View allAll Photos Tagged Insignificant

The hard to find Boronia polygalifolia

Hobcarton Crag is a relatively insignificant high point along the ridge from Grisedale Pike to Hopegill Head. This is the view back towards Grisedale Pike from whence I had just come. Beyond that to the right is Skiddaw & Blencathra. The remains of an old fence ran alongside the route for a while, and that is what the rusting iron-mongery on the left is part of.

 

Today's route

Anything but the weevil, a participatory art installation by Rasa Alksnyte

Chesterton. Cambridge. July. 2005.

Malting Lane. Cambridge UK. November 2006.

i mostly work in a mall. sometimes a stand-alone store. when at the mall i tend to go upstairs to the food court for lunch.

it's loud. dirty. dusty. busy.

people laughing loudly. talking loudly. scraping metal chairs that send vibration through the floor & up my own chair. vibrating to my bone.

 

sometimes i go there to eat. sometimes to just sit.

always with my headphones & music.

 

i require this half hour of solitude within the jungle.

 

i sit in the same seat. under the skylight.

 

it's important to find joy in the small things.

 

(i've been looking up a lot lately. not sure if there's meaning behind that..)

  

all rights reserved© do not copy without my permission!

Coldham's Lane. Cambridge UK. November 2006.

I always find something really insignificant for my shots. Not a throne, or a royal bed, or a beautifully set table. What is wrong with me?

 

"The Château Montreuil-Bellay, as we see it today, was constructed between the 13th and 15th centuries."

 

Montreuil-Bellay, France. 2010

Camera: tiny point-and-shoot.

Coldham's Lane. Cambridge UK. November 2006.

today is my eighteenth birthday. and i'm sitting here thinking how fast life goes. i have seen so much, yet so little. i am mature for my age, and yet i am just a child. i have so much more to experience and yet i have already experienced so much. sometimes i feel as if i'm sprinting along, closing my eyes periodically and missing part of the race. i don't know how to keep my eyes open all the time because some parts are so boring or painful it's impossible to keep them open. it terrifies me because life passes so fast. it terrifies me that i won't be able to live it in the best way possible. "to live is the rarest thing in the world. most people exist, that is all." -oscar wilde. this quote makes me feel incredibly insignificant because life is so short and in whatever time we have, we have to try to make a mark upon the world. the question is: how? and i don't know how to answer that.

 

this waterfall is like life, but i am just like one little tiny water particle. i have a sometimes fun, sometimes painful, sometimes tumultuous journey downhill until i hit the surface of the water below and the journey ends. and in a second, it's gone.

 

Ishinca looking insignificant!

 

Tuesday 14 July 2015: Ishinca Base Camp (4385m) - Akilpo Pass (5062m) - Quebrada Aquillpo camp (4220m)

 

Cordillera Blanca Traverse day 10.

 

Another day of up-and-over, heading back up the northern slopes of Quebrada Ishinca to cross into the Quebrada Akilpo (Akillpo, Aquillpo) via the Akilpo Pass. Scarpas and crampons again, rope, harness and helmets for the final section over lose rocks. Tiring.

 

Cloudier than yesterday, and colder too. Grey views back towards Ranrapalca, Ocshapalca and Janyaraju, and once we reached the pass we found cloud covering the peaks to the north, hiding Copa and Huascarán Sur. Akilpo was close and clear though, Tocllaraju too.

 

Another long descent down into and out along the Quebrada Akilpo, returning to grassland. As we followed the stream, bushes and trees reappeared too.

 

Camp 8 - our last night's camping on the Traverse - came with a large boulder that served as a kitchen, a bridge across the stream and great views of Nevado Akilpo. Lovely evening light lit up the skies and the snow. We dined by the light of our final bonfire.

 

Read more on about our Cordillera Blanca Traverse with Val Pitkethly on Sparkly Trainers.

 

DSC00225

A bug so insignificant, we kill it without thinking twice.

I never cared much for the small insignificant insects found in the bushes, until I casually took a photo of this 5 mm long beetle. It was mesmerizing to see the beautiful reflecting body of this creature coming alive in the shot. Since then I had started exploring the small bushes and the woods to search for more and more insetcs, and the result was highly rewarding!

