Occupy Potato Official Event–Open Feast: Potato Potluck

June 20th, 2012

On June 18, 2012 I had the privilege of helping hosting a Potato Potluck at the request of Open Feast, a project by the itinerant artist couple Irina Zadov and Abraham Epton.  At the time, I was artist-in-residence with fellow artist and colleague Ryan Seslow at the Second Avenue Firehouse Gallery in Bayshore, where we held the official Occupy Potato event.  10 personalities came together that evening to share stories, gratitude and a variety of potato dishes.  I planted a potato plant in the back courtyard of the gallery to commemorate the event and played Gamemaster for a homemade Dadaesque (Tata) game–A Potato, B Potato, C Potato

This was the final Open Feast event in the United States before Irina and Abraham traveled on to Belarus and later Europe.  You can learn more about their Open Feast project by visiting their website and read their journal entry for the event The Noble Potato Bids Us Farewell.  There are also pictures from the Potato Feast on Facebook.

THE POTATO REVOLUTION: Cult of Potato 2011

August 30th, 2011

Jeffrey Allen Price and THINK POTATO

presents

THE POTATO REVOLUTION:

Cult of Potato 2011

An Exhibition of Contemporary Potato Art

WAH Center (Williamsburg Art and Historical Center)

October 7 – November 13, 2011

In the midst of the global awakening, with widespread outbreaks of revolution and revolts, while uprisings and protests around the world are coordinated through social networks and mediated through other forms of electronic media, a natural and organic transformation is also growing–a grassroots artistic movement is blossoming–A Potato Revolution!

The Potato Revolution takes its inspiration from the most nutritious and abundant vegetable on planet earth – Solanum tuberosum.  The potato’s value as a source of food is well known and appreciated, but the potato has also been a significant symbol and subject of art as far back as its discovery in the Andes Mountains at least 10,000 years ago. The Cult of PotatoThe Potato Revolution reveals that the potato is as rich in content as it is in vitamins and minerals. artists following in this tradition are as varied and diverse as the 5,000 species of potatoes existing on planet earth.

The storied and complicated history of the potato is chronicled by Australian-based Kitty Owens in her series “Postcards from the Potato” tracing the potato’s journey from Peru to Europe and back to the New World.  Modern master, Italo Scanga and his altar-like “Potato Famine” sculptures give a powerful reminder of one of the most traumatic events in human history, The Late Blight that caused the destruction of Ireland’s single source of sustenance.  Scanga’s primal offerings include a large wooden spike impaled all-over with real potatoes.

Viviane Le Courtois room-sized video installation ”Générations d’épluchures (Generations of Peelings),” remembers and re-enacts her French family’s tradition of peeling potatoes by hand. Her collected mound of dried potato peels are the sculptural residue of her communal Potato Potluck dinners organized at her home in Denver, CO. connecting the potato with the idea of community, self-reliance and natural living.

Several of the artists in the exhibition grew up in geographic locations known for their reliance on the potato for survival.  Ontario-based Photographer Andrzej Maciejewski grew up in potato-dependent Poland, and his potato still-life “Garden of Eden” recasts the potato as the biblical forbidden fruit-the apple of the earth.  His “V.I.P. series (Very Important potatoes)” features unique portraits of distinguishing looking potatoes skewered on forks. Cologne, Germany-based artist Adrián Villa Dávila grew up in Columbia where the potato is revered like a deity.  Her potato work creates a poetic hypothetical friendship between two master potato artists of the past, her fellow South American, Victor Grippo and the Dutchman Vincent van Gogh.

Two Cult of Potato artists are also based out of the potato-prevalent country of Holland.  Michiel Brink, the world’s foremost Potato Musician and a founding member of the Cult of Potato, has been writing songs about potatoes for over a generation.  His band De Aardappeleters (The Potato Eaters, named after the famous painting by Vincent van Gogh), presents a new CD of songs with accompanying drawings.  Dina Belga, is a painter known for her love of rendering beautiful bulbous potatoes in unusual states of transformation, growth and flowering.

