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Graffiti: public art worth funding?

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009
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STIMULATE THIS: 'Stan,' from Matt Haffner's Serial City project

Earlier last month, critic Jonathan Jones of The Guardian joined several other journalists and arts aficionados in calling for a stimulus for public art in his native UK. But instead of simply parroting what we’ve already heard, Jones makes an inspired, though unorthodox spin on the argument: Why not fund genres outside of the mainstream, including graffiti?

We are primed as a nation for public art. All over Britain, a huge variety of imagery has been erected in the boom years. There must be more funding for public art, not less – but obviously the money can’t just go to famous individual artists. Instead, it has to be redirected to provide creative work for the young unemployed. And so, the state should pay the young to graffiti our streets.

(Let’s not forget that the UK is the home of Banksy, arguably the world’s most daring street artist, whose work now fetches record prices at international auctions.)

Atlantans feel strongly about their graffiti — both for and against. Mara Shalhoup’s story in CL last summer, for instance, received a lot more comments than you’d expect. Local artists such as Matt Haffner (featured on the cover of The Atlantan’s Arts and Power issue in December) work in traditional fine art circles as well as on the street. And Haffner is no stranger to grant funding: His work was chosen for ACP’s very first public art project. So, could you imagine seeing new, large-scale graffiti works by Haffner or other Atlantans — financed by grant money?

Of course the funds wouldn’t necessarily come from tax dollars. Last week’s groundbreaking Artadia announcement shows that there are still foundations out there willing to invest in Atlanta art. Coupled with ACP’s public art announcement, I wonder: Have foundations like Artadia considered street art as a grant-worthy alternative?

(Photo courtesy Wooster Collective)

Watchmen movie organic coffee tie-in?

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

VEIT INDUSTRIES

Found this in my inbox this morning:

Dear Amazon.com Customer,
Based on your recent shopping history, we thought you might like to know that Amazon Gourmet offers this special coffee:

Nite Owl Dark Roast Coffee

Enjoy the brand of coffee featured in the upcoming film “Watchmen” — and learn more about this “subversively good” brew at Amazon.com’s blog Omnivoracious.

And the (shameless) marketing campaigns begin…

(Image courtesy Amazon.com)

Westside Arts District announces new daytime art walk

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009
Eight

EIGHT: Members of the Westside Arts District

The newly christened Westside Arts District will host its inaugural gallery walk Sat., Feb. 28, in what may become a monthly routine. Scheduled events begin at 11 a.m. at the Atlanta Contemporary Arts Center, and continue throughout the day at seven other WAD locations along Howell Mill and Marietta Street.

“We’re trying to introduce people to the idea that there is a growing arts district in this part of town, and that we are all located within walking distance,” comments Lloyd Benjamin, owner/operator of Get This! Gallery. “This will be a different type of art walk. It’s during the daytime, and one focus point will be on special events. We hope the viewer walks away from the afternoon more informed about the shows they have just seen, along with having enjoyed the neighborhood and all it has to offer.”

So, does WAD represent a long-term shift in Atlanta’s physical and cultural development? Benjamin’s Get This! and next-door neighbor Saltworks — both recent transplants from other Atlanta neighborhoods — continue a trend since late 2006 of new galleries opening or reopening on the Westside, including WAD members Kiang Gallery and Bobbe Gilles Gallery.

“If feels like it’s still growing,” says Emily Amy, the eponymous owner and director of Emily Amy Gallery, which opened just last year. “There may have been plans for forming something like [WAD] before, but no one ever really mentioned it. There are so many creative people working here, it just makes sense to establish some teamwork.”

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ACP selects Beth Lilly’s ‘Gifted’ for 2009 public art project

Monday, February 23rd, 2009
Beth Lilly can photograph your future.

NEUROMANCY: Beth Lilly can photograph your future.

Last week Atlanta Celebrates Photography announced the selection of “Gifted,” a proposal by local artist and photographer Beth Lilly, for its next ACP public art project. More details will solidify as “Gifted” marches toward completion, but for the moment, this much is clear: The project will involve the literal gift of 1,200 limited-edition prints, distributed to the public for free during ACP’s citywide festival in October.