Never did I realize there could be so much of beauty hidden in the shadows of nature.

Taken 10/26/18 at the Civic Media Center in Gainesville, FL.

Just another insignificant shot of 56302, this time substituting for failed 66847 with 6J37. I'm sure you know by now where this location is! Another gloomy May evening-damn cloud-hope it clears in a few hours for the planets!

.quand les rivières

le début à prend la vélocité.

these steps may look insignificant but they represent a victory for the people of Barry Island. British Ports Authority wanted them blocked off , despite the steps being the main point of access to Barry Town after years of fighting the steps will stay open.

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”.

 

Since 2009, Daniel Kerkhoff, from Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.A., has been creating his own artist-in-residencies in communities in Ghana, Ecuador, and Vietnam.

 

Embedding himself in a community, he develops multiple connections through creating art (installations), writing poetic journals, making art with children, curating exhibitions, working with artists, assisting art libraries and community libraries, documenting walks and the community, and just being a part of everyday life.

 

Along with painting, collage, art installations, photography, and writing, his art practice involves connecting, sharing, and weaving people and places.

www.danielkerkhoff.com.

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”.

Assisting and creating libraries is part of my art practice.

During my art residencies, I continue to bring books and materials, art work, maps, magazines and journals, CDs, DVDs, and photos to the community centers in Adugyama, Ashanti Region Ghana and Sisid-anejo, Cañar, Ecuador. I also give a variety of art books, journals, and materials to fellow artists and art spaces.

In Accra, Ghana, I bring art books and magazines to The Nubuke Foundation and The Center for Contemporary Art, Ghana. In Cuenca, Ecuador, I'm connected to In-Arte Contemporáneo and bring art magazines and information. In Hanoi, I have provided various art publications and books to Cuci Fine Art, Chay Art, and Chaap Collective.

I bring art publications, art work, and music created by friends and colleagues of mine. I document their work in these different communities, creating another form of connection and awareness.

I consider this a weaving project, a form of sharing that can have many on-going effects. –Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

“Playing Catch, Giving and Receiving”

You are invited to play catch with my prints. Two dimensional prints that hang on the wall are transformed into three dimensional balls, a form of sculpture that is also performance and participatory.

Playing catch is a common past time that's relaxing and connecting. It is an act of giving (throwing) and receiving (catching) involving a ball, and, in this case, prints transformed into a ball (sculpture).

Instead of viewing the stationary print on a wall or a sculpture on the floor, it is viewed moving through time and space, dependent on the participants and their actions.

It is visual, transformative, therapeutic, sharing, interactive, and connecting, simple and playful actions of giving and receiving.

--Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”

  

“Walking the Path, Prints on Prints”

 

You are invited to walk on my prints, using them as a path.

 

It’s another way of experiencing art like a stepping stone meditation,

a different awareness may take place on an intentional walk, slower,

deliberate, a winding pathway, your prints touching these prints.

 

You become, in a way, the performer, the participant, the collaborator,

your soles connecting and becoming a part of these prints, adding steps,

humbling, engaging, liberating, creating another connection.

 

The title of this series is: "Paper Trail, A4 (All Over the Place)" from "The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)". These prints are collages made from my daily life in Hanoi -- collections of receipts, maps, brochures, business cards, food wrappers and waste.

 

They are my journal, a record of my consumption and daily activities, stamped with symbols that reflect my connection with Hanoi. They are painted over,

fragments remain revealed, information becomes cloudy, is lost and buried, like memory and history.

 

I created these collages during my artist-in-residency in Hanoi from

February 6, 2015 to October 26, 2015.

 

Walking is an important part of my art residencies. I document a familiar route in the community I’m living in by walking slowly, taking photos, and picking up “treasures”.

 

--Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

You feel properly insignificant in size standing next to these bronze age monuments.

"insignificant" PhotoFriday submission

 

* on the Ferncliff Trail @ Ohiopyle State Park

I understand feeling as small and as insignificant as humanly possible. And how it can actually ache in places you didn't know you had inside you. And it doesn't matter how many new haircuts you get, or gyms you join, or how many glasses of chardonnay you drink with your girlfriends... you still go to bed every night going over every detail and wonder what you did wrong or how you could have misunderstood. And how in the hell for that brief moment you could think that you were that happy. And sometimes you can even convince yourself that he'll see the light and show up at your door. And after all that, however long all that may be, you'll go somewhere new. And you'll meet people who make you feel worthwhile again. And little pieces of your soul will finally come back. And all that fuzzy stuff, those years of your life that you wasted, that will eventually begin to fade.