Adam Taye’s upbringing as a Mormon in Idaho led to a unique understanding of the spiritual connection between potatoes and basketball, as demonstrated in his didactic sculpture, “Esto Perpetua/ I Will Fight No More Forever”.  His experiences as a young potato farm hand in the land of potatoes-a-plenty are also humorously referenced in his “Erased New Yorker Cartoons”.

Master printer Jon Cone has included “the world’s largest Potato print, a collaboration with painter Archie Rand and an experiment in sleep deprivation working processes.  The potato as artistic medium takes its ultimate form in the work of Beirut-based artist Ginou Choueiri, whose life-like “potato portraits” perfectly synthesize potatoes with humans using portraits of actual people printed onto the skins of real spuds.

French artist Jean-Louis Gonterre known for his interest in photographing potatoes, presents a new series of pictures placing giant potatoes in configurations related to acts of tension and heat. Brooklyn-based Anna Alicja Feitzinger‘s photographic installation examines the potato through the lens of biology. Magnifying the potato plant through a microscope and photographing its microcosmic reality, she re-imagines the potato as the origin of the universe.

The potato’s prodigious comedic possibilities have been masterfully demonstrated by performance artist and author Paul McMahon, whose interest in potato puns led to him publishing an entire book of “Potato Jokes”.  His potato stand-up act immortalized on the Soupy Sales show and other related ephemera from McMahon’s potato days are on view. Another humorist and long-time potato artist, printmaker and draughtsman, Chad Woody presents new potato prints and charmingly detailed scenes from his own forthcoming book, “The Life and Death of a Potato”.

Other humorous works in the show include, Sherry Owens’ cast bronze potatoes frying together in a pan, “Hot For Each Other,” Beth Giacummo’s fast-food cartoon sculptures, “Fry Babies,” Annalisa Nutt’s sexy “Potato Pillow Talk” photographs, and Allan Innman’s photo-realistic rendering of the most ubiquitous face of potato pop culture, “Mr. Potato Head.”

The spirit of the Potato Revolution is encapsulated by the work of London-based potato artist Lucy Kippin, whose exciting installation “Dig for Victory” and “We the Made Lucky Few” casts potatoes in wax and also as supporting characters in a call to action and show of unity.

Potato Revolution organizer, THINK POTATO Founder, co-founder of Cult of Potato, and Potatoist Jeffrey Allen Price, presents “Potato Shrine” an interactive installation of potato-themed art and artifacts from 15-years of making, collecting and researching Potato Art. Also, on view his “Potato Revolution Café,” downstairs in the WAH Center’s main entrance. J.A.P. describes the installation as a “Potato Speak-Easy” and “Temporary Headquarters of The Potato Revolution.” Armed with potato-themed food, drinks, art and memorabilia “The Potato Revolution Café” will be open for Special Event Days between October 7 and December 18, 2011.  A special musical performance by POTATOTRON on Friday, November 4 at 8:30pm.

“The Potato Revolution” is on view October 7 thru November 13, 2011 at the WAH Center in Brooklyn, NY. For more information, www.wahcenter.net or potatorevolution@gmail.com

Artist-in-Residence, J.A.P. Presents The THINK POTATO Institute

September 5th, 2010

Impresario: Jeffrey Allen Price wearing Spiritus Solanum Tuberosum MASQ

The next public event organized by  J.A.P.  will be at the East Ends Arts Council in Riverhead, NY  October 9th and 10th, 2010 from 10am-4pm and October 16 from 2-4pm.  Potato Days at The THINK POTATO Institute will coincide with the Annual Harvest Festival on Main St. The THINK POTATO Institute is an installation of J.A.P.’s potato-themed art, objects, and ephemera collected over the last 15 years.

There will be an Artist Talk on Saturday, October 16 from 2-4pm.

Coinciding with this production is “Resident Potato” a potato-themed installation in the East End Arts Council Carriage House apartment for Artists-in-Residence.  There will also be a special musical performance by J.A.P. on November 16  at 7:30pm, “Spuds Unwrapped” as part of the EEAC Composer Forum Series

This event is sponsored in part by a grant from the New York Foundation for the Arts.