The key objective of the Global Art Lab program is to develop, encourage, and demonstrate innovative new ways of understanding complex social dynamics and addressing common social challenges through the arts. The program facilitates the exchange of innovative art practices between artists and arts organizations in Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan) and the U.S. and helps distribute this information to larger audiences through educational programs, public presentations, and an actively maintained website.

By creating new methods for addressing social concerns and building an international network of artists and arts organizations, Global Art Lab aims to expand contemporary art discourse to individuals who may have had no previous relationship to contemporary art. The program supports artists from Central Asia and the US in cultivating dialogue within and between their rich creative communities.

Funding for the Global Art Lab has been provided by the Christensen Foundation, the Kettering Family Foundation and the Trust for Mutual Understanding.

11/9/11

Cutting Strips

Mark's presentation of his work got everyone inspired and excited about making sculptures, but the basics had to be taught first - and cutting strips of tape was just the beginning. As you can imagine many shortcuts and hurry-let's-finish-quicker methods have been attempted during these workshops but Mark showed the best and most efficient way to cut tape. Before anyone can start working on a sculpture, they had to pass the tape-cutting test. Pull, stick, cut, stick, cut, stick, cut - pull, stick,cut,stick,cut, stick, cut. This had to be repeated hundreds of times in order to get enough tape for 1 sculpture.






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