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”.

 

Since 2009, Daniel Kerkhoff, from Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.A., has been creating his own artist-in-residencies in communities in Ghana, Ecuador, and Vietnam.

 

Embedding himself in a community, he develops multiple connections through creating art (installations), writing poetic journals, making art with children, curating exhibitions, working with artists, assisting art libraries and community libraries, documenting walks and the community, and just being a part of everyday life.

 

Along with painting, collage, art installations, photography, and writing, his art practice involves connecting, sharing, and weaving people and places.

www.danielkerkhoff.com.

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”.

Assisting and creating libraries is part of my art practice.

During my art residencies, I continue to bring books and materials, art work, maps, magazines and journals, CDs, DVDs, and photos to the community centers in Adugyama, Ashanti Region Ghana and Sisid-anejo, Cañar, Ecuador. I also give a variety of art books, journals, and materials to fellow artists and art spaces.

In Accra, Ghana, I bring art books and magazines to The Nubuke Foundation and The Center for Contemporary Art, Ghana. In Cuenca, Ecuador, I'm connected to In-Arte Contemporáneo and bring art magazines and information. In Hanoi, I have provided various art publications and books to Cuci Fine Art, Chay Art, and Chaap Collective.

I bring art publications, art work, and music created by friends and colleagues of mine. I document their work in these different communities, creating another form of connection and awareness.

I consider this a weaving project, a form of sharing that can have many on-going effects. –Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

“Playing Catch, Giving and Receiving”

You are invited to play catch with my prints. Two dimensional prints that hang on the wall are transformed into three dimensional balls, a form of sculpture that is also performance and participatory.

Playing catch is a common past time that's relaxing and connecting. It is an act of giving (throwing) and receiving (catching) involving a ball, and, in this case, prints transformed into a ball (sculpture).

Instead of viewing the stationary print on a wall or a sculpture on the floor, it is viewed moving through time and space, dependent on the participants and their actions.

It is visual, transformative, therapeutic, sharing, interactive, and connecting, simple and playful actions of giving and receiving.

--Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”

  

“Walking the Path, Prints on Prints”

 

You are invited to walk on my prints, using them as a path.

 

It’s another way of experiencing art like a stepping stone meditation,

a different awareness may take place on an intentional walk, slower,

deliberate, a winding pathway, your prints touching these prints.

 

You become, in a way, the performer, the participant, the collaborator,

your soles connecting and becoming a part of these prints, adding steps,

humbling, engaging, liberating, creating another connection.

 

The title of this series is: "Paper Trail, A4 (All Over the Place)" from "The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)". These prints are collages made from my daily life in Hanoi -- collections of receipts, maps, brochures, business cards, food wrappers and waste.

 

They are my journal, a record of my consumption and daily activities, stamped with symbols that reflect my connection with Hanoi. They are painted over,

fragments remain revealed, information becomes cloudy, is lost and buried, like memory and history.

 

I created these collages during my artist-in-residency in Hanoi from

February 6, 2015 to October 26, 2015.

 

Walking is an important part of my art residencies. I document a familiar route in the community I’m living in by walking slowly, taking photos, and picking up “treasures”.

 

--Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”.

 

Since 2009, Daniel Kerkhoff, from Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.A., has been creating his own artist-in-residencies in communities in Ghana, Ecuador, and Vietnam.

 

Embedding himself in a community, he develops multiple connections through creating art (installations), writing poetic journals, making art with children, curating exhibitions, working with artists, assisting art libraries and community libraries, documenting walks and the community, and just being a part of everyday life.

 

Along with painting, collage, art installations, photography, and writing, his art practice involves connecting, sharing, and weaving people and places.

www.danielkerkhoff.com.

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”.

Assisting and creating libraries is part of my art practice.

