• towend

    why be collective is a collaboration between sara young and Tyler Budge. We use the organizing principles of the beehive as an extension of interdisciplinary investigations concerning making and production. The projects archive forgotten or fragmented body histories as a tool for creating body knowledge. The installations mimic our cultures’ obsessive work ethic through systematic labor, investigating the social implications of swarming and reconfiguration and extracting similarities that exist between the bees and ourselves as makers. In one recent work, towend, alludes to the bees communication strategies. The endless circling windsocks are propelled from a compass-like object eye-ing a landscape of horizon paintings and are ultimately paired with two participants unifying patterns of activity.

  • towend_tyler

    why be collective is a collaboration between Sara Young and Tyler Budge. We use the organizing principles of the beehive as an extension of interdisciplinary investigations concerning making and production. The projects archive forgotten or fragmented body histories as a tool for creating body knowledge. The installations mimic our cultures’ obsessive work ethic through systematic labor, investigating the social implications of swarming and reconfiguration and extracting similarities that exist between the bees and ourselves as makers. In one recent work, towend, alludes to the bees communication strategies. The endless circling windsocks are propelled from a compass-like object eye-ing a landscape of horizon paintings and are ultimately paired with two participants unifying patterns of activity.

  • towend_tyler

    why be collective is a collaboration between Sara Young and Tyler Budge. We use the organizing principles of the beehive as an extension of interdisciplinary investigations concerning making and production. The projects archive forgotten or fragmented body histories as a tool for creating body knowledge. The installations mimic our cultures’ obsessive work ethic through systematic labor, investigating the social implications of swarming and reconfiguration and extracting similarities that exist between the bees and ourselves as makers. In one recent work, towend, alludes to the bees communication strategies. The endless circling windsocks are propelled from a compass-like object eye-ing a landscape of horizon paintings and are ultimately paired with two participants unifying patterns of activity.

  • video towend3

    why be collective is a collaboration between Sara Young and Tyler Budge. We use the organizing principles of the beehive as an extension of interdisciplinary investigations concerning making and production. The projects archive forgotten or fragmented body histories as a tool for creating body knowledge. The installations mimic our cultures’ obsessive work ethic through systematic labor, investigating the social implications of swarming and reconfiguration and extracting similarities that exist between the bees and ourselves as makers. In one recent work, towend, alludes to the bees communication strategies. The endless circling windsocks are propelled from a compass-like object eye-ing a landscape of horizon paintings and are ultimately paired with two participants unifying patterns of activity.

  • video towend4

    why be collective is a collaboration between Sara Young and Tyler Budge. We use the organizing principles of the beehive as an extension of interdisciplinary investigations concerning making and production. The projects archive forgotten or fragmented body histories as a tool for creating body knowledge. The installations mimic our cultures’ obsessive work ethic through systematic labor, investigating the social implications of swarming and reconfiguration and extracting similarities that exist between the bees and ourselves as makers. In one recent work, towend, alludes to the bees communication strategies. The endless circling windsocks are propelled from a compass-like object eye-ing a landscape of horizon paintings and are ultimately paired with two participants unifying patterns of activity.