Berwick: A cheap alternative to constellation therapy.

Liz Nofziger

H&L Restoration Services at MEME

Event Details
Starts: 
2 May 2010 12:00pm
Ends: 
05/02/2010 8:00pm
Location: 
MEME Gallery, 55 Norfolk Street, Cambridge MA 02139

 

H&L Restoration services Logo

 

SUNDAY MAY 2, 2010

For one day only former Berwick AIRs, Liz Nofziger and Heather Kapplow, along with Linda Price Snedden will be offering wellness services as H&L Restoration Services.

As seen on CCTV and the MASSART CHANNEL, H&L Restoration Services is an extremely specialized clinic that provides a type of treatment that has previously only been available in Tibet. This treatment suppresses extraneous immune reactions; protects bone marrow and digestive tracts from free floating radiation; tonifies the liver; has a hypoglycemic effect on people with insulin resistance; and has mild antidepressant effects.

All in all, we think it might be THE antidote to everyday life! Please see our fine infomercial here for more details about our highly effective treatment: http://vimeo.com/11061136

H&L Restoration Services will be operating this fairly top secret (but extremely affordable) trial treatment center on May 2, 2010 from 12pm-8pm (with a short afternoon break from 3:30-4pm) at the MEME Gallery (55 Norfolk Street, Central Square, Cambridge MA.) Because we care a great deal about your physical and mental health, we invite you to partake of what we are offering. Please feel free to refer your friends and relatives to us as well.

H&L Restoration Services
http://meme.templeofmessages.com/pagez/now.html

Liz Nofziger AIR Project Statement

Liz Nofziger is currently working toward a new large-scale site-specific installation for Columbia College’s Glass Curtain Gallery in March 2007. Designed by William Le Baron Jenney (widely considered to be the “father of the skyscraper”), the Ludington Building (1890-91) is his earliest-surviving, steel-frame building in Chicago. The structure was commissioned by Mary Ludington to house the American Book Company and currently is a major part of the Columbia College campus, housing, among other facilities, the Glass Curtain Gallery and the Center for Book and Paper Arts (an appropriate return to origin).

During her AIR residency Nofziger aims to thoroughly examine, document, develop, and challenge her process of working site-specifically, with this exhibition as the outcome. Since a first site-visit in June, she has been compiling information on Jenney and the space itself, considering its various histories within the context of current events, and thinking about the viewer’s experience within the space. By compiling an in-depth documentation of the development of a large-scale site-specific work Nofziger will create an important experimental trace element. It will serve as a type of evidence that reveals and solidifies the sometimes circuitous, and often invisible, paths of investigation and planning.

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