4 November, 2009

wbsc:

Crystal Liepa took these wonderful photos at our Halloween rent party. In the mix are Colin & Miranda experimenting with ectoplasm. What fun!

GPOYW // Ectoplasm Out of My Ear Edition

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29 October, 2009
Come ghost hunting at the West Bank Social Center!
This month’s rent party just happens to fall on All Hallows’ Eve, so we’re exploring the space and exposing its supernatural elements. We’ll also be presenting results from a smaller, all-night paranormal inquiry that took place last Saturday.
You can participate by swapping real-life ghost stories, practicing divination techniques, making ectoplasm, and snapping spirit photos with photographer Crystal Liepa.
And because hunting ghosts is hard work, there will also be music. Tunes from DJ Jonathan Ackerman and ritualistic dancing to commence at 11:30pm.
That’s next Saturday, October 31st, 9pm-2am at the WBSC. There will be a $5 cover at the door, costumes are not required.
RSVP to the Facebook event!
(photo: “A Seance” by spirit photographer William Hope)

Come ghost hunting at the West Bank Social Center!

This month’s rent party just happens to fall on All Hallows’ Eve, so we’re exploring the space and exposing its supernatural elements. We’ll also be presenting results from a smaller, all-night paranormal inquiry that took place last Saturday.

You can participate by swapping real-life ghost stories, practicing divination techniques, making ectoplasm, and snapping spirit photos with photographer Crystal Liepa.

And because hunting ghosts is hard work, there will also be music. Tunes from DJ Jonathan Ackerman and ritualistic dancing to commence at 11:30pm.

That’s next Saturday, October 31st, 9pm-2am at the WBSC. There will be a $5 cover at the door, costumes are not required.

RSVP to the Facebook event!

(photo: “A Seance” by spirit photographer William Hope)

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27 October, 2009

Some Thoughts on Eating Together

wbsc:

Last night we welcomed a small group of new and old friends to West Bank Social Center for dinner. The menu was simple: we ate soup that had been made the day before by five of our friends, and leftover focaccia that Miranda had brought from work. The soup-makers had designed an activity to place us at the table next to people we didn’t know, and as you might expect, the conversations meandered.

I was seated across from a woman named Amanda who works for KFAI and produces a podcast about local food issues. By the end of our conversation we were swapping thoughts about the future of agriculture, and the world-changing possibilities of cookbooks. Next to me were two professors from the University who teach a course about art spaces and community engagement. We talked about food and politics, food and art, about the simple pleasures of cooking together, and strange fruits from faraway places.

At one point, I was asked why we decided to do this project, to have this soup dinner in this space we’d created?

I didn’t have a definitive answer, in part because I have had no time to think of one. I realized as I meandered my way through the idea that we’d never really thought about soup as a project so much as an anti-project, that one day each month when we would simply share the company of interesting people.

“Because we’re hungry.” I told her. “And because we like to spend time with other people.”

In some ways, West Bank Social Center is the same story. We never really talk about it as a project so much as a space for things to happen. Since we began last summer it’s been a laboratory and a retreat, a noisy mess and a conversation. We struggle to pay the rent, we swap a lot of big and small ideas, but at the end of the day, it’s really about being hungry and being together.

- Shanai

WBSC is taking November off to reflect, rest, and re-energize.* I can’t think of a better way to kick that off then Shanai’s thoughts on dinner last night. Also, a big thank you to Sara, Chris, Paul, Stephanie, and Nate for making soup. It warmed me up and made me feel good.

So many exciting things are happening.

* We still have a few events on the books, most notably Mr. Sturdevant’s 30th Birthday Party on the 7th!
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20 October, 2009

Last week’s Wednesday Night Social with MAW at WBSC with Marionettes and Games. See it bigger here.

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20 October, 2009
wbsc:


We at WBSC like big thinkers— people whose visions resist tidy categories and easy summations. But damn if it isn’t hard to do these people justice in a quick event blurb.
I’m feeling this way about Joni Tevis, who’s stopping by WBSC this Thursday, October 22 at 7pm to share some of her work. Tevis crafts lovely, thoughtful essays that I also want to call travelogues, and prose poems, and memoirs, and natural histories. Her subject matter is similarly wide-ranging, though they all seem to be investigating some of the same big questions about place and culture and memory.
She’ll read pieces from her 2007 book, The Wet Collection (including a fascinating reflection on a stint spent selling funeral services in Texas), an essay on visiting a demolition derby with her mother, and excerpts from an upcoming book about ghost towns and atomic frontiers.
Check out this recent Orion article to get a feel for her work. Hope to see you Thursday!
Very much! —Miranda




I’m loving all the literary stuff Miranda is bringing into the WBSC.

wbsc:

We at WBSC like big thinkers— people whose visions resist tidy categories and easy summations. But damn if it isn’t hard to do these people justice in a quick event blurb.

I’m feeling this way about Joni Tevis, who’s stopping by WBSC this Thursday, October 22 at 7pm to share some of her work. Tevis crafts lovely, thoughtful essays that I also want to call travelogues, and prose poems, and memoirs, and natural histories. Her subject matter is similarly wide-ranging, though they all seem to be investigating some of the same big questions about place and culture and memory.

She’ll read pieces from her 2007 book, The Wet Collection (including a fascinating reflection on a stint spent selling funeral services in Texas), an essay on visiting a demolition derby with her mother, and excerpts from an upcoming book about ghost towns and atomic frontiers.

Check out this recent Orion article to get a feel for her work. Hope to see you Thursday!

Very much! —Miranda

I’m loving all the literary stuff Miranda is bringing into the WBSC.