During my art residencies, I continue to bring books and materials, art work, maps, magazines and journals, CDs, DVDs, and photos to the community centers in Adugyama, Ashanti Region Ghana and Sisid-anejo, Cañar, Ecuador. I also give a variety of art books, journals, and materials to fellow artists and art spaces.

In Accra, Ghana, I bring art books and magazines to The Nubuke Foundation and The Center for Contemporary Art, Ghana. In Cuenca, Ecuador, I'm connected to In-Arte Contemporáneo and bring art magazines and information. In Hanoi, I have provided various art publications and books to Cuci Fine Art, Chay Art, and Chaap Collective.

I bring art publications, art work, and music created by friends and colleagues of mine. I document their work in these different communities, creating another form of connection and awareness.

I consider this a weaving project, a form of sharing that can have many on-going effects. –Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

“Playing Catch, Giving and Receiving”

You are invited to play catch with my prints. Two dimensional prints that hang on the wall are transformed into three dimensional balls, a form of sculpture that is also performance and participatory.

Playing catch is a common past time that's relaxing and connecting. It is an act of giving (throwing) and receiving (catching) involving a ball, and, in this case, prints transformed into a ball (sculpture).

Instead of viewing the stationary print on a wall or a sculpture on the floor, it is viewed moving through time and space, dependent on the participants and their actions.

It is visual, transformative, therapeutic, sharing, interactive, and connecting, simple and playful actions of giving and receiving.

--Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”

  

“Walking the Path, Prints on Prints”

 

You are invited to walk on my prints, using them as a path.

 

It’s another way of experiencing art like a stepping stone meditation,

a different awareness may take place on an intentional walk, slower,

deliberate, a winding pathway, your prints touching these prints.

 

You become, in a way, the performer, the participant, the collaborator,

your soles connecting and becoming a part of these prints, adding steps,

humbling, engaging, liberating, creating another connection.

 

The title of this series is: "Paper Trail, A4 (All Over the Place)" from "The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)". These prints are collages made from my daily life in Hanoi -- collections of receipts, maps, brochures, business cards, food wrappers and waste.

 

They are my journal, a record of my consumption and daily activities, stamped with symbols that reflect my connection with Hanoi. They are painted over,

fragments remain revealed, information becomes cloudy, is lost and buried, like memory and history.

 

I created these collages during my artist-in-residency in Hanoi from

February 6, 2015 to October 26, 2015.

 

Walking is an important part of my art residencies. I document a familiar route in the community I’m living in by walking slowly, taking photos, and picking up “treasures”.

 

--Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

03/10 Insignificant Secret @ Legacy Taipei

Coldham's Lane. Cambridge UK. November 2006.

Ahhhh family arguments over the most insignificant things...

French electro-pop duo Bonk crept up a little in critical estimation after their second album, 'Insignificant and Aware of It'. Their first album, 'Subteranen Hoboken Blues' was heavily promoted but largely looked upon as a failure. Here, they found their signature 80s sound, and showcased it well on tracks like 'Dantana Bridge', 'Dial 01-01-01' and 'I Will Sleep With Charlotte Gainsborough'.

   

CREATE YOUR DEBUT ALBUM COVER

 

1 - Go to "wikipedia." Hit "random... Read More... Read More" or click en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random

 

The first random wikipedia article you get is the name of your band. (alternatively, if the first article you hit is short, hit Random Article two more times.)

 

2 - Go to "Random quotations"

or click www.quotationspage.com/random.php3

 

The last four or five words of the very last quote of the page is the title of your first album.

 

3 - Go to flickr and click on "explore the last seven days" or click www.flickr.com/explore/interesting/7days

 

Third picture, no matter what it is, will be your album cover.

 

4 - Use photoshop or similar to put it all together. Search for fonts on the web, or check out a site like www.dafont.com/

 

5 - Post it to FB with this text in the "caption" and TAG the friends you want to join in.

Coldham's Common. Cambridge UK. November 2006.

The Hialoa is rather an insignificant looking plant, and is apt to be passed without notice; but upon examination it will be found well worthy of a closer acquaintance. The hialoa appears to greatest advantage in early spring; for although it bears the hot dry weather better than many plants, yet it assumes in summer a faded and somewhat shabby appearance. But in early spring, with its exquisite bits of colour, and soft corrugated leaves, it is a very pretty plant indeed; though one of Hawaii's humblest.

