Greetings from JuergenGreetings from Juergen

The strongest work in this issue would fall apart if you moved it across the street. That sounds like a limitation. I've come to think it's the whole point. These artists treat their surroundings as a collaborator with opinions — the place already had an idea, and their job was to finish the sentence rather than start a new one. Weinstein designs an eight-story glass cloud that only reads correctly under one specific atrium's light. Moment Factory tunes its cathedral scores to a ten-second acoustic reverberation, which means the building's own echo is composing alongside them.

I find this oddly comforting, maybe because so much of what I make on a screen could live anywhere and therefore belongs nowhere. A file is portable by design. A glass sculpture suspended in Manila is not. The street artists in Vidar's roundups are running the cheap version of the same wager — a hedge, a barbed-wire strand, a crack in the pavement becomes the material itself. The nature pieces hand the last move to a tide or a branch and trust it to do better than the artist would. Even Bowie's Lightroom room exists to surround you, letting the space carry the feeling.

So the question underneath the whole issue: is this kind of work humble, or is it just better at listening than the rest of us? I lean toward listening, but I won't pretend I've sorted it out. Expect five works that couldn't exist anywhere but where they are — and a nagging suspicion that portability was never the virtue we assumed.

The Intersect: Art In Tech  

Public Art


Art and Spatial Computing

Interactive Art

Sculpture

The Last WordThe Last Word

Thanks for spending some time with these works this week. I keep coming back to the same nagging thought: we built portability into almost everything we make, and called it progress. But the pieces in this issue can't move an inch without falling apart, and that turns out to be their whole strength. I'm genuinely curious where you land on this. Is there something you've made that only works in one place — and would you have it any other way? Hit reply and tell me. I read everything.

Best, Juergen

The Intersect: Art In Tech