Open Engagement

Open Engagement
Genre Art & Social Practice
Frequency Annual
Venue Queens Museum, 2014
Portland State University, 2010-13
University of Regina, 2007
Years active 2007 - Present
Founder Jen Delos Reyes
Website
openengagement.info

Open Engagement is an international conference and artist project that sets out to explore various perspectives on art and social practice,[1] and expand the dialogue around socially engaged art making. Directed and founded by Jen Delos Reyes in 2007, Open Engagement puts emerging and established voices side-by-side, highlighting different ways of knowing and learning, and serving as a site of production, as well as reflection. The conference incorporates workshops, exhibitions, residencies, pedagogy, curatorial practice and collaborative projects.

The conference has hosted over 700 presenters, taking place in two countries over the past seven years. Since the first Open Engagement conference in 2007, the event has become a locus for people interested in socially engaged art.[2] The conference offers a primary site where practitioners convene annually to take stock of the field, playing host to key artists, thinkers, and activists including Tom Finkelpearl, Shannon Jackson, Nato Thompson, Rick Lowe, Pablo Helguera, and Tania Bruguera amongst many others.

Open Engagement is a free conference. Contributors are not asked to pay a registration fee and the public is not charged to attend.

Open Engagement 2015 will take place in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

History

2007
The initial conference, borne out of Delos Reyes' graduate studies at the University of Regina, was hosted by the University, the Dunlop Art Gallery, The Mackenzie Art Gallery and local Regina residents from October 11–13, 2007. Each of the three days focused on a unique theme of exploration; October 11, You are all that I see: Art and everyday experience; October 12, It takes two: Collaborations, collectives, other team relationships; October 13. I’ll call you: Long-term relationships, communities, and connectivity. Over 40 national and international contributors were present during this first conference. The contributors were selected through an open call for submissions, participating alongside three keynote presenters.[3]

2010
In 2010 Open Engagement moved to Portland State University, planned in conjunction with the Art and Social Practice students, continuing under the leadership of Delos Reyes. The artists involved in Open Engagement: Making Things, Making Things Better, Making Things Worse, challenged traditional ideas of what art is and does. The artists' projects mediated the contemporary frameworks of art as service, as social space, as activism, as interactions, and as relationships.

Over 150 presenters were accepted through an open call for submissionS. Featured keynote presenters were Mark Dion, Nils Norman, and Amy Franceschini.[4]

2011
Open Engagement 2011 explored broadly art and social practice. Through conversations, interviews, open reflection on experiences, and related projects created for or presented at the conference, five themes were examined: Peoples and Publics, Social Economies, In Between Places, Tracking and Tracing, and Sentiment and Strategies. 2011’s keynote presenters were Julie Ault, Fritz Haeg, and Pablo Helguera.

In 2011 Open Engagement also played host to the Bureau for Open Culture, Bad at Sports, an exhibition by the Bruce High Quality Foundation University, and concurrent summits on art and education and social practice/participatory programs and practices arising at museums. The summits featured representatives from Otis College of Art and Design, the University of California Santa Cruz, MICA, California College of the Arts, The Walker, Portland Art Museum, The Hammer and others.[5]

2012
The 2012 Open Engagement featured presentations from keynote speakers Tania Bruguera, Shannon Jackson and Paul Ramirez Jonas. The work by these artists and scholars informed the conference themes: Politics, Economies, Education, and Representation.[6]

2013
Open Engagement 2013 featured keynote presenters Claire Doherty,[7] Tom Finkelpearl, and Michael Rakowitz. They were brought together to reflect on the themes of publics, contexts, and institutions in relation to the current state of socially engaged art, education, and institutional practice.

The conference included dozens of panels, workshops, and lectures, as well as a continuation of the socially engaged art in art institutions summit as well as a public conversation with Creative Time on the roles of the Creative Time Summit and Open Engagement.

References

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