Form + Content Gallery

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Form + Content Gallery

Form + Content Gallery is an artist owned and operated gallery in the North Loop area of downtown Minneapolis.

  • Hello All!
Tomorrow is Thursday, which means Form + Content Gallery is open from 12pm-6pm, which also means that if you haven’t stopped by to check out the artifacts on display from The Excavation of Zone 5 that you should come by and take a gander. 
The Excavation of Zone 5 is on view until August 20th.  Gallery hours are Thursday - Saturday 12pm-6pm.
Our gallery sitters love visitors!  So drop in and peruse the artifacts!

    Hello All!

    Tomorrow is Thursday, which means Form + Content Gallery is open from 12pm-6pm, which also means that if you haven’t stopped by to check out the artifacts on display from The Excavation of Zone 5 that you should come by and take a gander. 

    The Excavation of Zone 5 is on view until August 20th.  Gallery hours are Thursday - Saturday 12pm-6pm.

    Our gallery sitters love visitors!  So drop in and peruse the artifacts!

    Tagged: Jay H. Isenberg, AIA the department of public design Form and Content Gallery form and content Council of Architects gallery art Architecture minnesota minneapolis Lynda Monick-Isenberg

    Posted on July 20, 2011

  •  
If you didn’t make it to the opening of The Excavation of Zone 5 at Form+Content Gallery on Saturday, check out photos from the opening on the Form + Content Facebook page and make sure to stop by the gallery in your free time to  peruse the artifacts.  The show is on view until August 20th.  Gallery  hours: Thurs-Sat 12pm-6pm.

    If you didn’t make it to the opening of The Excavation of Zone 5 at Form+Content Gallery on Saturday, check out photos from the opening on the Form + Content Facebook page and make sure to stop by the gallery in your free time to peruse the artifacts. The show is on view until August 20th. Gallery hours: Thurs-Sat 12pm-6pm.

    Tagged: Jay H. Isenberg, AIA form and content deparment of public design Council of Architects art Architecture gallery Lynda Monick-Isenberg minneapolis minnesota

    Posted on July 18, 2011 with 2 notes

  • Response to Hacking/Unauthorized image
Two recent statements appearing on the project website, issued ostensibly from its director have been deemed by the Department to be the work of anonymous hackers with no group claiming responsibility.   The statements in question were issued,  “…in response to the growing  demand to explain what is happening in Zone 5”.   In response the  Department labeled the statements, “mundane” and admitted that it’s  website had been recently hacked but that it had regained control of its  site.  The Department has issued no further statements, but has chosen  to publish the two insertions in their entirety with no accompanied  images at this time.Statement #1:“Several architects dressed in black joined together to do something   that would positively impact their surroundings, but were unable to   jointly determine what that might be until given the keys to a gallery.    The group met for weeks in a vacant studio space, quickly dubbed “Zone   5”, where they gathered while  assembling the discarded and unused  material and detritus of their  profession. Talking loudly and  simultaneously they began a furious  process of “making” that became the  focus for their creative energy and  passion for connecting,  discussing, arguing and laughing.” -End of statement

    Response to Hacking/Unauthorized image

    Two recent statements appearing on the project website, issued ostensibly from its director have been deemed by the Department to be the work of anonymous hackers with no group claiming responsibility. 

    The statements in question were issued,  “…in response to the growing demand to explain what is happening in Zone 5”.   In response the Department labeled the statements, “mundane” and admitted that it’s website had been recently hacked but that it had regained control of its site.  The Department has issued no further statements, but has chosen to publish the two insertions in their entirety with no accompanied images at this time.

    Statement #1:
    “Several architects dressed in black joined together to do something that would positively impact their surroundings, but were unable to jointly determine what that might be until given the keys to a gallery.  The group met for weeks in a vacant studio space, quickly dubbed “Zone 5”, where they gathered while assembling the discarded and unused material and detritus of their profession. Talking loudly and simultaneously they began a furious process of “making” that became the focus for their creative energy and passion for connecting, discussing, arguing and laughing.”
    -End of statement

    Tagged: Jay H. Isenberg, AIA the department of public design form and content Council of Architects gallery art Architecture minnesota minneapolis Lynda Monick-Isenberg

    Posted on July 15, 2011

    Source: thedepartmentofpublicdesign.blogspot.com

  • They say herding cats is difficult. Try managing it with ten architects. Fiction is more plausible than this reality.

    The Department of Public Design

    Tagged: Jay H. Isenberg, AIA form and content the department of public design Council of Architects gallery art Architecture minnesota minneapolis Lynda Monick-Isenberg

    Posted on July 13, 2011 with 1 note

  • An Exhibition of reAssembly

    The Director of the Department of Public Design released preliminary images of the work undertaken by the Council of Architects in the reAssembly of Zone 5.

