the pleasure of working with Fort Bragg, California, artist Scott Oliver in Rio del Oro.  The site is part of the largely undeveloped Rio Communities south east of Los Lunas, New Mexico. 

A New Horizon will consist of 7 large letters cast from local aggregate materials.  As Oliver states, it "... is a spot to rest and a vantage point from which to take in the surroundings even as it bifurcates one’s attention between near and far. Made out of the ground on which it rests, A New Horizon is literally part of the landscape—a patch of untamed desert given coherent (if enigmatic) form." 

With A New Horizon, Oliver is also referencing a division which has defined the empty, but parceled out acreage.  The Rio Communites were part of a dubious real estate venture in the 1960's where the area was divided up and sold employing the romance and lure of the American West.  The corporation, also named Horizon, created subdivisions that were and are all but impossible to build.  More information about the site and the Horizon will be provided in a later post.


Oliver's work will incorporate the physical and historical aspects of the site and as he states it is "...meant to be a pause—an interstice in the landscape and in time. It begs the question: what’s
next? But is unconcerned with the answer. The space it defines is the space between."

An event is planned on-site at the completion of the installation on October 19.  The event titled Desert Dumbballs & Llano Stories.  Oliver describes the event as "a hybrid of contemporary
Chautauqua and sculptural performance."  The event will include performances and presentations that exploring the project site and its surroundings.

Oliver has the honor of being listed as a part of the High Desert Test Sites 2013.  The program is a series of desert installations, events and performances that stretch from the Mojave Desert to Albuquerque from October 12 - 19.

Fall 2013 Installations



Our hibernation has ended and we're in full swing planning mode for two incredible installations taking place near Albuquerque this fall.  The two sites, Moriarty and Rio del Oro (formerly known as Los Lunas), will have new permanent works created by artists Travis Somerville and Scott Oliver respectively.  These sites were the home of last year's temporary projects that coincided with ISEA2012.

We're at day 45 before the week long installations start in the New Mexico desert. We'll be updating with details about the projects on their path to completion.

Please also check the EbM Facebook page which already has a ton of info about the fall!

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

In the news!

EbM is in the news!


DSC07570

The Mountain View Telegraph, specifically.
And the article was run in September, so more accurately, was in the news...

Nonetheless!
The Mountain View Telegraph is "a weekly newspaper serving communities in the East Mountain, Moriarty and the Estancia Valley." Lee Ross wrote this delightful article about our installation with Jessica Segall:

Call it an event, or an amateur film screening or performance art. Whatever it was, something decidedly strange happened in an empty field east of Moriarty on Sunday night.
A few years ago, a group of artists bought a piece of land north of Interstate 40. The land is just across the freeway from a topless bar for truckers and home to plenty of cattle, but there's not much else out there.
The artists collaborative, which is called Earthbound Moon, then set up a snack shop and a movie screen and showed a video of a woman wearing what appears to be a 17th century dress in the Arctic. The film was screened on a piece of frozen copper, according to Amy Sampson, one of Earthbound Moon's artists.
The film was made by artist and sculptor Jessica Segall.

Read More!