About 601 Tully
Check out our new website! 601Tully.syr.edu
601 Tully is a center for engaged practice in Syracuse, NY developed by artist and professor Marion Wilson with a rotating collaborative team of 54 students and neighbors and Anda French of French 2Design. It's a site for meaningful exchange between artists, community members, and scholars in the co-production of culture.
601 Tully includes a contemporary art space, a public events space, a bookstore, a teaching garden, and Recess Cafe West.
In 2009, Wilson purchased the condemned two-story home and local drug hub, and throughout five semesters, Wilson's design/build class re-zoned, designed, renovated and now sustains the physical and programmatic aspects of 601 Tully. The collaborative team has consisted of artists, architects, environmentalists, Fowler High School students, Green Train Workforce, neighbors, and the occasional passerby.
601 Tully is made possible by the generous support of the Syracuse University School of Education, The Kauffman Foundation, The Near West Side Initiative, Imagining America, Home HeadQuarters Inc., Say Yes to Education, and National Grid.
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Sunday, February 28, 2010
Wall Partition
This is the variation with just wooden panels and varying transparent and translucent windows.This is the variation with some translucent panels.
This is the partition partially open. This is a simplified version of how it opens for now.
Friday, February 26, 2010
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Learning How to be Congruent with NLP - presentation techniques!
Your ability to be congruent when delivering your message is probably the single most important element when it comes to persuasion and influence.Congruency is when your behaviour (i.e. your voice, tonality, gestures, movement etc) match the words that you are saying.
Even if you threw every other technique, method or approach out of the window and the only thing you did right was to be congruent with your message you would still achieve a higher level of results than the average person.
Many people try to fake congruence; you may have tried this yourself in the past. While this approach may work some times, the majority of the time it will not.
So how do you achieve a high level of congruence when delivering your message?
The answer is simple….
You must believe in what you are saying!
The more conviction you have in the benefits of your message the more persuasive it will be.
Have you ever had a salesperson try and sell you something when it was quite clear they didn’t believe in the benefits of their own product?
Have you ever been on a training course where the trainer is completely disinterested in the material they are teaching?
I would imagine in both cases you were not compelled to learn or take action.
On the other hand, have you ever been on a training course where the trainer thoroughly enjoys and is enthusiastic about the subject they teach.
How much more did you learn during one of these sessions?
A great deal more I’d bet!
Several years ago I was speaking to a friend of mine who worked as a sales assistant for the cosmetic company Clinique. This company sold one of the largest ranges of women’s cosmetic products on the market.One evening when we were discussing her sales technique she revealed something very interesting. She made the point that there were certain products that she personally used herself and there were other ones that she did not use.When she examined her sales record it showed that she had sold an astronomical amount of the products she used herself and very little of the products she didn’t use.
She even admitted herself that she struggled to convince people to buy a product that she, herself, did not believe in.
Put simply, the more you believe in the benefits of your message, the more congruent you will be and hence the more persuasive you will be.
Putting it into Practice : Harness your own Power of Congruence
To help you harness your own natural sense of congruence I have designed the following exercise that I urge you to complete now.
Step1: Pick your OutcomePick one of the situations that you would like to exert more influence in.
Step2: Generate Benefits and ConsequencesNow answer the following questions:
What benefits will the person experience when they are influenced by your message?
How will the person benefit emotionally, physically, financially?
What negative consequences will they experience if they are not influenced by your message?
How would this affect them emotionally, physically, financially?
Step3: Access Feelings of Congruence
When you have finished your list take a look at the first benefit on your list. As you do this, begin to allow an image inside your mind that represents the benefit.
You might even imagine what it’s like to have this benefit fully and completely.
Keep imagining this benefit until you start to feel the feelings that you would get if you are experiencing the benefit.
Notice where the feelings are and allow them to grow.
Now do the same with each of the benefits on the list.
Step4: Access more feelings of Congruence
Now take a look at the consequences.
Sit for a moment and imagine the person loosing out by not taking your advice.
Play a little movie inside your mind of what it would be like if they didn’t become influenced by your message and they experienced the consequences on your list.
As you do those notice the feeling of determination to help them bubble up inside of you.
