Caroline Woolard
making work and doing researchArchive for antigravity
Joost Conijn

Joost Conijn, Iron and Video
The motto is: do it. Go for it completely: a plan, a journey, a film. Inspired, deliberately uninhibited. Joost Conijn sets up a gate in the desert that opens automatically. Takes off in a plane that he built himself. Travels through Russia in a wood-powered car made of wood, all the way to the Chernobyl zone. Films the neighbourhood kids for a year, capturing their life on the fringes of society. Improves his plane and then crashes it. Cycles through the Moroccan Rif Mountains with two friends; they use their hands to communicate with one another about what’s going on in the world. He moves through life with an independent attitude and plays the big game of art. With bravura, and yet totally straight.
http://www.joostconijn.org/index2.php
Swing EVERYWHERE
…………….Flying lessons…… Gravitation is a phenomenon through which all objects attract each other. Flight is the process by which an object achieves sustained movement through the air by aerodynamically generating lift, aerostatically using buoyancy, or in movement beyond earth’s atmosphere, in the case of spaceflight………………………
The quest for the horizon is a bed, an unreachable, horizontal dreamland of vacation islands where water and sky touch freely. Only sailors and sunset interrupt this line of blue against blue with myth and poetry. The vertical reach of cities, like the upright character of waking life, slaps neighborhoods awake in construction’s eternal quest for clouds: vacancies appear only upwards, above and on top. Lonely horizons are levitating bodies in beds, beds filled mostly by ones not twos. City buildings stand in crowds barred by streets, with so many not-slanted, flat roofs collecting and evaporating because where would the water go? The anonymous intimacy of subway mornings with sleeping fists gathered, gripping, piled on totem-pole-of-hands railings. I want to make eye contact.
Swing on the Subway
see it on YouTube
Here is my swing for the subway, disguised as a bag. With 1000 mesh “L-train grey” cordura, webbing, sliders, hooks, velcro, and snaps, I constructed a bag using industrial sewing machines. The bag transforms from a backpack, handbag, or book bag of 11×4x12 to a swing of 11×24x2 with adjustable (25″ to 50″max) straps that hook around the handrail of the subway.


