
“People keep pulling up and
then immediately driving away,” said a bemused Allison Lacher, one of
the local organizers of the Terrain Biennial, which held its preview
night Saturday in Enos Park, with festivities spread throughout the
neighborhood. “That’s not usually the way things go at art openings –
it’s a little disconcerting.”
The
Terrain Biennial – which began in Oak Park, Illinois, in 2011 and is
described in press materials as “an international exhibition of
sitespecific art made for front yards, balconies and porches” – came to
Enos Park last weekend, with artists from various locations converging
on the neighborhood to decorate and otherwise transform 17 spaces,
ranging from homes to vacant lots, into unique works of installation
art.
Attendees at
Saturday’s preview night were given a map of all the locations (covering
a range of blocks between Third Street and Seventh Street) and most
immediately set off, either on foot or by car, to check out the uniquely
spread-out exhibition, which included spooky projections on house
windows, repurposed Christmas ornaments and a balcony snuggled up in a
giant quilt, among many other sights unusual for any neighborhood, with
some positively disconcerting in Enos Park.
In
addition to the site-specific artwork, there were several events spread
out through the neighborhood, including a few film screenings in
people’s yards, including the 27-minute Sundown Town, a sometimes upsetting meditation on racism and denial by Chicago artist Cassandra Davis.
In
the Enos Park Apple Orchard on Bergen Street, Chicago artist James
Pepper Kelly and curator Ruslana Lichtzier hosted a workshop wherein
they invited visitors and residents to peel apples – later to be baked
into apple crisps by Kelly – while engaging in conversations about ways
the Enos Park neighborhood and the city of Springfield itself could be
improved, using Vachel Lindsay’s utopian novel The Golden Book of Springfield as a lens (and local poet and Lindsay scholar Ian Winterbauer on hand for good measure).
Michelle Ownbey, president of the Enos Park Neighborhood Improvement Association (as well as publisher of Illinois Times) said
that the neighborhood came to be involved when she was approached by
Lacher a few months back. “I wasn’t familiar with Terrain Biennial but
she told me a little bit about what they do up in the Oak Park area,”
she said. “We’ve been working hard the last few years specifically to
attract more artists to the neighborhood, especially with the new artist
residency program that the Springfield Art Association has started. Our
board thought it was a great idea – we’re all about anything that
brings people to the neighborhood for positive reasons.”
Although
many of the neighborhood residents responded with enthusiasm, not
everyone got the memo, according to Ownbey. “I got a lot of phone calls
and inquiries from neighbors who weren’t sure what was happening. In
fact, one neighbor had seen a man and woman going into one of our vacant
properties and I think they were about ready to call the police on them
because they took a picture of them and sent it to me. I told them I
was pretty sure they were artists,” she said with a laugh. “Even though
we had put it in the newsletter and tried to let the neighborhood know
what was going on, some people were caught a little off-guard.” On the
other extreme, a few neighbors volunteered their homes to be decorated
and were passed over, sometimes in favor of vacant properties. “I think
some of them were a little hurt that they didn’t get picked but I tried
to reassure them that their houses were just too nice to be chosen.”
Ownbey,
whose home was among the sites chosen by artist, said that even her
husband was somewhat taken aback when he first saw what artists Gail
Simpson and Aristotle Georgiades had done.
“He
said, ‘What’s that in our front yard?’ I told him, ‘It’s art!’” The
Terrain Biennial in Enos Park will run through Nov. 15. For additional
information send an email to [email protected]
Contact Scott Faingold at [email protected]