I just wanted to say that I visited the show this Sunday and I thought it
was pretty good, the way it was all set-up and put together must of taken
ages - you folks are obsessed I think, I just wish there were other places
in London doing similar things. Why is the rest of London showing such dull
traditional art?

Anyway, I'm sorry that I could not make it on Saturday. By the look of
things it was a great afternoon. I'm not in London at the moment I am now in
Bristol and may visit the cubecinema if I have time. Will try to catch the
furtherfield crew another time...

karen

On Mon, Jun 15, 2009 at 2:06 PM, marc garrett <[email protected]
> wrote:

> RE: Feral Trade Café Opening.
>
> A warm thank you from the Furtherfield/HTTP Gallery crew and Kate Rich,
> to all those who managed to make it to the Feral Trade Café Opening this
> Saturday. The official time was for 4 - 7pm, but it got so busy with a
> constant influx of people that it went on until 8pm. We had over 80
> visitors through the afternoon till early evening, the setting was
> convivial and the sun was shining.
>
> For those who are still interested in visiting it will be open until 2nd
> Aug - Fri, Sat & Sun, 12 - 5pm.
>
> ----------------------------->
>
> An art exhibition that is also a working café, Feral Trade Café opens at
> HTTP Gallery for 8 weeks during Summer 2009. Serving food and drink
> traded over social networks, Feral Trade Café by artist Kate Rich (AU)
> provides a convivial setting from which to contemplate broader changes
> to our climate and economies, where conventional supply chains (for food
> delivery and cultural funding) could go belly up.
>
> The term 'feral' denotes the project's wilful wildness (as in pigeons)
> as opposed to romantic or nature-wildness (wolves): it offers
> street-wise survival tactics for urban environments. Since the first
> registered Feral Trade import of 30kg of coffee direct from the growers
> in El Salvador to the Cube Microplex in Bristol in 2003, Kate Rich has
> used social networks to traffic edible produce from around the world.
> Feral Trade participants become mules, carrying food items with them on
> trips they would have taken anyway and delivering them to depots
> (usually friends’ and colleagues’ flats or workplaces) in the growing
> network.
>
> more info about the show & how to get there:
> http://www.http.uk.net/exhibitions/FeralTradeCafe/index.shtml
> _______________________________________________
> NetBehaviour mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour
_______________________________________________
NetBehaviour mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour

Reply via email to