 

The hialoa grows everywhere on the lowlands; and varies from two to six feet in height. The plant contains a great quantity of gluten, which the natives turned to account in their primitive days, using the pounded leaves for filling the seams and cracks of their canoes.

 

2014 © University of Hawai'i

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”.

 

Since 2009, Daniel Kerkhoff, from Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.A., has been creating his own artist-in-residencies in communities in Ghana, Ecuador, and Vietnam.

 

Embedding himself in a community, he develops multiple connections through creating art (installations), writing poetic journals, making art with children, curating exhibitions, working with artists, assisting art libraries and community libraries, documenting walks and the community, and just being a part of everyday life.

 

Along with painting, collage, art installations, photography, and writing, his art practice involves connecting, sharing, and

weaving people and places.

www.danielkerkhoff.com.

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”.

Assisting and creating libraries is part of my art practice.

During my art residencies, I continue to bring books and materials, art work, maps, magazines and journals, CDs, DVDs, and photos to the community centers in Adugyama, Ashanti Region Ghana and Sisid-anejo, Cañar, Ecuador. I also give a variety of art books, journals, and materials to fellow artists and art spaces.

In Accra, Ghana, I bring art books and magazines to The Nubuke Foundation and The Center for Contemporary Art, Ghana. In Cuenca, Ecuador, I'm connected to In-Arte Contemporáneo and bring art magazines and information. In Hanoi, I have provided various art publications and books to Cuci Fine Art, Chay Art, and Chaap Collective.

I bring art publications, art work, and music created by friends and colleagues of mine. I document their work in these different communities, creating another form of connection and awareness.

I consider this a weaving project, a form of sharing that can have many on-going effects. –Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”

  

“Walking the Path, Prints on Prints”

 

You are invited to walk on my prints, using them as a path.

 

It’s another way of experiencing art like a stepping stone meditation,

a different awareness may take place on an intentional walk, slower,

deliberate, a winding pathway, your prints touching these prints.

 

You become, in a way, the performer, the participant, the collaborator,

your soles connecting and becoming a part of these prints, adding steps,

humbling, engaging, liberating, creating another connection.

 

The title of this series is: "Paper Trail, A4 (All Over the Place)" from "The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)". These prints are collages made from my daily life in Hanoi -- collections of receipts, maps, brochures, business cards, food wrappers and waste.

 

They are my journal, a record of my consumption and daily activities, stamped with symbols that reflect my connection with Hanoi. They are painted over,

fragments remain revealed, information becomes cloudy, is lost and buried, like memory and history.

 

I created these collages during my artist-in-residency in Hanoi from

February 6, 2015 to October 26, 2015.

 

Walking is an important part of my art residencies. I document a familiar route in the community I’m living in by walking slowly, taking photos, and picking up “treasures”.

 

--Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, a Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”

 

“Playing Catch, Giving and Receiving”

You are invited to play catch with my prints. Two dimensional prints that hang on the wall are transformed into three dimensional balls, a form of sculpture that is also performance and participatory.

Playing catch is a common past time that's relaxing and connecting. It is an act of giving (throwing) and receiving (catching) involving a ball, and, in this case, prints transformed into a ball (sculpture).

Instead of viewing the stationary print on a wall or a sculpture on the floor, it is viewed moving through time and space, dependent on the participants and their actions.

It is visual, transformative, therapeutic, sharing, interactive, and connecting, simple and playful actions of giving and receiving.

--Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

   

Ginkgo biloba 'Chi Chi' 3/2022 Ginkgo E1- (Icho) Dwarf Ginkgo, Size at 10 years: 4x4ft., Green Foliage, Insignificant flower, USDA Hardiness Zone 3, Michigan Bloom Month 4-, In Garden Bed E1 for 175 DAYS (HLG). Planted in 2021.

 

Dawes: A semi-dwarf, bushy male clone with a rounded multi-stem habit. Being male means it does not produce the smelly fruit. This is a real novelty plant reaching only 15-20' high in a 30 year period. Unusual stem formations, called chi-chi in Japan, form on the trunk after many years. These can grow to resemble stalactites. Fan-shaped, deciduous leaves are smaller than the species. Great for a specimen in the garden with its small habit and great yellow fall coloring.