Step5: Intensify then Deliver
Repeat the exercise 3 times before going to deliver your message. By doing this you will feel a sense of conviction and congruence that will give your message incredible power.
Dynamic Dreamscapes
From Ideation to Revelation
The claims of mystics are neurologically quite astute. No human has ever experienced an objective world. You are, at this moment, having a visionary experience. The world that you see and hear is nothing more than a modification of your consciousness, the physical status of which remains a mystery. Your nervous system sections the undifferentiated buzz of the universe into separate channels of sight, sound, smell, taste, and touch. The sights and sounds and pulsing that you experience at this moment are like different spectra of light thrown forth by the prism of the brain. We really are such stuff as dreams are made of. While this gives rise to a few philosophical questions concerning the foundations of our knowledge, it also offers us a remarkable opportunity to deliberately transform the character of our experience.
There are three pure types of dreams, namely, subjective, physical, and future, and are influenced by past or subjective, physical and spiritual causes. The latter is always prophetic, especially when it leaves a vivid impression on the conscious mind. The former, too, posses an element of warning and prophecy, though the true meaning is hidden in symbols of allegory. To the ancients, dreams were regarded as messages from the gods or as oracles to predict the future. It was widely believed that dreams had the power to solve problems, heal sickness and bring spiritual revelation. In more recent times, dreams became the subject of psychological and scientific investigation. Widely recognized as the product of the unconscious mind, dream activity is now measured in sleep laboratories. Dreams will often depict a surreal landscape that does not obey natural laws. Additionally an estimated 40 percent of reported psychic experiences concern knowing the future in some way, with dreams being the most common way for premonitions (precognitions) to appear. Archetypes have included but are not limited to, “The Persona”, “The Shadow”, “The Anima & Animus”, “The Trickster”, as well as “The Divine Child”, “The Great Mother”, “The Great Father”, etc.
Dreams can be baffling and mysterious. Throughout history dreams have been associated with sacred revelation and prophecy. And so, just as we can wonder what a particular dream means to the dreamer, we can argue about what causes dreams in the first place. Sigmund Freud once called dreams the “royal road to the unconscious.” Freud’s classic text, The Interpretation of Dreams, is an examination of how this unconscious operates. Freud believed that every dream was a wish fulfillment, and he kept this theory till the end, even though he gave up his initial idea that all dreams have sexual content. For Freud, the concept of wish fulfillment didn’t necessarily imply that a pleasure was sought, because a person could just as well have wished to be punished. Nevertheless, this idea of a “secret” wish being masked by a dream remains central to classical Freudian psychoanalysis.
A contemporary understanding of dream interpretation is often associated with the work of Carl Jung. The founder of Analytical Psychology, Jung made the study of dreams and the unconscious his lifework. Jung was a pupil of Freud, and was in agreement about the importance of unconscious processes in the production of dreams. He referred to the process of individuation as the most important task any person can undertake in life – the attainment of harmony between all the aspects of the psyche. Jung saw life in terms of a spiritual journey and, far from being a dangerous melting pot of repressed and forbidden wishes he saw the unconscious as a friend and guide to help us on our way. Applying these principles to his own life he used dreams to help him make decisions, resolve uncertainties and move along his path to self-realization.
The ability of the individual to think is his ability to act on the Universal and bring it into manifestation. Human consciousness consists only in the ability of man to think. Mind itself is believed to be a subtle form of static energy, from which arises the activities called “thought”, which is the dynamic phase of mind. Mind is static energy & thought is dynamic energy – the two phases of the same thing. Thought is therefore the vibratory force formed by converting static mind into dynamic mind.
The keener the sensibilities, the more acute the judgment, the more delicate the taste, the more refined the moral feelings, the more subtle the intelligence, the loftier the aspiration – the purer and more intense are the gratifications which existence yields. The powers, uses, and possibilities of the mind under the new interpretations are incomparably more wonderful than the most extravagant accomplishment, or even dreams of material progress. Thought is energy. Active thought is active energy; concentrated thought is concentrated energy. Thought concentrated on definite purpose becomes power.
