projects
00-08 american dreams
08 PS4
08 Untitled
07 (d)3
07 fineArtOfWar
07 calling america
07 dear Internet
07 FMA
06 oneSmallStep
06 BHM@WM
06 spacer.gif{ART}
04 e Pluribus Unum
04 dissension Convention
04 molotov remix
02-04 war-product-war
05 white flag
05 Untitled '83
04 CO.dependency
04 54321
04 yourself in the mirror
04 Uconnect
02-04 Indymedia Film Series
02-03 Contextin' Art
03 enduring freedom v.3
02 enduring freedom v.1
01-03 an american dream
01-03 man walks on moon
00 security guard
00 savings and values
00 bad dreams
00 reality tv
00 communications
00 surrounded by friends
00 a mythology of boys and girls
sound
WITCHin Flux
electroacoustic Music. Vol. IX
recomposition
gutHead
betweenStations
oneNightWithYou
text
state of Art - A Conversation with G.H. Hovagimyan
the Presence of Absence: a conversation with Charles Cohen
some thoughts on computer security and the living dead
the art of making protest art
mediations
warProductWar, review
stock questions
american dreams, review
curating
09 agriART
02-04 Indymedia Film Series
02-03 Contextin' Art
proposals
09 DYRS youth center (.doc)
08 The Peace Lily Project (.doc)
07 the People's Tours
07 50 Years Later
06 NMCIA
05 reWater
04 peace of mind: 3 person getaway
04 the free market survival kit
04 how america changed the world

ReWater: a study in Perverse Osmosis
Rejected proposal for The Drop @ Exit Art by Ryan Griffis and Mark Cooley
MATERIALS
Approximately 280 1/2 Liter bottles of Dasani™ drinking water bottles
filled with urine and relabeled, retail shelving, map and data chart.
DESCRIPTION
Bottled water companies are becoming notorious for siphoning off public
ground and tap water supplies and offering it back to the public at
a huge profit. Bottled water companies have also become incredibly savvy at convincing the public that their products are cleaner, fresher and healthier than water from the tap even though federal regulation of bottled water falls under the Food and Drug Administration which has much looser regulation over contaminants
than the EPA (which overlooks tap water sources) and provides no specific requirements-such as proximity to industrial facilities, underground storage tanks or dumps-for bottled water sources.
Dasani™ bottled drinking water, a Coca-Cola™ product, is bottled from
municipal tap sources in the location of its bottling plants, "enhanced
with minerals for a pure, fresh taste," transported great distances
and sold back to the public at three times the cost of gasoline, or
about one thousand times what the public pays for tap water.
Using the "replacement approach" to body hydration, the artists ryan
griffis and mark cooley will replenish lost precious bodily fluids by
drinking 2.5 liters of Dasani™ bottled drinking water per day of the
exhibition The Drop at Exit Art. The artists will consume all of their
fluid supply (setting aside the 20% average fluid intake from food) by
consuming only Dasani™. The 2.5 liters will replace the estimated 1.5
liters of water loss from urine and an additional liter of water loss a
day through breathing, sweating and bowel movements.
On a daily basis the artists will collect their urine, minus 20% gained
from food intake, in previously consumed Dasani™ bottles, seal them,
alter the label, and mail them to Exit Art, NY, where they will be
displayed in a fashion reminiscent of supermarket product display,
warholian nightmare and conceptual art. Bottles will arrive
(approximately 8 per day) at the gallery throughout the course of the
exhibition and be added to the display. Accompanying the bottles will
be a digital map (either projected or displayed on a wall mounted
monitor) tracing the shipping route from Dasani™ bottling plants (like
the one in Queens, NY) to the points of purchase in Illinois and
Virginia, and from the artist's homes to Exit Art. A mix of real-time
and pre-constructed data will accent the map, visualizing the mundane
movement of the water (and its byproduct), the inflated cost of bodily
secretions, global corporate maneuvers, and the developing crisis of
sustainable water sources.
The piece will tell a story of appropriated resources, bodily
functions, pursuit of profit, dehydration and rehydration (of machines
and bodies), daily routine, and interstate commerce.
ARTIST'S WEBSITES
Ryan Griffis - http://www.yougenics.net/griffis
Mark Cooley - http://www.flawedart.net
SOME WATER RESOURCES
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines03/1209-10.htm
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/story/0,3604,1174127,00.html
http://www.newstarget.com/001028.html
http://www.sierraclub.org/cac/water/bottled_water

