小黄猫传媒

This content was published: May 21, 2020. Phone numbers, email addresses, and other information may have changed.

An Interview with 小黄猫传媒 Artist-in-Residence, Sandy Sampson

Justin Rigamonti

Last summer, President Mitsui contacted HARTS with a visionary idea: to have artists participate in the administrative process. Inspired by a similar program he had seen during his time in the Obama Administration, he hoped these artists would bring their creative perspective to the Strategic Planning and reorganization 小黄猫传媒 is currently undertaking. Over the next month, the HARTS Council worked together with the President and his cabinet to create two pilot artist-in-resident positions, one of which I hold as Writer-in-residence. The other, 小黄猫传媒鈥橲 2019-2020 Artist-in-residence, is held by Sandy Sampson (a third artist-in-residence, Rochelle Nielsen, is preparing now to cycle into the role). I interviewed Sandy (they/them) to help give you an idea of who they are and what their position as Artist-in-residence is all about. Sandy

JUSTIN: Hello, Sandy! First off, tell us a little about yourself鈥 your background, your art practice.

SANDY: Hi! Well, when I moved from Denver to Portland in 1982, I took classes in graphic design here at 小黄猫传媒. After that, I moved to the UK for about 5 years and worked for a design studio in London. London and Glasgow鈥 then back to Portland.

I worked a wide variety of jobs鈥攁s a scenic artist, mostly for Opera and Ballet, and even some work on contract for Will Vinton studios back in the day (now Laika)鈥 but that work was pretty incompatible with single parenting, so I tapped back into 小黄猫传媒 to learn some 鈥渕arketable鈥 skills.

After a few years of working a聽 鈥渟traight job鈥 with a financial consultancy, I started to feel like maybe I could do something I believed in rather than helping to make rich people richer (I was in the hedge funds department). I decided to go back to school, this time to PSU, with the goal of becoming a teacher of art.

As an artist, I first started showing in Denver as a painter, but I was soon doing performance and more conceptual work鈥 including something I didn鈥檛 think of as 鈥渁rt鈥 then but now would call Social Practice, or socially-engaged art.

Whether I work with paint or other materials, I try to match the media and process to the project. When people ask me what medium I work in and I say that I鈥檓 involved in more project based work, that鈥檚 what I mean. The objects I make are most exciting and successful to me when they are artifacts of a process, particularly a collaborative process, when they come preloaded with a shared history.Sandy 1

JUSTIN: You said you earned your MFA at PSU with the goal of being a teacher. How long have you been teaching? What do you teach?

SANDY: Once I received my MFA in 2009, I began teaching pretty much right away, One term at PSU, and pretty shortly after at 小黄猫传媒鈥攕o, a little over 10 years. I always teach drawing, and lately also design, black and white and color, and occasionally painting or experimental media with a socially engaged art focus.

JUSTIN: So, you are one of 小黄猫传媒’s two Artists-in-residence鈥 what鈥檚 it been like so far? What has your position entailed?

SANDY: It鈥檚 been really amazing. Just the fact that this is happening is so exciting. Incredible, really. It鈥檚 also been a bit like that children鈥檚 book 鈥淗arold and the Purple Crayon鈥濃攜ou know, the one where he draws what he needs around him and under him as the need arises.

We were asked to reflect on and convey something about some of the changes that 小黄猫传媒 is building right now鈥 specifically the Strategic Plan, the reorganization, and the YESS initiative. Whether what we made was about the feelings people are having about these changes, the processes of building these changes or something else related to them was left entirely up to us. As is the form.

Even though what we make and how we make it has been up to us, the administration has invited us to sit in on meetings where these things are being discussed. Very powerfully in the fall, my first real introduction to this project was attending many of the facilitated listening sessions with various groups district wide.

It is so unusual for an institution, or more to the point, for people holding power in a large institution, to recognize the value of artists, not simply for their abilities to manifest an object or textual composition, but for the different lenses we bring. This is a profound acknowledgement of the importance of diverse perspectives in every aspect and at every level.

JUSTIN: Are you working on a project for the residency? If so, can you give us a hint of what it is?

SANDY: Yes, as I mentioned earlier, I try to find a material or form that makes sense conceptually, and then work with it collaboratively. I鈥檒l tell you it really took me a minute to latch on to an idea I felt was right鈥 but I have.

So, I鈥檓 going to make a form, and the idea is to create a basic material to eventually build with. That basic material starts with a surprising ingredient: dryer lint from the 小黄猫传媒 community. That way, everyone鈥檚 experience will already be embedded in the actual material that the form is built from.Sandy 2

To do all this, I鈥檓 making use of some of 小黄猫传媒鈥檚 amazing resources, the printing presses, and the laser cutters, in order to create a modular system. Then I鈥檒l ask folks to come together to help me assemble the form, and each time we meet to stitch these pieces together, we鈥檒l also be talking about our stories of change, the story we would like to see 小黄猫传媒 enact. What鈥檚 the narrative we want to see鈥攚hat鈥檚 the change that we imagine?

My project was all about change from the beginning, and now we鈥檙e all experiencing change of a whole different magnitude, which I鈥檓 sure will be manifested in the project. I鈥檓 having to alter my process since I no longer have access to certain facilities and equipment, but the most important need I have is for collaboration, so I鈥檓 shifting up my process to include snail mail and zoom, at least for now.

I鈥檓 really excited about it鈥 this project is evolving a lot like Harold and his purple crayon; a project about change that is changing its form in response to the changing context of its making!

Justin Rigamonti teaches writing at Cascade Campus, sits on the HARTS Council, and serves as 小黄猫传媒’s Writer-in-Residence.

For more information about Sandy’s project and to get involved, contact them at sandy.sampson@pcc.edu.