The subconscious soul works and makes provision for our benefit, producing only the mature fruit; thus ultimate analysis of thought process shows that the subconscious is the theatre of the most important mental phenomena. It is through the subconscious that Shakespeare must have perceived the great truths which are hidden from the conscious mind of the student; that Phidias fashioned marble and bronze; that Raphael painted Madonnas; and that Beethoven composed symphonies.
Circumstances and environment follow the trend of mental and spiritual progress. As growth follows knowledge, actions follow inspiration, opportunity follows perception – always the spiritual first, then the transformation into the infinite unlimited possibilities of achievement. Create ideals only. Give no thought to external conditions. Make the world within beautiful and opulent and the world without will express and manifest the condition which you have made within. You will come into a realization of your power to create ideals and these ideals will be projected into the world of effect. Thoughts are causes and conditions are effects. Thought is creative and will automatically correlate with its object. This is the Cosmological Law, the Law of Attraction, the Law of Cause & Effect; the recognition and application of this law will determine the beginning and the end.
Induction reasoning is the process of the objective mind by which we compare a number of separate instances with one another until we see the common factor that gives rise to them all. Induction proceeds by comparison of facts. It is this method of studying nature which has resulted in the discovery of a reign of law which has marked an epoch in human progress.
So far as the individual is concerned, the objective, the physical, the visible, is the personal – that which can be cognized by the senses. It consists of body, brain, and nerves. The subjective is the spiritual, the invisible, the impersonal. The impersonal, or spiritual, being a part or one with the source and origin of all power, can necessarily exercise no such choice, but, on the contrary, it has infinite resources at its command. It can and does bring about results by methods concerning which the human or individual mind can have no possible conception.
Bringing a mental image into manifestation requires mental labor. The first step is ideation. It is likewise the most important step, because it is the plan on which you are going to build. It must be solid; it must be permanent. The architect, when he plans a 30 story building, has every line and detail pictured in advance. He can see the end before a single step is taken; so you are to picture in your mind what you want. It will gradually unfold - first the general plan will take shape, as the outline takes form, and then the details. Then is the process of visualization. You must see the picture more and more complete. As the details begin to unfold the ways and means for bringing it into manifestation will develop. Thought will lead to action, action will develop methods, methods will develop circumstances, and finally the third step which is Materialization.
Down through the ages the power and wonder of practitioners of magic have been recorded in song and story. The presence of wizards, witches, sorcerers, shaman, and gurus has always been intriguing and awe inspiring to the average person. These people of power, wrapped in a cloak of secrecy, presented a striking contradiction to the common ways of dealing with the world. The spells and incantations they wove were feared beyond belief and, at the same time, sought constantly for the help they could provide. Whenever these people of power publicly performed their wonders they would both shatter the concepts of reality of that time and place, and present themselves as having something that was beyond learning. In modern time the mantle of the wizard is most often placed upon the dynamic practitioners who exceed in skill, and whose work is so amazing to watch that it moves us with powerful emotions, disbelief, & confusion – Just as with all wizards of ages of the earth whose knowledge was treasured and passed down from sage to sage – so too, does the magic of these wizards also have structure.
The number of verbal descriptions of human experiences is limitless. At the same time, the number of forms (syntax) in which this infinite set of meanings is represented is highly restricted - has structure –and therefore, may be described by a set of rules. To deny a magical quality or to simply label it as talent, intuition, or genius is to limit one’s own potential. This does not question the magical quality of our experience, but rather shows that this magic which is performed – like other complex human activities such as painting, composing music, or advancing science – has structure and is, therefore, learnable, given the appropriate resources. Everyone has the ability to claim these dynamic qualities.
Consider the human receptor systems: sight, hearing, touch, taste, and smell. There are physical phenomena which lie outside the limits of these five accepted sensory channels. For example, sound waves either below 20 cycles per second or above 20,000 cycles per second cannot be detected by human beings. Yet these physical phenomena are structurally the same as the physical waves which fall between these limiting figures: the physical waves which we call sound. In the human visual system, we are able to detect wave forms only between 380 and 680 mille-microns. Wave forms above or below these figures are not detectable by the human eye. Again, we perceive only a portion of a continuous physical phenomenon as determined by our genetically given neurological limitations. Thus, one way in which our models of the world will necessarily differ from the world itself is that our nervous system systematically manages whole portions of the real world. This reduces the range of possible human experiences as well as introducing differences between what is actually going on in the world and our experience of it. Our nervous system, then, initially determined genetically, constitutes the first set of filters which distinguish the world - the territory-from our representations of the world-the map.
