In 2018, Locust Projects invited the Detroit-based design duo known as root of two to bring three headless chickens to roost in Miami. For six months, Cezanne Charles and John Marshall embellish the Magic City skyline with their public art and digital engagement project.
Previously presented in France and the United Kingdom, Whithervanes translate the traditional weathervane into a 21st century radio transmitter. Mounted on rooftops in downtown, the Design District and Biscayne Boulevard, the four-foot tall birds change colors and direction in response to the climate of fear propagated by the media. These are tech-savvy chickens. They scan the Internet for alarmist keywords, collecting information on topics from violence to economic crises to natural disasters. You can follow their “neurotic, early worrying system”, or N.E.W.S. on the Whithervanes Twitter account.
Connecting art with streaming social media and news technology, Whithervane designers Cezanne Charles and John Marshall invite us to think about the emotional impact of the digital information that controls our view of the world.
Sound Editor: Anamnesis Audio | Photographs courtesy root of two and Locust Projects
Related episodes: Art of the Everyday, Art and the Rising Sea, Report from Miami Art Week 2017
Pope L on Endurance
Martha Wilson on Political Performance Art
Contemporary Art and the Black Imagination
Sarah Oppenheimer on Space and Light
When Art is a Common Field
Rauschenberg Residency on Rising Water
Premiere Broadcast on Jolt Radio Miami
Donna Kukama on Unfinished Stories
Live from the São Paulo Biennial 8 Sep 2016
Live from the São Paulo Biennial 7 Sep 2016
Live from the São Paulo Biennial 6 Sep 2016
Anawana Haloba on Vanishing Cultures
Amanda Sanfilippo on Public Art
Maria Alyokhina on Political Art
Fresh Talk: Amy Sherald
Glexis Novoa on Cuba's Past
Fresh Talk: Ola Kolehmainen
Fresh Talk: Franky Cruz
Fresh Talk: Sanford Biggers
Fresh Talk: Yvette Mutumba and Julia Grosse
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Spider-Man Crawlspace Podcast
The Week in Art
Harlem Is Everywhere
Gulliver’s Travels
Pollyanna
Robservations with Rob Liefeld
The Modern Art Notes Podcast