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Matthew Mazzotta : November 2024
- Katy Boynton : November 2019
- Dana Albany : October 2019
- Wayne Little John August 2019
- Wayne Little John August 2019
- Shelly L Willis : July 2019
- Gig Depio : June 2019
- David Franklin : May 2019
- Pailine Kamiyama : April 2019
- Irina Panasyuk : March 2019
- Elizabeth Grajales : February 2019
- Aric Shapiro : January 2019
- Michael Mowry : December 2018
- Michael Ogilvie : November 2018
- Patricia Walsh : October 2018
- Sara Conley Odenkirk : September 2018
- Shelly Willis : January 2020
- Mark Salinas : March 2021
- Patricia Walsh : April 2021
- Amy Smith : May 2021
- Norie Sato : July 2021
- Nick Anderson : August 2021
- Amanda Browder : September 2021
- Vinnie Bagwell : October 2021
- Roberta Bloom _ November 16, 2021
- General Workshop : December 2021
- General Workshop : February 2022
- General Workshop : March 2022
- Open Discussion Workshop : August 2022
- Open Discussion Workshop : October 2022
- Open Discussion : November 2022
- Activism in Public Art : December 2022
- Open Discussion Workshop : January 2023
- Amy Smith : February 2023
- Hannah Cole : March 2023
- April, May, June 2023
- Reading an Art Call : July 2023
- How to Read Clark County Public Art Letter of Agreements : September 2023
- The Burning Man Experience : October 2023
- Resource Materials : November 2023
- Document Building : December 2023
- Felicia Filer : January 2024
- Geovany Uranda : February 2024
- Financial Groove: March 2024
- International Sculpture Center: April 2024
- Thomas -Detour- Evans: May 2024
- Influential Walls: June 2024
- Clark County Quote Forms : July 2024
- Holly Lay : August 2024
- Matthew Mazzotta : November 2024
- Meg Heeres : October 2024
- December 2024 : Asa Kennedy
- Nevada Arts Council: January 2025
- Khloe Churko : March 2025
Full Scope Workshop for November was a presentation by Public Artist, Matthew Mazzotta, The Architecture of Social Space: Creating Spaces of Critique Within the Places We Live. Matthew Mazzotta’s community-specific public projects integrate new forms of civic participation and social engagement into the built environment and reveal how the spaces we travel through and spend our time living within have the potential to become distinct sites for intimate, radical, and meaningful exchanges. Through his process, each project starts by creating temporary public spaces for listening – ‘Outdoor Living Room’ – as a way to capture voices from local people that might not attend more formal meetings. Stemming from this approach are experiences that involve people from a range of backgrounds working together to create new models of living that contribute to local culture beyond the economic realm.
The discussion was followed by a question-and-answer segment where attendees asked Matthew about the topics covered.
Meet Our Speaker!
Inherent in every moment is the potential to ignite profound change. Art affords us a compelling perspective to act on this possibility.
Matthew Mazzotta works at the intersection of art, activism, and urbanism, focusing on the power of the built environment to shape our relationships and experiences. His community-specific projects integrate new forms of civic participation and social engagement into the built environment and reveal how the spaces we travel through and spend our time living within have the potential to become distinct sites for intimate, radical, and meaningful exchanges. Through his process, each project starts by creating temporary public spaces for listening—an Outdoor Living Room—as a way to capture voices from local people who might not attend more formal meetings. Stemming from this approach are experiences that involve people from a range of backgrounds working together to redefine their collective identity.
Matthew’s public art projects have been named “Architecture Project of the Year” from the Dezeen Awards at the Tate Modern to Huffington Post’s “9 Design Projects Tackling America's Poverty Crisis, One Community At A Time” and have received international art and architecture awards such as the Architizer A+ Award, Azure’s AZ Award, CODAawards, WAN Award, and Americans for the Arts. His work has been featured on CNN, BBC, NPR, The Colbert Report, and Discovery Channel, and published in numerous books, journals, and magazines including Science Magazine, Wired Magazine, and Interior Design Magazine. He has exhibited his work at the Cooper Hewitt-Smithsonian Design Museum in NYC and poke at the Asia Society NYC in partnership with UNESCO and the United Nations 75th Anniversary moderated by Rem Koolhaas.
Matthew received his BFA degree from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and his Master of Science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Program in Art, Culture, and Technology. He is a TED Fellow, a Guggenheim Fellow, a Fulbright Grantee, a Smithsonian Artist in Research, as well as a Loeb Fellow at Harvard University.
Visit Matthew’s website to find out more about his past and present work: www.Matthewmazzotta.com
Watch on YouTube >>