PULLMAN, Wash. Eleven regional artists and architects will converge at downtown Pullman’s Cougarland Motel March 2 for a site-specific “happening”, titled “In(n) and Out of Nowhere.” The art event will be open to the public between 7 p.m. and 10 p.m.
Each artist has been invited to transform and re-contextualize a motel room at Cougarland, constructing an installation that explores themes of travel, transience, isolation, desire and the boundary between public and private space.
The objective of the project is to take art out of the traditional venue of the gallery and museum, and present an art audience with new ways to consider commonplace objects, materials and spaces. Curated by Samantha DiRosa, assistant professor of Digital Media at Washington State University, “”In(n) and Out of Nowhere promises to be one of the most intriguing art events presented in the Palouse.
The artists involved, who currently reside in
Each artist is offered one room to work with. Projects will be installed between check-in time and 6:30 p.m. on March 2, and rooms will be returned to their original state by check-out time the following day. The artists are not permitted to remove any contents from the room.
Those who come to “In(n) and Out of Nowhere” will encounter a variety of media, including sculpture, sound art, video and performance. In a project titled “Inn House,” for example,
This motel project originated with art professor Leon Johnson and other art faculty at the
“Events such as this that exist outside of traditional exhibition spaces, that rely upon the site to create meaning, and that depend upon audience interaction to function, are becoming increasingly prevalent in contemporary art,” DiRosa said.
“’In(n) and Out of Nowhere’ is a unique project for the
Cougarland Motel is located on
Funding for this exhibition is provided by the Visual Performing and Literary Arts Committee and The Forst Endowed Fine Arts Visiting Artist Program.
For more information please contact DiRosa at (509) 335-3180 or ssgoetz@wsu.edu.