In addition to the above mentioned neurological constraints, a second way in which our experience of the world differs from the world itself is through a set of social constraints. We refer to these as social genetic factors. These social genetics are the categories to which we are subject as members of a social system: our language, accepted ways of perceiving, and all the socially agreed upon fictions. A third way that we experience the world can differ through individual constraints. These are representations we create based upon our unique personal history. The uncommon ways each of us represents the world will constitute a set of interests, habits, likes, dislikes, and rules for behavior which are distinctly our own.
The most pervasive paradox of the human condition which we see is that the processes which allow us to survive, grow, change, and experience joy are the same processes which allow us to maintain a model of the world – our ability to manipulate symbols, that is, to create models. So the processes which allow us to accomplish the most extraordinary and unique human activities are the same processes which block our further growth if we commit the error of mistaking the model for the reality. We can identify three general mechanisms by which we do this: Generalization, Deletion, and Distortion.
Generalization is the process by which elements or pieces of a person’s model become detached from their original experience and come to represent the entire category of which the experience is an example. Deletion is a process by which we selectively pay attention to certain dimensions of our experience and exclude others. Distortion is the process which allows us to make shifts in our experience of sensory data. Fantasy for example, allows us to prepare for experiences which we may have before they occur. People will distort present reality when rehearsing a speech which they will later present. It is this process which has made possible all the artistic creations which we as humans have produced. A sky as represented in a painting by Van Gogh is possible only as Van Gogh was able to distort his perception of the time place in which he was located at the moment of his creation.
The Meta-model presented is inspired by the formal model developed in transformational linguistics. As people communicate their models of the world they do it in Surface Structures. The way a person uses language to communicate the model/representation is subject to the universal processes of human modeling such as deletion. The Surface Structure itself is a representation of the full linguistic representation from which it is derived – the Deep Structure. The guide to inducing change is a result of the effect of systematically applying two techniques:
1) Recovery of pieces removed by the deletion transformations from the Deep Structure.
2) Transformation of nominalizations back into process words they were derived from – the Deep Structure.
The intuitions which are represented in the transformational model of language are special cases of these three principles; for example, sentences are Surface Structures which have no expressed subject are the examples of the process of deletion. To develop an image of the model of another person’s communication, the missing piece has to be restored; the expression has to be reconnected with its source – its fullest representation. In the case of Surface Structure, its source and fullest representation is the Deep Structure. In the case to the Deep Structure, the individual’s experiences are the source for the representation. While Deep Structure is the fullest linguistic representation, it is derived from a fuller, richer source – the sum total of one’s experiences.
peter schjeldahl writes the art reviews for New Yorker
Why Artists Make the Worst Students© Peter Schjeldahl, 1998
What Peter says about artists is true of most talented and gifted people as students, and his insights offer an instructive perspective for the collaborative knowledge development and learning environment.
I teach an art seminar for seniors at Harvard. One peculiarity of my own education is that I barely have any. I'm one of those '60s dropouts you read about, and I never took an art course in my life. This background made me incredibly nervous about teaching, but it has gone all right.
I'm fascinated by the problem of teaching artists in college, because, What is an artist? An artist, in my experience, is a man or woman of unusual talent and peculiar, highly individual sensibility, with an independent and probably contrarian mind, driven by mysterious passions for which another word is neurosis. In getting from point A to point B, the neurotic goes via point Q. It's in that roundabout that people are either completely crippled and hopeless in life, or highly creative.
The artist is a strange being. I think it's safe to say that a real artist is conscious of having a personal singularity that is partly a blessing and partly a curse. An artist enjoys and suffers from isolation. As solitude, isolation can nurture. It can also destroy.
Artists are people who are subject to irrational convictions of the sacred. Baudelaire said that an artist is a child who has acquired adult capacities and discipline. Art education should help build those capacities and that discipline without messing over the child. By child, I do not mean childish behavior -- I mean the irrational conviction of the sacred.