    Tagged: ,m Jay H. Isenberg, AIA form and content the department of public design Architecture art gallery Council of Architects minnesota minneapolis Lynda Monick-Isenberg

    Posted on July 13, 2011

    Source: thedepartmentofpublicdesign.blogspot.com

  • From the Department of Public Design RE: Found objects, materials and arcane constructions  Council of Architects MEMO From:  Member Roehr This project has grown out of a conversation amongst a specific group of  working architects interested in exploring new ways of working together  that might leverage their particular (sometimes peculiar) skills and  collective energy to new and unforeseen ends.  The project itself is an  effort to tease out that ever mystifying and primal relationship between  things and meaning - how meaning imbues a thing; how a thing embodies  meaning.  This is a perennial question in our practice, and the question  that holds the potential to open architecture well beyond itself.  As a  group effort, the project has also become an exploration of the  relationship between the realms of highly personal and collective  meaning.  It has taken a group of people who are typically engaged in  the controlled, detailed, orchestrated manipulation of the environment  into a highly ambiguous situation in which the very ground rules for  what we are doing together are in constant flux and negotiation, pushing  everyone beyond their comfort zone.  The conversation is fundamentally  unstable, and is constantly going meta; the danger is to tumble through  an infinite regress of reflection about what we are trying to achieve.   But that is also the thrill, and cuts to the heart of the balance we are  always seeking as architects and artists, and presumably as humans - a  provisional equilibrium between order and chaos - an equilibrium that  momentarily suspends negotiation and allows us to act.  The resulting  artifact will be less an artwork or installation per se, and more the  record of this process, manipulated to highlight and clarify itself.

    From the Department of Public Design
    RE: Found objects, materials and arcane constructions

    Council of Architects MEMO
    From:  Member Roehr

    This project has grown out of a conversation amongst a specific group of working architects interested in exploring new ways of working together that might leverage their particular (sometimes peculiar) skills and collective energy to new and unforeseen ends.  The project itself is an effort to tease out that ever mystifying and primal relationship between things and meaning - how meaning imbues a thing; how a thing embodies meaning.  This is a perennial question in our practice, and the question that holds the potential to open architecture well beyond itself.  As a group effort, the project has also become an exploration of the relationship between the realms of highly personal and collective meaning.  It has taken a group of people who are typically engaged in the controlled, detailed, orchestrated manipulation of the environment into a highly ambiguous situation in which the very ground rules for what we are doing together are in constant flux and negotiation, pushing everyone beyond their comfort zone.  The conversation is fundamentally unstable, and is constantly going meta; the danger is to tumble through an infinite regress of reflection about what we are trying to achieve.  But that is also the thrill, and cuts to the heart of the balance we are always seeking as architects and artists, and presumably as humans - a provisional equilibrium between order and chaos - an equilibrium that momentarily suspends negotiation and allows us to act.  The resulting artifact will be less an artwork or installation per se, and more the record of this process, manipulated to highlight and clarify itself.

    Tagged: Jay H. Isenberg, AIA the department of public design form and content gallery Council of Architects art Architecture Lynda Monick-Isenberg minnesota minneapolis

    Posted on July 13, 2011 with 2 notes

    Source: thedepartmentofpublicdesign.blogspot.com

  • Guardians in Red series (detail). Part of the assemblage of images “excavated from Zone 5,” included as part of the intriguingly oblique promos for the upcoming exhibition of reassembly by the so-called Department of Public Design, at Form+Content Gallery in Minneapolis (opening reception, July 16, 6 pm).

    Guardians in Red series (detail). Part of the assemblage of images “excavated from Zone 5,” included as part of the intriguingly oblique promos for the upcoming exhibition of reassembly by the so-called Department of Public Design, at Form+Content Gallery in Minneapolis (opening reception, July 16, 6 pm).

    Tagged: Jay H. Isenberg, AIA form and content the department of public design excavation of zone 5 guardians in red Lynda Monick-Isenberg Architecture art gallery minneapolis minnesota

    Posted on July 13, 2011 with 1 note

    Source: mnartists.org

  • Excavation of Zone 5
The Department of Public Design  has assembled an ambiguous assortment of seemin…gly  unrelated objects recently uncovered in Zone 5. These objects have been  assessed by the Council of Architects to determine their nature,  origin, and meaning.  The Council has attempted to assemble these  objects in order to apprise their adherence to the Department’s current  Standards of Dogma for the public domain.The Council’s findings  will be on display July 14-August 20 at Form + Content Gallery in  Minneapolis, MN.  The public is invited to view this presentation and  encouraged to respond with alternate explanations and interpretations  for consideration by the Council, after which a final report will be  prepared for the Department’s purview.While the Department  cannot be reached in any manner for information or questioning, the  findings of this ongoing investigation can be found at the a designated  project website@http://thedepartmentofpublicde​sign.blogspot.com/

    Excavation of Zone 5

    The Department of Public Design has assembled an ambiguous assortment of seemin…gly unrelated objects recently uncovered in Zone 5. These objects have been assessed by the Council of Architects to determine their nature, origin, and meaning. The Council has attempted to assemble these objects in order to apprise their adherence to the Department’s current Standards of Dogma for the public domain.

    The Council’s findings will be on display July 14-August 20 at Form + Content Gallery in Minneapolis, MN. The public is invited to view this presentation and encouraged to respond with alternate explanations and interpretations for consideration by the Council, after which a final report will be prepared for the Department’s purview.

    While the Department cannot be reached in any manner for information or questioning, the findings of this ongoing investigation can be found at the a designated project website@

    http://thedepartmentofpublicde​sign.blogspot.com/

    Tagged: Jay H. Isenberg, AIA form and content department of public design excavation of zone 5 architecture art gallery Lynda Monick-Isenberg Council of Architects

    Posted on July 11, 2011 with 1 note

    Source: thedepartmentofpublicde​sign.blogspot.com

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