Dan Peterman: Museum of Contemporary Art.Dan Peterman Pe´ter`man n. 1. A fisherman; - so called after the apostle Peter. was engaged in the practice of "adaptive reuse" long before the term came into vogue. Distinct from recycling, reprocessing Reprocessing may refer to:
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] This midsize retrospective suggested that Peterman is more rust-colored than green. In his workshop in an economically disadvantaged neighborhood on the South Side of Chicago he has immersed himself in the decaying residue of the late industrial revolution, in the dysfunctional junk that litters the urban landscape--signs of systems made redundant and pathetic in their abandonment. In Excerpts from the Universal Lab (good humor), 2004, the artist assembles a kunstkammer of scientific rubbish, a collection of thousands of decades-old out-moded materials from the University of Chicago labs. On a large constructed flatbed he has placed the painted cab of a Good Humor truck, surrounding it with an inventoried array of this exhausted scientific flotsam A name for the goods that float upon the sea when cast overboard for the safety of the ship or when a ship is sunk. Distinguished from jetsam (goods deliberately thrown over to lighten ship) and ligan (goods cast into the sea attached to a buoy). , organizing it by size, shape, material, and function. Pursuing adaptive reuse only insofar in·so·far adv. To such an extent. Adv. 1. insofar - to the degree or extent that; "insofar as it can be ascertained, the horse lung is comparable to that of man"; "so far as it is reasonably practical he should practice as he transforms this glut into art, he investigates the ephemeral nature of knowledge and the almost immediate redundancy of most human activity. Ville Deponie, 2002, is a small hut made from recycled sneaker material attached to plywood. The springy spring·y adj. spring·i·er, spring·i·est 1. Marked by resilience; elastic. 2. Abounding in freshwater springs. spring dot-matrix sneaker residue ranging from blue to yellow to black to orange and pink makes the hut a pointillist poin·til·lism n. A postimpressionist school of painting exemplified by Georges Seurat and his followers in late 19th-century France, characterized by the application of paint in small dots and brush strokes. composition, and comfortable to sit inside or walk on, too. This move toward putting the sneaker craze of recent decades to some real use is the kind of thinking that Peterman engages. It is less an effort to light a symbolic candle in the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?" midmost of late capitalist waste than a reconsideration of the possible applications of that waste. The gray and taupe taupe n. A brownish gray. [French, from Old French, mole, from Latin talpa.] taupe adj. Noun 1. benches and planks he began constructing from postconsumer post·con·sum·er adj. Of or relating to products that have been used and recycled by consumers: paper made from postconsumer waste. plastic in 1997 are directed toward providing park recreation and communal dance floors, putting waste to work in the service of urban citizenry. In Standard Kiosk (Chicago), 2004, Peterman takes the massive trapezoidal metal dumpsters now an omnipresent part of the urban environment, cuts them in half, and pieces them together vertically to form kiosks that serve a variety of uses. Two are currently installed in Chicago's Humboldt Park to disseminate health and cultural information; a third in front of the Museum of Contemporary Art serves as a bicycle station. That a trash receptacle could be made capable of regeneration is Peterman's way of suggesting a kind of adaptive problem-solving that could be more and more a part of our collective future. |
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