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Oliver Herring, TASK Party

Minneapolis College of Art and Design

Bethel University/MCAD TASK Party, 2010. Photo by Caitlin Longley.

Bethel University/MCAD TASK Party, 2010. Photo by Caitlin Longley.

Bethel University/MCAD TASK Party, 2010. Photo by Caitlin Longley.

TASK Party

TASK’s open-ended, participatory structure creates almost unlimited opportunities for a group of people to interact with one another and their environment. TASK’s flow and momentum depend on the tasks written and interpreted by its participants. In theory anything becomes possible. The continuous conception and interpretation of tasks is both chaotic and purpose driven. It is a complex, ever shifting environment of people who connect with one another through what is around them. It is also a platform for people to express and test their own ideas in an environment without failure and success (TASK always is what it is) or any other preconceptions of what can or should be done with an idea or a material. People’s tasks become absorbed into other people’s tasks; objects generated from one task are recycled into someone else’s task without issues of ownership or permanence.

Oliver Herring, a New York-based artist, developed the concept and held the first such party in London in 2002. Hundreds of TASK workshops, events, and parties have been held throughout the world at museums, galleries, and schools. http://oliverherringtask.wordpress.com