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Rhona Byrne

Stop the world I want to get off

This play is a reflection on the (im)possibility of accepting diversity and the other. The fragmented body of the neoplasm—the fruit of unstable conditions—overcomes barriers, loves and denies itself and others, wanders around, forgetting its profession. It frequently and with pleasure divides, goes through dangerous palpation, questions the possibility of contact with the experience of the other. Poorly brought up but very successful, it invites us to a trans-species transition.

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Rhona Byrne makes sculptures, films, context-specific installations, collaborative event-based projects, and books. Her work explores and engages with multi-layered surfaces and the workings of the built environment and navigates intangible and transient layers of physical, mental, and social space. In developing this series of works, Byrne examines the amusement park industry and in particular wooden roller coasters, their physical experience, and the people who love them. Prompted by an ongoing fascination with how these man-made places and structures came about and how they can affect emotional states and alter our involvement with our environment, Byrne went about visiting theme parks, roller coaster designers, and manufacturers in Pennsylvania.

Pennsylvania is home to more amusement parks and roller coasters than any other state. Pittsburgh’s main park, Kennywood, is a traditional amusement park opened in 1898 by the Monongahela Street Railway Company at a time when technological innovations that initially applied to mills, factories, and railroads found their way to places of play and recreation connecting humans to the dynamism of technology in a very different way. During her explorations, she met with the American Coaster Enthusiasts Club (ACE). United by a common interest, ACE (founded in 1978) is the world’s largest ride enthusiast organization and has nearly 7,000 members across the U.S.

A number of works were developed with members of this club. During the off-season, many rides at Kennywood Park undergo annual care and maintenance and some of the very old wooden sections require replacement. The generous management at Kennywood allowed Byrne to procure a number of the older wooden sections from ‘The Racer’. Byrne’s fourth work in this exhibition, Stop the world I want to get off, is a sculptural work made from this reconstituted material. It offers a pathway through the gallery space, a slower trajectory through the world and vantage point to other places, inviting us to experience imaginary mental and perceptual spaces as much as a shared physical one.

Rhona Byrne would like to give special thanks to Duncan Horner, Jeff Filicko (Kennywood PR), Chris Gray (Great Coaster International), Tom Reddy (Philadelphia Toboggan Coaster Inc.), and to the members of the American Coaster Enthusiasts and in particular the ‘Coaster Choir’ ACE members; Bill Linkenheimer, Lee Ann Draud, Lisa M Corbly, Linda Spar, Maggie Altman, Chris Grella, Sarah Windisch, Erik Frankenstein, David Hahner, Jim Futrell, Linda Cramer, Bernie Cramel, and ACE members interviewed at East Coaster for the work ACE; Juan Dominguez, Mike Betzlere, Chris Smilek, Stephen O’Donnell, Dave Altman, Derek Shaw, Robert Derman, Lee Ann Draud, Colleen Whyte, Stacey Smilek, Bill Galvin, Jason Ballard; also Jeremy Boyle and the Voice Assembly group; Nathan Hall, Kerrith Livengood, Ben Harris, Dave Bernabo and Brandon Masterman.

When

2010

About The Artist

Rhona Byrne is an artist who lives and works in Dublin, Ireland. She attended the National College of Art and Design where she received her BFA in Sculpture. Her art practice is site and context-specific combining sculpture and spatial environments with performance and processes of participation that explore a negotiation of object, materiality, place, and social practice. Her practice often operates on or occupies the ‘threshold’ between sculpture and architecture, sculpture and theatre, sculpture and performance, sculpture and environmental psychology. Rhona Byrne's hand-­made objects, installations, and collaborative, event­‐based, projects explore the interplay between people and their habitat. Her practice is predominantly context responsive which includes a rigorous approach to research into the particularities of a site, context, and the people who shape it. She employs an interdisciplinary approach often collaborating with diverse industries, groups, and individuals. Her work is often a catalyst to generate other narratives for its participants and an invitation to explore the person-environment relationship and the unstable conditions of place and affect, spatial experience, meaning, and emotion.

Rhona Byrne makes sculptures, films, context-specific installations, collaborative event-based projects, and books. Her work explores and engages with multi-layered surfaces and the workings of the built environment and navigates intangible and transient layers of physical, mental, and social space. In developing this series of works, Byrne examines the amusement park industry and in particular wooden roller coasters, their physical experience, and the people who love them. Prompted by an ongoing fascination with how these man-made places and structures came about and how they can affect emotional states and alter our involvement with our environment, Byrne went about visiting theme parks, roller coaster designers, and manufacturers in Pennsylvania.

Pennsylvania is home to more amusement parks and roller coasters than any other state. Pittsburgh’s main park, Kennywood, is a traditional amusement park opened in 1898 by the Monongahela Street Railway Company at a time when technological innovations that initially applied to mills, factories, and railroads found their way to places of play and recreation connecting humans to the dynamism of technology in a very different way. During her explorations, she met with the American Coaster Enthusiasts Club (ACE). United by a common interest, ACE (founded in 1978) is the world’s largest ride enthusiast organization and has nearly 7,000 members across the U.S.

A number of works were developed with members of this club. During the off-season, many rides at Kennywood Park undergo annual care and maintenance and some of the very old wooden sections require replacement. The generous management at Kennywood allowed Byrne to procure a number of the older wooden sections from ‘The Racer’. Byrne’s fourth work in this exhibition, Stop the world I want to get off, is a sculptural work made from this reconstituted material. It offers a pathway through the gallery space, a slower trajectory through the world and vantage point to other places, inviting us to experience imaginary mental and perceptual spaces as much as a shared physical one.

Rhona Byrne would like to give special thanks to Duncan Horner, Jeff Filicko (Kennywood PR), Chris Gray (Great Coaster International), Tom Reddy (Philadelphia Toboggan Coaster Inc.), and to the members of the American Coaster Enthusiasts and in particular the ‘Coaster Choir’ ACE members; Bill Linkenheimer, Lee Ann Draud, Lisa M Corbly, Linda Spar, Maggie Altman, Chris Grella, Sarah Windisch, Erik Frankenstein, David Hahner, Jim Futrell, Linda Cramer, Bernie Cramel, and ACE members interviewed at East Coaster for the work ACE; Juan Dominguez, Mike Betzlere, Chris Smilek, Stephen O’Donnell, Dave Altman, Derek Shaw, Robert Derman, Lee Ann Draud, Colleen Whyte, Stacey Smilek, Bill Galvin, Jason Ballard; also Jeremy Boyle and the Voice Assembly group; Nathan Hall, Kerrith Livengood, Ben Harris, Dave Bernabo and Brandon Masterman.

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