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16 October, 2009
Friends in the U of M MFA program are hosting an installment of San Francisco artist Oliver Herring’s TASK Party project.
TASK Partygoers are asked to design one task and complete one task over the course of the night. And that’s as structured as it gets. The night unfolds according to the creativity and whims of the people who show up.
Past TASK parties have asked participants to build cardboard race cars, confess secrets to one another, and form impromptu bands. There are almost 70 people signed up to participate. I can’t wait to see how this unfolds!wbsc:

TASK PARTY! It’s a party. Where you do tasks. But not just any tasks, eachother’s tasks. There are two basic rules for participants:1) Write down a task on a piece of paper and add it to a designated “TASK pool.”2) Pull a task from that pool and interpret it any which way you want, using whatever materials are available. When a task is completed, a write a new task, pull a new task, and so on.West Bank Task Party
Saturday, October 17th
8pm to MidnightRSVP on Facebookwebsite: www.westbanktaskparty.wordpress.comemail: westbanktaskparty [at] gmail [dot] com
We couldn’t be more excited about this! —Colin

Friends in the U of M MFA program are hosting an installment of San Francisco artist Oliver Herring’s TASK Party project.

TASK Partygoers are asked to design one task and complete one task over the course of the night. And that’s as structured as it gets. The night unfolds according to the creativity and whims of the people who show up.

Past TASK parties have asked participants to build cardboard race cars, confess secrets to one another, and form impromptu bands. There are almost 70 people signed up to participate. I can’t wait to see how this unfolds!

wbsc:

TASK PARTY! It’s a party. Where you do tasks. But not just any tasks, eachother’s tasks. There are two basic rules for participants:

1) Write down a task on a piece of paper and add it to a designated “TASK pool.”
2) Pull a task from that pool and interpret it any which way you want, using whatever materials are available. When a task is completed, a write a new task, pull a new task, and so on.

West Bank Task Party
Saturday, October 17th
8pm to Midnight
RSVP on Facebook
website: www.westbanktaskparty.wordpress.com
email: westbanktaskparty [at] gmail [dot] com

We couldn’t be more excited about this! —Colin

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14 October, 2009

WBSC + MAW + Wednesday nights + You = ?

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8 October, 2009

Last night at WBSC’s Wednesday Night Social.

This is what my Wednesday nights look like and I love it. Photos by Corbin.

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30 August, 2009
wbsc:


Those of you who came out for our rent party Friday witnessed a milestone: the opening of the WBSC Transcription Desk. Partygoers dictated letters to Social Center secretaries, who typed, shaped phrases, and ensured the dispatches reached their intended parties.

Who got letters? Moms, friends, sworn enemies, the secretly admired… and, if you act quickly, you. We’ve got one mystery letter left, addressed to (Your Name Here).

Should it be yours? We’ll send it to the first person who emails westbanksocialcenter@gmail.com with their mailing address.




Christina Hendricks? Pshaw, we’ve got Andy Dayton!

wbsc:

Those of you who came out for our rent party Friday witnessed a milestone: the opening of the WBSC Transcription Desk. Partygoers dictated letters to Social Center secretaries, who typed, shaped phrases, and ensured the dispatches reached their intended parties.

Who got letters? Moms, friends, sworn enemies, the secretly admired… and, if you act quickly, you. We’ve got one mystery letter left, addressed to (Your Name Here).

Should it be yours? We’ll send it to the first person who emails westbanksocialcenter@gmail.com with their mailing address.

Christina Hendricks? Pshaw, we’ve got Andy Dayton!

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26 August, 2009

You have an idea, we have a space.

West Bank Social Center is now taking proposals. Let us know what you have in mind and how we can help you realize it. You’ll also find a link to the proposal form on our website. It’s intentionally open-ended.

We are looking forward to learning more about your ideas! - WBSC Staff

(via wbsc)

Things we are interested in: everything.

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12 August, 2009
GPOYW - Surprise 3 page spread in the newspaper edition.

Some nice ink for Solutions, Give & Take (watch that spot!) and the WBSC in last week’s Southwest Journal. That’s Troy on the left.

GPOYW - Surprise 3 page spread in the newspaper edition.

Some nice ink for Solutions, Give & Take (watch that spot!) and the WBSC in last week’s Southwest Journal. That’s Troy on the left.

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5 August, 2009

The team of rivals, in action.

southtwelfth:

My pal Colin Kloecker and I are, in the parlance of the post-2008 election cycle, a team of rivals. A two-man team of rivals.

To that end, we’re both involved with dueling events tonight. Through the auspices of the West Bank Social Center, Colin is, with his associate Troy Gallas, sponsoring a kick-off event for PARK(ing) Day, which you can read a lot more about here. That’s from 5-7pm tonight.

Across the river in the Common Room at 7pm, we’ll be having a video and film screening. I have invited Minneapolis filmmakers Pete McLarnan and Brennan Vance to curate a showcase of new work in this area. All of the pieces shown this evening are from artists who have recently applied for the State Arts Board and Jerome Foundation film and video grants.

As Pete says: “The evening will serve as a gesture of community and mutual support in what is a generally isolated and anonymous group of artists. See the work through the eyes of a grant committee member, reflect on how artists choose to present themselves and their work, and make your own judgements.” And just like a grant committee member, you’ll see these films while seated in a tasteful piece of vintage office furniture.

If you plan well, you can attend both! It’s a quick bike ride across the Stone Arch Bridge from the WBSC to the Common Room.

May the best men win. Which is to say, both of us.

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4 August, 2009
(via mediation)

Better left unexplained.

(via mediation)

Better left unexplained.

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29 July, 2009
GPOYW - The “wearing a homemade lavender-filled bow-tie while bartending a 100-Course Meal with Shanai” edition.

Photo by Becca Dilley.

GPOYW - The “wearing a homemade lavender-filled bow-tie while bartending a 100-Course Meal with Shanai” edition.

Photo by Becca Dilley.

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