Everything that would begin to make somebody a good student would tend to make him or her a poor artist, and vice versa. I'm well aware of this as a problem -- particularly at Harvard, because at Harvard, the students are, by definition, the best in the world. That's who they select. It's certainly a luxury for teaching. The students can actually all write, which is astounding. One of my fellow teachers there once said, "It's amazing, these kids. You can throw the stick as far as you want to in the swamp, and they'll bring it back every time." But along with that comes a cageyness and an all-too-ready ability to beguile teachers.
I have what I call a "gang theory" of education. All gangs are formed by individuals who, for one reason or another, are misfits, wander to the margin by themselves, discover each other, discover other people like themselves. They bond together. If all they have in common is that alienation, they're a very dangerous group of kids. But if they have some aspiration in common, they can be intensely creative. In a way, everybody does this growing up. Every age group is a cohort -- particularly in our culture, which is intensely generational. When we grow up, we tend to trust only those who share our exact historic and cultural period, who watch the same television shows with the same attitudes. Childhood, for everyone, is more than formative. It's a trove of spiritual material for a lifetime. But this is especially true of artists.
Gang members are extremely competitive, but not with each other. They pool their resources, their information, their knowledge, and attack the world. Teams work this way, too, but I like the concept of the gang because, with art, there has to be an element of condoned anarchy. You can't measure creative development by criteria that are like crisply executed football plays. Coaching a gang, it seems to me, one must concede the role of judging individual worth to the group.
In a gang -- of art students, say -- everybody knows without saying who is the best. It's very primitive, very hierarchical, in the way wild animals are hierarchical. Everyone knows who's best, who's second best. There's a lot of doubt about who's third best, because everybody else thinks they're third best. Except for one person who is absolutely hopeless. This person, as a mascot and scapegoat, is cherished by everyone.
The problem is: How do you nurture a gang in academe? I don't think academia should take much responsibility for this. A college education is, and should be, people wanting typical careers in the structure of the world. Education must not distort itself in service to the tiny minority of narcissistic and ungrateful misfits who are, or might be, artists.
What I want to know from students, and I ask them right away, is, What do you want? I don't care what it is. I want to help you get it. If you don't know what you want, that's normal at your age. And I will feel your pain -- up to a point. But if you don't know what you want past a certain point, then we're just chattering, we're wasting the taxpayers' or your parents' money. This is fine. It happens all the time. But it's depressing.
My aim is to help kids realize that they're artists already, or that maybe they don't really want to do it, which is more than fine. They've saved themselves a lot of grief, and they can get on with their lives. I tell them that I'm not interested in educating their minds, I'm interested in sophisticating them, which is different. Sophistication is knowledge that's acquired in the course of having a purpose. You know why you want the information at the moment that you put your hand on it. You're not just storing it up for a rainy day.
And what are you learning about in my seminar? You're learning about the course of art, the course of society, the course of the world, the course of your life. You are joining a conversation. You do not prepare to join a conversation. You come up to the edge of it and listen and kind of get the beat, then you jump in. And maybe if you jump in too soon, everyone's going to give you a look and you'll slink off and come back later. It's to get this conversation going among a group of people, when they're students -- that's what I'd like to be able to do. It's a very messy process.
Aspects of sophistication. Love and style. Spirituality and street smarts. Why do you need street smarts? Shrewdness? Toughness? It's to protect something soft that is going to be in danger if it's exposed at the wrong time and place. It's to protect a soul. But to protect your soul, you have to have one to start with. There's nothing that can be done about that in a seminar.
The role of the teacher in gang theory is to throw red meat through the bars of their cage. My particular expertise is savviness about the New York art world, so that's what I share. With another teacher, it would be something else. There's nothing innately relevant or innately irrelevant to an artist. If their minds and spirits can't put the stuff in order, then they're not artists. Very often the flashiest, most seemingly talented person turns out to be not an artist at all, and some hopeless klutz ends up being Jackson Pollock.
A lot of education is like teaching marching; I try to make it more like dancing. Education is this funny thing. You deal for several years with organized information, and then you go out into the world and you never see any of that ever again. There's no more organized information. I'm trying to establish within my seminars disorganized information, which students can start practicing their moves on.
