Category: Art

Reverse Graffiti Cleaning up the Street:  Street Artist Moose

Reverse Graffiti Cleaning up the Street: Street Artist Moose

A shoe brush, water, old socks, cleaning fluid, and elbow grease are the tools of a British street artist known as Moose, who creates graffiti by cleaning dirt from sidewalks and tunnels. Some authorities call it vandalism, but Moose, whose real name is Paul Curtis says that what he is doing is cleaning up the street, and that he is leaving no real marks and is cleaning up the dirt of urban life.

Moose says that he got the idea watching people write their names on dirty tunnel walls using their fingers in his hometown of Leeds, in the U.K.  This form of street art is called “reverse graffiti,” and other artists including Brazilian artist Alexandre Orion and street artist Banksy have also used this technique.

Moose usually does work on tunnels, signs, and retaining walls.  One of his best known pieces  was in the Broadway Tunnel in San Francisco.  At the time he was working for a record label, and they wanted to promote a new album. Lacking the funds for advertising, they scrubbed their message into the walls of tunnels around his hometown of Leeds, England.

A few years ago, he worked with a group of Greenpeace eco-warriors. They piled into a zodiac raft, armed with pressure washers, and buzzed across the Thames River to a blackened retaining wall near the House of Parliament. When they’d finished their work, the wall was emblazoned with the message: “DON’T CHANGE THE CLIMATE. CHANGE THE POLITICS.”

“The environmental message [in my art] is unavoidable, “Moose says. “I’m writing in grime….If I can intrigue people to look closer, and then shock them with the contrast between where the wall was cleaned and where it was dirty … It’s just a quirky little way of getting the point out to people.”

 

Links:

Video of his work

Moose’s websit

NPR Morning Edition – Moose and his work

 

 

 

 

 

KBaumlier – Work showing on Digital Billboard Today in San Bernardino, CA

KBaumlier – Work showing on Digital Billboard Today in San Bernardino, CA

Today I have work in the Digital Billboard Art Project  – on a billboard in San Bernardino, CA.  The work started at midnight – and goes until today 11:59 pm (24 hours.)

To participate, you send in an application, and formatted files that are then arranged in a cue to play on the digital billboard.  I submitted slides about energy and resources – and used poems, wordplay, and lyrics from some of my past songs and projects.   I am excited for words like – GOING FAST, GONNA LAST?,  MY FUEL MY FIRE, ALL OIL DESIRE, etc. to be put near the highway.

There is a schedule that says what time each artists work will be shown – and my pieces run for 4 minutes within the schedule.  The billboard is located off I-15 southbound before the E Ontario Ave exit. The actual billboard is next to the Spring Hill Suites Corona-Riverside hotel.

The Billboard Art Project is a project that acquires digital billboards normally used for advertising and repurposes them as roadside galleries – showing images from artists. Types of work that may be displayed include images created specifically for the billboard as well as images of previously made art adapted to the format. No two Billboard Art Project shows are alike; each city features new work.

The project was started by David Morrison, who got interested in this venue when seeing test images on a new billboard being played in 2005.   He writes, “ Advertising is so epidemic and pervasive that people pay good money for clothes so that they can advertise corporate entities like Polo, Tommy Hilfiger, and their favorite sports team… So, when you see a billboard that isn’t telling you what to buy or who to trust, it carries the impact of the unexpected.”

In 2010, he acquired 24 hours of time from Lamar Advertising in October 2010. The billboard time was purchased and a date set.  When he was discussing the project with a friend, he immediately asked to participate, and soon a call for artists was sent out through email.  At this first project, the Richmond Virginia Art project had over 30 participants with images that ranged from being serious to comical.

This year there have been shows setup across the country including Duluth, Chicago, Reading, New Orleans, Baton Rouge and San Bernardino.

If you are in San Bernadino driving on I-15 southbound – look for a billboard that looks different – and you have found the show.

Links:

Billboard Art Project

Follow the Billboard Art Project – Live Event on facebook

Billboard Art Project flickr site

Billboard Art Project YouTube videos

 

Ice Drawings: Jim Denevan and the Largest Piece of Art

Ice Drawings: Jim Denevan and the Largest Piece of Art

The Anthropologist is a project and platform created by the clothing store Anthropologie to show the process of creation and to create relationships with artists.   The main platform for this is the Anthropologiest website and various publications that share selected projects and art as a way to promote creativity.

Last year  The Anthropologist commissioned land artist Jim Denevan to draw on the frozen surface of Lake Baikal in Siberia.   Lake Baikal is the oldest and deepest lakes in the worldand is over 30 million years old. Denevan proposed to make the largest piece of art on the surface of the ice of the lake.

Denevan (who is from Santa Cruz), and his team made marks on nine square miles of ice by making large circles baced on the Fibonacci sequence.  To do the project, the artist and his team had to work in sub-zero temperatures and in strong winds to make the work.

You can see sketches, in-progress images, and film of the project on the site.  There is also a book and DVD about the piece that you can buy at Anthropologie.com.

Is it the largest piece of art?  That’s depends on what you call art – but it sure looks big to me.