 

Grafted by MSU on 3/2020. (also known as 'Tschi-Tschi') is a dwarf, dense, mounded, slow-growing, multi-stemmed shrub form of the popular ginkgo tree. It typically grows to only 4-5' tall with a fan-shaped habit and over 10 years. Ginkgo biloba is a deciduous conifer (a true gymnosperm) that features distinctive, two-lobed, somewhat leathery, fan-shaped leaves

 

Photo by F.D.Richards, SE Michigan. Link to additional photos of this plant from 2022:

 

www.flickr.com/search/?user_id=50697352%40N00&sort=da...

 

#Conifer, #GinkgoBiloba, #Ginkgo, #MaidenhairTree, #Tree, #TschiTschi, #Dwarf

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”.

 

Since 2009, Daniel Kerkhoff, from Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.A., has been creating his own artist-in-residencies in communities in Ghana, Ecuador, and Vietnam.

 

Embedding himself in a community, he develops multiple connections through creating art (installations), writing poetic journals, making art with children, curating exhibitions, working with artists, assisting art libraries and community libraries, documenting walks and the community, and just being a part of everyday life.

 

Along with painting, collage, art installations, photography, and writing, his art practice involves connecting, sharing, and weaving people and places.

www.danielkerkhoff.com.

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”.

Assisting and creating libraries is part of my art practice.

During my art residencies, I continue to bring books and materials, art work, maps, magazines and journals, CDs, DVDs, and photos to the community centers in Adugyama, Ashanti Region Ghana and Sisid-anejo, Cañar, Ecuador. I also give a variety of art books, journals, and materials to fellow artists and art spaces.

In Accra, Ghana, I bring art books and magazines to The Nubuke Foundation and The Center for Contemporary Art, Ghana. In Cuenca, Ecuador, I'm connected to In-Arte Contemporáneo and bring art magazines and information. In Hanoi, I have provided various art publications and books to Cuci Fine Art, Chay Art, and Chaap Collective.

I bring art publications, art work, and music created by friends and colleagues of mine. I document their work in these different communities, creating another form of connection and awareness.

I consider this a weaving project, a form of sharing that can have many on-going effects. –Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

“Playing Catch, Giving and Receiving”

You are invited to play catch with my prints. Two dimensional prints that hang on the wall are transformed into three dimensional balls, a form of sculpture that is also performance and participatory.

Playing catch is a common past time that's relaxing and connecting. It is an act of giving (throwing) and receiving (catching) involving a ball, and, in this case, prints transformed into a ball (sculpture).

Instead of viewing the stationary print on a wall or a sculpture on the floor, it is viewed moving through time and space, dependent on the participants and their actions.

It is visual, transformative, therapeutic, sharing, interactive, and connecting, simple and playful actions of giving and receiving.

--Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”

  

“Walking the Path, Prints on Prints”

 

You are invited to walk on my prints, using them as a path.

 

It’s another way of experiencing art like a stepping stone meditation,

a different awareness may take place on an intentional walk, slower,

deliberate, a winding pathway, your prints touching these prints.

 

You become, in a way, the performer, the participant, the collaborator,

your soles connecting and becoming a part of these prints, adding steps,

humbling, engaging, liberating, creating another connection.

 

The title of this series is: "Paper Trail, A4 (All Over the Place)" from "The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)". These prints are collages made from my daily life in Hanoi -- collections of receipts, maps, brochures, business cards, food wrappers and waste.

 

They are my journal, a record of my consumption and daily activities, stamped with symbols that reflect my connection with Hanoi. They are painted over,

fragments remain revealed, information becomes cloudy, is lost and buried, like memory and history.

 

I created these collages during my artist-in-residency in Hanoi from

February 6, 2015 to October 26, 2015.

 

Walking is an important part of my art residencies. I document a familiar route in the community I’m living in by walking slowly, taking photos, and picking up “treasures”.

 

--Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

Usually, the flowers on rosemary are insignificant...

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”.

 

Since 2009, Daniel Kerkhoff, from Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.A., has been creating his own artist-in-residencies in communities in Ghana, Ecuador, and Vietnam.

