George Ferrandi
George Ferrandi is an American artist primarily known for her performance, installation and participatory projects that address issues of vulnerability, impermanence, fallibility and spectacle, often through experimental approaches to narrative. Her work is known for employing a unique humor and deep sense of humanity.
In 2011, Ferrandi founded the studio program and art gallery Wayfarers in Bushwick, Brooklyn, New York.
Ferrandi’s works operate at the intersections of performance, sculpture, and theater. She uses staged and improvised interventions to explore her interests in how gestures alter perception of space and how narrative is used as a tool to sculpt time.
Art
Documenta 15 (2022)
Ferrandi's Jump!Star: Simmering, a Vienna-based Constellate that moved online at the beginning of the pandemic, was featured in Documenta 15 in a presentation by Brunnenpassage at Instituto Internacional de Artivismo "Hannah Arendt." A rope woven by Constellate participants from different parts of the world during lockdown served as the setting for the workshop as well as a materialized example of collaborative approaches in the arts.George’s Lovely Variety (2021)
Since January 2021, Ferrandi has been publishing George’s Lovely Variety, a subscription-based monthly project usually in the form of newspaper of drawings and writings delivered to readers through the USPS.Jump!Star (2015)
Since 2015, Ferrandi has been developing Jump!Star, an initiative that unites communities, scientists, artists and arts organizations in researching and ritualizing how future generations might celebrate the end of Polaris’ reign as Earth’s North Star. The project takes the form of a series of socially engaged, science-centered projects called “Constellates” that use cultural imagination as raw material. Ferrandi works with a core team of collaborators including artist Alan Calpe, musicians Mirah, Jee Young Sim and Jherek Bischoff, scientists Jana Grcevich and Sonali McDermid, and ethnomusicologist Dina Bennet.Constellates have been developed with communities around the US through Harvester Arts, Wichita State University, University of Mary Washington, Penn State, and Wheaton College and in Europe through Brunnenpassage and the Weltmuseum Wien.
Jump!Star is named in honor of astronomer Annie Jump Cannon, the American scientist credited with establishing the contemporary star classification system.
Synchronized Sound Plays
Ferrandi’s “Synchronized Sound Plays” are an ongoing series of live mediations performed around a table for and with small audiences. Participants wear headsets and are each hearing different but carefully synchronized stories and instructions, so that they become actors in the play, as well as audience members. Throughout, Ferrandi places and removes objects on the table in front of them that shape each listener’s narrative differently, depending on which story they are hearing. The experience is performed with rotating audiences many times over the course of the exhibition.“OK. don’t look at the stranger…” premiered in 2012 at Wayfarers in Brooklyn for rotating audiences of two. “let me get this out of your way….” was developed and premiered at Harvester Arts in Wichita, Kansas, in 2014 for rotating audiences of two. Star!Star!Star!Circle premiered in 2015 on the roof of the International House of Japan in Tokyo and was performed in Japanese and English for rotating audiences of eight.