Recology San Francisco Enables Artists to 'Make Art, Not Landfill'
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                Recology San Francisco is the only garbage dump in the country  that hosts a rotating artist-in-residence program. Artists are granted  studio space for four months, along with a stipend and free access to  items dropped off in the Public Disposal and Recycling (PDR) area. It is  essentially the penultimate dumpster diving experience: anything and  everything, from old electronics to musical instruments and every other  possible art material under the sun, appears at some point, free for the  unlimited taking. Resident artists must use only that which they  salvage from the PDR to make new work while in residence. Founded in  1990 by artist Jo Hanson, by the end of this year the Recology San  Francisco A. I. R. program will have served 99 artists, including the  likes of Val Britton, Packard Jennings, Christine Lee, and Scott Oliver.  Current resident artists Terry Berlier and Donna Anderson Kam present  the fruits of their labor in a two-day reception in the on-site studio  this weekend.
 Terry Berlier
Terry Berlier
The Beginning and the End Meet
Photo: Micah Gibson  The residency program is an exercise in resourcefulness and a  resounding statement about the surplus generated by consumer culture.  Upon arrival, Berlier wondered about the possibility of procuring a  piano. Within two days a perfectly suitable upright was brought to the  dump and snagged for deconstruction in her studio. A fully functioning  MacBook computer dropped off for electronics recycling is among other  plethora implemented in the construction of the artist's sculptural new  media installations. An assistant professor of sculpture at Stanford  University, Berlier took a sabbatical to work in her dump studio. She  notes that "the residency has blown up my practice" through the wealth  of raw materials available daily as people arrive hourly with carloads  of stuff cleared out of their homes, offices and storage spaces. For  someone like Berlier, who previously worked with found objects, the  residency can be an overwhelming abundance of raw materials for  art-making. The anticipated challenge of finding supplies for artists  who have more narrowly focused practices can be nerve wracking. But the  experience can also lead to new discoveries, such as for Anderson Kam,  whose practice prior to the residency focused on drawing on conventional  paper. During the residency, she has begun experimenting with new  materials, such as the cast-off perforated vinyl advertising skins from  transit buses. Oversized cardboard spools have spurred her development  of continuous narratives drawn on their circular surfaces.
 Donna Anderson Kam
 Donna Anderson Kam
(08-12-2011) 4:47 PDT Little Hollywood, Ca.
Photo: Micah Gibson  Beyond the art program, this dump is a surprisingly fascinating  place. Despite whatever expectations one might have about messiness, it  is very orderly and clean. Even the seagulls are kept in line by a  professional Falconer named Indigo who patrols regularly with three  exquisite falcons, steering the gulls away from the organic waste and  out to the Bay. The facility itself is a model for creative reuse -- a  private sculpture garden on site offers sound buffering between the dump  and the nearby residential neighborhood known as Little Hollywood.  Designed by Susan Leibovitz Steinman (sister to photographer Annie  Leibovitz) in 1992, the garden features concrete salvaged from the  collapsed Embarcadero Freeway damaged in the 1989 Loma Prieta  Earthquake. Resident artists are encouraged to create work for the  garden -- to date it houses more than 35 sculptures scattered throughout  the three-acre space.
 Ethan Estess
 Ethan Estess
Last Dive at the Farallones: 100,000 Marine Mammals Killed Per Year
Photo: Micah Gibson  Recycling is, of course, the highest order of Recology San Francisco,  followed closely by educational efforts to encourage recycling. Every  pound of waste that goes into a landfill has a cost attached to it and,  as a for-profit employee-owned company, Recology San Francisco is  incentivized to educate the public about recycling efficiently. The  artist-in-residence program is an internally funded community-based  endeavor that combines actual recycling with public outreach. Other  efforts include participation in street parades -- a spotless garage  houses an extensive collection of antique garbage trucks -- and more  than 150 public tours for adults and children annually. Beyond the work  it does locally, Recology San Francisco endeavors to provide a model for  other waste management programs by making its business model available  as an open source set of guidelines. "Make Art, Not Landfill" reads a  stamp on the Recology San Francisco materials, designed to look like a  stenciled graffiti tag. The message that we need to recycle for the  betterment of the planet is writing on the wall, as it were -- that  recycling can also support artists gives new life to an old idea.
 Recology Sculpture Garden
Recology Sculpture Garden
Garden designed by Susan Leibowitz-Steinman
Conehead Chairs by Norma Yorba  The Artist in Residence Program at Recology San Francisco will host  an exhibition and reception for current artists-in-residence Terry  Berlier, Donna Anderson Kam and Ethan Estess on Friday, January 20, 2012  from 5-9pm and Saturday, January 21, from 1-5pm.  For more information 
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