September 4, 2008

"The Scale of Intervention" Panel Tomorrow Night At The New Museum

250px-New_Museum_PC230111.JPG

I know it's last minute, but if you're in New York Cityt tomorrow night (Friday) Sara and I are moderating an amazing panel at the New Museum of Contemporary Art at 7:30 pm.

On the panel, and giving short presentations of their work, will be CutUp Collective from London, Leon Reid IV (of Darius + Downey) from New York, Betsey Biggs from New York, and Roadsworth from Canada.

Click here for more info.

Posted by marc at 10:46 PM in New York | Recommend this! (14) |


Seen On The Streets Of Santiago, Chile

santiag.jpg

Posted by marc at 8:06 AM in Walls | Recommend this! (52) |


Love It: Sam3's" Water Kiss"

Street animation like this that been exciting the hell out of us these days. While not as elaborate as Blu's Muto, for us, Sam3's "Water Kiss" is equally inspiring.

Posted by marc at 7:49 AM in Video | Recommend this! (67) |


The Art Of Bruno 9li

We've been fans of the artist Bruno 9li for quite a while now. It was terrific to learn more about his work via this short documentary film by Ideia Forte...

Posted by marc at 7:44 AM in Video | Recommend this! (46) |


Fresh Stuff From Herbert Baglione in Aarhus

herbb1.jpg

herbb2.jpg

Herbert's work above is part of "Icons for Now", a street installation show for Denmark's Aarhus Festival in the city of Aarhus. Other artists included in the exhibition are HuskMitNavn and ESPO.

Posted by marc at 7:38 AM in Walls | Recommend this! (42) |


Matt Haffner's "Pushcart Vendors"


Matt Haffner's wheat paste installation - "Pushcart Vendors" from matt haffner on Vimeo.

Posted by marc at 7:34 AM in Video | Recommend this! (17) |


Seen On The Streets Of Lima

limadol.jpg

Posted by marc at 7:30 AM in Stencils | Recommend this! (24) |


The Process Enacted Mutoscope

Created by Jordan C. Greenhalgh, Brian Baldwin and Danielle Hazekamp, the process enacted mutoscope (which is essentially a giant flip book)! contains 987 polaroids that make up an original film. The poject took two and a half months to complete. Watch the video above and check www.thechasefactory.com for more info.

Posted by marc at 7:17 AM in Video | Recommend this! (11) |


Seen On The Streets Of Córdoba Spain

cordoba.jpg

Posted by marc at 4:54 AM in Walls | Recommend this! (42) |


September 2, 2008

Fresh Stuff From Rene Gagnon

renpos1.jpg

renpos2.jpg

renpos3.jpg

Posted by marc at 8:55 AM in Wheatpastes | Recommend this! (63) |


Shit We're Diggin: Data's Fire Flowers On Brick Lane

fireflower.jpg

Posted by marc at 8:45 AM in Wheatpastes | Recommend this! (54) |


Fresh Stuff From dolk & pøbel

probsea1.jpg

probsea2.jpg

probsea3.jpg

probsea4.jpg

More images here.

Posted by marc at 8:27 AM in Walls | Recommend this! (101) |


Leon Reid IV's "Free As A Bird" at the Missouri State Prison

freeasabird.jpg

Posted by marc at 8:19 AM in 3D | Recommend this! (35) |


Fresh Stuff From Ash in Arhus Denmark

ash2.jpg

Posted by marc at 8:15 AM in Walls | Recommend this! (72) |


Respect Signs

respectsigns.jpg

From LISC Chicago:

Alicia Coria and two of her sons, Ivan Castro, 8, and Diego Castro, 10, never had a chance. As they crossed North Avenue at Kimball one afternoon last October, an 87-year-old driver lost control of his car, ran a red light and slammed into the mother and her children, killing them all.

On May 14, a makeshift memorial to Stowe Elementary School students Ivan and Diego Castro and their mother, Alicia Coria, gave way to this more permanent remembrance.

The accident, which shocked the entire city, was particularly devastating for students and teachers at nearby Stowe Elementary School, which Ivan and Diego attended. To express their grief and affection for the family, the students and others almost immediately assembled a community shrine of flowers and candles at the Humboldt Park intersection and maintained it until earlier this year.

But on May 14, that temporary memorial gave way to a more permanent remembrance of the two boys and their mother and the circumstances under which they died. Stowe third graders, under the tutelage of artists Mike Bancroft and Anthony Marcos Rea, installed a portable mural they had created. The mural’s imagery incorporates silhouettes of children, the mother holding her two children, and verbiage in Spanish and English that says “respect signs,” an admonition to motorists to obey traffic signals.

The community art project was spearheaded by Stowe Principal Dr. Charles Kyle, teachers Nellie Windsor and Juan Fernandez, and Bancroft and Rea, who are artists-in-residence at Stowe under a project of the School Engagement Initiative (SEI), which implements similar efforts in four other Humboldt Park schools. SEI, a project of LISC’s Building Community through the Arts (BCA), places artists in classrooms to create cross-disciplinary arts projects that address the culture of the community and further the broader aims of community development.

Stowe third graders, under the tutelage of artists Mike Bancroft and Anthony Marcos Rea, installed the portable mural.

The mural – a series of plastic silhouettes of students portrayed against a colorful background made with mylar tape – is affixed to two sides of a cyclone fence surrounding a vacant lot on the northeast corner of North and Kimball. It was officially unveiled at a May 17 ceremony attended by students, artists, neighbors and local officials.

“People were distraught about the accident,” said Bancroft, who has worked at Stowe for the past year. “This project is helpful in showing students that art can happen through a context. They’re not just doing it for art’s sake.”

But students aren’t the only ones learning through the North Avenue mural project or others generated by SEI, said Jorge Félix, of the Institute of Puerto Rican Arts and Culture (IPRAC), which with the Chicago Arts Partnerships in Education (CAPE) administers SEI.

The mural’s imagery incorporates silhouettes of children, the mother holding her two children, and the words “respect signs."

“In addition to the artists training the students, the program is about informing local artists who are new to the community what the culture is like here,” he said. “Art can change minds and it can educate.” And through SEI, that process is a two-way street.

In another recent SEI project, at Lowell Elementary School, teachers Carmen Rivera-Kurban and Mary Muniz and visiting artists Charly Barera and Patricia Reyes created an original “plena” song for the school band and designed and printed original attires for the performance. The project addressed issues of cultural relevancy in the curriculum.

SEI is funded by LISC/Chicago, the City of Chicago Cultural Outreach Program, and The National Endowment for the Arts. Building Community through the Arts (BCA), an initiative of LISC/Chicago, celebrates the diversity of talent in three Chicago neighborhoods by bringing cultural relevance to community development.

Posted by marc at 8:04 AM in Activism | Recommend this! (25) |


Fresh Stuff From 0700team in Selesia, Poland

southpol.jpg

Posted by marc at 7:59 AM in Walls | Recommend this! (66) |


Fresh Stuff From WK in London

eddylon1.jpg

eddylon2.jpg

Posted by marc at 7:51 AM in Wheatpastes | Recommend this! (29) |