Image Source:

The Anthropologist

Links:

The Anthropologist – Jim Denevan Project

Jim Denevan- Artist Site

I Heart Cleveland:  Little Miss Cleveland

I Heart Cleveland: Little Miss Cleveland

Yesterday I attended artist Sarah Paul’s lecture “I Heart Cleveland: The Strategic Seduction of a City” at the Guilford House at  Case Western Reserve University (CWRU) campus.

Before the lecture began, Paul invited the audience to take a Little Miss Cleveland calendar, a calendar she has made with 12 images of Little Miss Cleveland, the beauty queen from Cleveland that is a persona of Paul.  The calendar has provocative images of Little Miss Cleveland posing in front of memorable places in Cleveland including Lake Erie, the flats, and the Cleveland skyline.

The lecture started by the hosts of the event surrounding Paul with boxes of pizza.

Paul began by presenting some of the early roots of her work which is music, singing, and being in bands.  We heard an early clip of the first song she wrote and recorded and Paul talked about the power of music to transcend reality, engage an audience, and exist as an intersection of art, music, and pop culture.

Paul’s artwork in recent years has explored issues of gender fluidity and the spectrum between the male and female.  Some of her past works have included a video about being in love with a large My Little Pony and an installation of a My Little Pony brushing bar which had real size ponytail hair pieces the audience could brush and braid while under a looming 20 foot projection of Paul as Captain Firepants (an alter ego of hers) becoming a beautiful flower girl.

Originally from Buffalo, NY, Paul moved to Cleveland in 2007 and fell in love with the city.  As we know, Cleveland has a self –depriating quality to it.  People often love to hate it or talk about how it could/should be different – but Paul developed a unique relationship with the city which made her as Paul said, “ heart Cleveland.”

When Paul settled into her artist live/work space after moving to the area, she found that out her large windows she had a unique view of the smokestacks and flames of a steel factory nearby.  She would watch the smokestacks, videotape the smoke and flames, and grew to feel that they were neighbors and had a personal connection and dialogue.

During the Winter, the factory closed down for a few months – and the smoke and flames disappeared.  Paul felt a great loss, as though a neighbor had moved away.  Little Miss Cleveland was born out of her inspiration to call the smoke and fire back. Paul projected a video piece of the smokestacks that she had made on the windows of her space – a poetic way to try to call the smokestacks back.  Paul become a siren seducing the city to bring the smokestacks back to life.

Eventually the smoke and fire came back, like a neighbor returning from a vacation, but Paul felt inspired to continue to embrace and celebrate Cleveland in her work.

As Little Miss Cleveland, she dressed as a plus-size beauty queen and began to attend Indian baseball games.  Over time the vendors and workers at the stadium began to recognize her –and baseball fans wanted to know who Little Miss Cleveland is.

Who is Little Miss Cleveland?  In an interview with Cool Cleveland Paul said, “ She’s just this really playful giant chubby girl. She’s very sincere….I’ve crafted this narrative and this character and all of that, but the passion and the motivation behind it is rooting for the underdog that Cleveland is, that the Rust Belt is. There’s a sense of humor in it and in her; she’s this giant, self-crowned beauty queen. She’s embracing herself, her large body. Whatever is technically “wrong” with her, she embraces all of that and celebrates it to a point where she becomes this sexy, vivacious irresistible character.”

In her talk Paul explained that the work is for herself and also for Cleveland.  Little Miss Cleveland is in love with the city, the steel mill and the lake.

Paul has continued to make appearances, make music, and art installations  as Little Miss Cleveland.  Each form explores the blurring of art and life.  Paul and Little Miss Cleveland present a ironic position – promoting loving Cleveland, which often is seen as an underdog city.

In Paul’s closing comments she talked about blurring the mainstream and high art genre, and the invented myth.

What is Little Miss Cleveland doing next?  She has some upcoming music shows with her band Now That’s Class and an upcoming show at the Sculpture Center in Cleveland in April.  Everyone is invited – and you might find that you heart Cleveland a little bit more after spending time with Little Miss Cleveland.

Image Source:
Sarah Paul

 

Links:

Interview with Sarah Paul in Cool Cleveland

Sarah Paul’s website

Little Miss Cleveland website

Sarah Paul Plain Dealer Article

 

Wind Paintings : Belgian artist Bob Verschueren

Wind Paintings : Belgian artist Bob Verschueren

Today there are many artists who are working with art and the natural environment.   I recently was sent a link of an interesting use of wind and landscape – the work of  the late  Belgian artist Bob Verschueren who created Wind Paintings in the 1970s and 1980s.  To make the pieces he would go to a empty landscape and paint lines of crushed charcoal, iron oxide, chalk, and other pigments in a linear pattern. Over the time of a few hours, the wind would come through and create the works – and eventually blow them away.

On his website the artist writes a description of the works which states, “Natural pigments spread across the landscape with the help of the wind.  The conjunction of three decisive elements: the direction and the strength of the wind, the landscape and its relief and the hand of the sower of color.”  He also writes about how the first Wind Painting gave him the extraordinary sense of living his art – rather than creating it.

His other works include installations made of ephemeral materials including nettle and water lily leaves, sand, tree branches, moss, twigs, and vegetables.

To see more images of his Wind pieces and other art, you can goto his website – http://www.bobverschueren.net.

 

Links:

Bob Verschueren’s Website – http://www.bobverschueren.net