 

Embedding himself in a community, he develops multiple connections through creating art (installations), writing poetic journals, making art with children, curating exhibitions, working with artists, assisting art libraries and community libraries, documenting walks and the community, and just being a part of everyday life.

 

Along with painting, collage, art installations, photography, and writing, his art practice involves connecting, sharing, and

weaving people and places.

www.danielkerkhoff.com.

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”.

Assisting and creating libraries is part of my art practice.

During my art residencies, I continue to bring books and materials, art work, maps, magazines and journals, CDs, DVDs, and photos to the community centers in Adugyama, Ashanti Region Ghana and Sisid-anejo, Cañar, Ecuador. I also give a variety of art books, journals, and materials to fellow artists and art spaces.

In Accra, Ghana, I bring art books and magazines to The Nubuke Foundation and The Center for Contemporary Art, Ghana. In Cuenca, Ecuador, I'm connected to In-Arte Contemporáneo and bring art magazines and information. In Hanoi, I have provided various art publications and books to Cuci Fine Art, Chay Art, and Chaap Collective.

I bring art publications, art work, and music created by friends and colleagues of mine. I document their work in these different communities, creating another form of connection and awareness.

I consider this a weaving project, a form of sharing that can have many on-going effects. –Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”

  

“Walking the Path, Prints on Prints”

 

You are invited to walk on my prints, using them as a path.

 

It’s another way of experiencing art like a stepping stone meditation,

a different awareness may take place on an intentional walk, slower,

deliberate, a winding pathway, your prints touching these prints.

 

You become, in a way, the performer, the participant, the collaborator,

your soles connecting and becoming a part of these prints, adding steps,

humbling, engaging, liberating, creating another connection.

 

The title of this series is: "Paper Trail, A4 (All Over the Place)" from "The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)". These prints are collages made from my daily life in Hanoi -- collections of receipts, maps, brochures, business cards, food wrappers and waste.

 

They are my journal, a record of my consumption and daily activities, stamped with symbols that reflect my connection with Hanoi. They are painted over,

fragments remain revealed, information becomes cloudy, is lost and buried, like memory and history.

 

I created these collages during my artist-in-residency in Hanoi from

February 6, 2015 to October 26, 2015.

 

Walking is an important part of my art residencies. I document a familiar route in the community I’m living in by walking slowly, taking photos, and picking up “treasures”.

 

--Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, a Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”

 

“Playing Catch, Giving and Receiving”

You are invited to play catch with my prints. Two dimensional prints that hang on the wall are transformed into three dimensional balls, a form of sculpture that is also performance and participatory.

Playing catch is a common past time that's relaxing and connecting. It is an act of giving (throwing) and receiving (catching) involving a ball, and, in this case, prints transformed into a ball (sculpture).

Instead of viewing the stationary print on a wall or a sculpture on the floor, it is viewed moving through time and space, dependent on the participants and their actions.

It is visual, transformative, therapeutic, sharing, interactive, and connecting, simple and playful actions of giving and receiving.

--Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

   

Often I find myself focusing on minute, seemingly insignificant details in order to calm the cacophony and confusion of vast, overwhelming spaces of life experiences. cobb #5, 2006, is from the series Certain Places, portraits of the evocative feeling and emotions that overcome me in a particular kind of place; where the past coexists with the present, uncertainty mingles with anticipation, and the familiar delivered the unexpected. Although an element of isolation is necessary for me to experience fully the emotion of place, the act of existing in these environments reinforces a powerful sense of being alive and connected to the world around me. I love and live for these energizing feelings. The right place serves as a portal into a rejuvenating world of imagination and possibility, where I yearn to discover what’s happening ahead, hidden beyond the horizon; empty places that transport me from the everyday to reveal beautiful secrets.

 

SOLD

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”.

 

Since 2009, Daniel Kerkhoff, from Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.A., has been creating his own artist-in-residencies in communities in Ghana, Ecuador, and Vietnam.

 

Embedding himself in a community, he develops multiple connections through creating art (installations), writing poetic journals, making art with children, curating exhibitions, working with artists, assisting art libraries and community libraries, documenting walks and the community, and just being a part of everyday life.