Peter Schjeldahl, Art Critic for The New YorkerPosted: February 13, 1999
Why Artists Make the Worst Students© Peter Schjeldahl, 1998
Editor's Note: Peter's speech at a conference on Liberal Arts and the Education of Artists was brought to my attention by one of our readers when it was transcribed and published in The Chronicle of Higher Education, 11/27/98. What Peter says about artists is true of most talented and gifted people as students, and his insights offer an instructive perspective for the collaborative knowledge development and learning environment.
Peter Schjeldahl, Art Critic for The New Yorker
Mindworks - an introduction to NLP
Brainstorming Logo/Motif/Construction Sign Ideas
Bucky Bar
The Bucky Bar via dezeen.
Last week Amsterdam studios DUS Architecten and Studio for Unsolicited Architecture built a dome of umbrellas around a lamp post in Rotterdam and held a party under it.
Check this out, something to think about in oh so many ways...
Monday, February 22, 2010
Sunday, February 21, 2010
Article
Maltzan makes a series of bold cuts through other parts of the building, creating surprising visual connections to the world outside. A counter in the communal kitchen, for example, lines up with a slot that runs diagonally through the entire ground floor, framing views of the freeway’s underbelly on one end and back toward Skid Row on the other.
The most unexpected of these views is in the laundry and community room on the third floor. Conceived as the building’s domestic heart, the room overlooks a section of the elevated freeway through a long horizontal window. The window is made of acoustical glass, so that even at midday the noise is reduced to a soft hum. But it is so close to the passing cars that at rush hour, when traffic is barely moving, tenants and drivers can make direct and prolonged eye contact. Late at night, when the freeway is nearly empty, the cars flow by in a dreamy rhythm.
It’s a witty, even poetic moment, one that captures the dueling essences of Los Angeles: the promise of freedom and opportunity embodied by its freeways and the degree to which that promise has turned out to be a fantasy.
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Friday, February 19, 2010
here is a combined industrial design/architecture/landscape architecture class hosting a listening session to hear about food systems issues as they relate to stakeholders from 7 sectors of the food system this Friday 12-2 pm in the auditorium of the SU Warehouse, downtown. I spoke with Matt Potteiger, ESF Landscape Architecture professor and he said your group is more than welcome to attend.
Participants include:A representative from Grinestone Farm, a local organic farm 35 minutes north of Syracuse
A representative of Syracuse Grows
A representative from the Near Westside Initiative talking about plans for an urban greenhouse and farm
A rep from a local soup kitchen
A rep from the CNY Regional Farmers’ Market
A rep from Madison County’s Bounty Program and the Coordinator of Agricultural Economic Development
A rep from the board of the Mobile Market and a Director of Senior Nutrition Services for Onondaga County
Participants have been asked to address the following questions:
- What is the mission of your organization?
- Do you rely specifically on particular funding sources for your work, and if so, what are your funding cycles and do these impact your work?
- What are your long-term goals within your organization's mission?
- Given the realities of everyday life, what do you find that you actually do most of the time if different than these goals?
- What it is that you wish you could do; what might be your vision statement?
- What gaps do you see in the regional food system from your organization's point of view?
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Monday, February 15, 2010
The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces
Part 1 of 6:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S2GfOhFZkY8
Paul Coudamy
ZMIK
http://www.zmik.ch/
Bathroom applique?
http://www.dezeen.com/2010/02/07/nafi-by-zmik/#more-63649
Zoning Board Photos
Wayne's Collages from the Fall
Thursday, February 11, 2010
121 ethiopia
http://www.121ethiopia.org/index.html
talking about artist doing education in a community.
this is an fundation host by Olafur Eliasson and his wife.
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Sunday, February 7, 2010
Friday, February 5, 2010
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Re-thinking the south facade
I'm thinking that the BZAs "interest" is our south facade solution is an opportunity to really blow open the conversation again. What if we re-consider that wall as a "painting" instead - think of Lisa Sigal's work - viewed here or Daniel Buren from early in the semester and our earlier stripe solutions. If they want us to "reflect" the character of the neighborhood what if we made a composite painting/artwork of our surrounding neighbors colorful houses on our south facade. BTW if we call it art - it may not have the same guidelines of site review.