 

Along with painting, collage, art installations, photography, and writing, his art practice involves connecting, sharing, and weaving people and places.

www.danielkerkhoff.com.

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”.

Assisting and creating libraries is part of my art practice.

During my art residencies, I continue to bring books and materials, art work, maps, magazines and journals, CDs, DVDs, and photos to the community centers in Adugyama, Ashanti Region Ghana and Sisid-anejo, Cañar, Ecuador. I also give a variety of art books, journals, and materials to fellow artists and art spaces.

In Accra, Ghana, I bring art books and magazines to The Nubuke Foundation and The Center for Contemporary Art, Ghana. In Cuenca, Ecuador, I'm connected to In-Arte Contemporáneo and bring art magazines and information. In Hanoi, I have provided various art publications and books to Cuci Fine Art, Chay Art, and Chaap Collective.

I bring art publications, art work, and music created by friends and colleagues of mine. I document their work in these different communities, creating another form of connection and awareness.

I consider this a weaving project, a form of sharing that can have many on-going effects. –Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

“Playing Catch, Giving and Receiving”

You are invited to play catch with my prints. Two dimensional prints that hang on the wall are transformed into three dimensional balls, a form of sculpture that is also performance and participatory.

Playing catch is a common past time that's relaxing and connecting. It is an act of giving (throwing) and receiving (catching) involving a ball, and, in this case, prints transformed into a ball (sculpture).

Instead of viewing the stationary print on a wall or a sculpture on the floor, it is viewed moving through time and space, dependent on the participants and their actions.

It is visual, transformative, therapeutic, sharing, interactive, and connecting, simple and playful actions of giving and receiving.

--Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

“The Insignificant is Significant”, A Library and Art Installation, a continuation of the series, “The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)”

  

“Walking the Path, Prints on Prints”

 

You are invited to walk on my prints, using them as a path.

 

It’s another way of experiencing art like a stepping stone meditation,

a different awareness may take place on an intentional walk, slower,

deliberate, a winding pathway, your prints touching these prints.

 

You become, in a way, the performer, the participant, the collaborator,

your soles connecting and becoming a part of these prints, adding steps,

humbling, engaging, liberating, creating another connection.

 

The title of this series is: "Paper Trail, A4 (All Over the Place)" from "The Quiet and Ugly Artist (Hanoi, 1965-2015)". These prints are collages made from my daily life in Hanoi -- collections of receipts, maps, brochures, business cards, food wrappers and waste.

 

They are my journal, a record of my consumption and daily activities, stamped with symbols that reflect my connection with Hanoi. They are painted over,

fragments remain revealed, information becomes cloudy, is lost and buried, like memory and history.

 

I created these collages during my artist-in-residency in Hanoi from

February 6, 2015 to October 26, 2015.

 

Walking is an important part of my art residencies. I document a familiar route in the community I’m living in by walking slowly, taking photos, and picking up “treasures”.

 

--Daniel Kerkhoff, www.danielkerkhoff.com

 

...fragmentos do meu sul e meu norte

"Se denomina inventário um conjunto de elementos ordenados e registrados com uma certa finalidade. Na realidade, um inventário tem estreita relação com a área comercial, na qual se faz necessária uma classificação da mercadoria. Em outros casos, pode remeter a um conjunto de recursos para levar a cabo uma atividade, como por exemplo uma biblioteca. Qualquer que seja o caso, um inventário costuma requerer um registro detalhado com o objetivo de conseguir encontrar cada elemento do modo mais fácil possível, como também registrar um histórico sobre ele".

Neste inventário de coisas insignificantes, jogo com a ideia do que é importante ou não na nossa trajetória. Por si só, nada tem qualquer significado antes de que este seja atribuído. Há diálogos e também tensões entre fotografia, palavra e coordenadas. As duas duas últimas também geram outras imagens possíveis. Neste projeto, busquei observar questões gigantes enquanto também olhava para as miudezas do caminho. Os rastros e os silêncios sempre povoados me interessam. Narrativas fluidas e mutantes. O espectador também pode decidir o que é fundamental ou não para ele, entre a memória e o esquecimento. Guardar coisas, se quiser. Jogar com a alteridade e montar sua própria coleção.

De Iana Soares.

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