Beth Lilly (aka the Oracle @ Wifi) specializes in collaboration — that is, she creates art by embracing and reworking the social networking trends of our digital media-saturated society in surprisingly novel ways. Lilly’s Oracle @ Wifi series, for instance, is an ongoing, improvisational performance-meets-photography project. On the seventh day of each month, Lilly invites the public to call her with a “question for the Oracle.” Basically, you can ask her anything, so long as the wording is tasteful and involves a future event. Over the past three years, the Oracle has fielded queries as specific as “Will I get into law school and become a successful lawyer?” to such fantastic head-scratchers as “What do I really really really want?” and “Are my family and me moving to the United States?” The Oracle’s response comes in the form of three photos, taken at whatever location Lilly may be, which are then randomly assigned to each caller’s question. As in other forms of divination, the meaning of these “image-fortunes” is a matter of free association.

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SCAD-Atlanta presents gallery hop tonight

Thursday, February 19th, 2009
Deborah Poynton

SENSE OF DRAMA: Artist Deborah Poynton

The Savannah College of Art and Design-Atlanta presents its February gallery hop tonight from 6-8 p.m., featuring new exhibitions at all three SCAD-Atlanta galleries (ACA Gallery of SCAD, Trois Gallery, and Gallery See).

Deborah Poynton’s solo exhibition at ACA Gallery, Everything Matters, headlines the event. Poynton typically paints on a grand scale, and her style is a curious synthesis of classical influences: One senses the drama of El Greco’s religious painting and hints of the 19th-century grotesque, each counterbalanced with a modern sobriety. Her recent paintings focus on realistic nude and semi-nude figures in an examination of the “physical and relational connections within her complex tableaux.” Poynton will appear at the gallery in person to deliver an artist’s talk starting at 5 p.m. . Everything Matters continues through March 29.

The other two exhibitions shouldn’t disappoint, either: The Slipper Tongue and Other Works, featuring new works by art history professor Jonathan Field (Trois Gallery), and the annual SCADDY Awards Exhibition, a juried show of top SCAD student finalists in 25 advertising-related categories, including brand identity, posters, advertising campaigns, animation, photography and illustration.

Free shuttles serving each gallery will be available beginning at 5:45 p.m. from 1600 Peachtree St., on the south side of SCAD’s main academic building. Participants may join the gallery hop at any one of the three locations. The event is free and open to the public, and includes light refreshments and complimentary onsite parking at the main campus.

(Photo courtesy of DeborahPoynton.com)

Shepard Fairey: Cultural vanguard or plagiarist?

Wednesday, February 18th, 2009

When Shepard Fairey appeared on the Colbert Report Jan. 15, I honestly didn’t think very much of it. Of course, that episode aired before the recent Obama poster controversy. Fairey’s interview only lasted four minutes while he sat in his chair and gave a nonchalant and bare-bones outline of his work on the Obey Campaign and the once famous, but now infamous “Hope” poster. For me, it all sounded like well-traveled terrain.

I did, however, learn two things from that interview: The man has bad posture, and he likes to smirk when he speaks of “being a criminal.” But now that he’s in trouble, what does our faithful counter-culturalist do? He turns to the courts — that is, to the Law with a capital L. Fairey’s preemptive civil action, and the very real step towards officialdom it implies, just doesn’t seem too “punk rock.”

Last Thursday’s Colbert returned to the discussion of Fairey (see video above). Colbert’s attorney Ed Colbert (his brother) debates with the former head of the Whitney Museum, David Ross. The two sides argue the Obama poster’s implications, albeit in a mostly staged, comedic litigation.

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WonderRoot classes/workshops schedule for Feb. 16-28

Monday, February 16th, 2009

This afternoon WonderRoot — the increasingly popular community arts center on Memorial Drive — released a schedule of upcoming classes and workshops for the rest of the month. All classes are free for youth and WonderRoot members.

From the press release:

Pro Skillz
Instructor: Dale Stephenson
Date and Time: Monday, Feb. 16; 5:00p-7:00p

Adobe Photoshop
Instructor: Kevin Griggs
Date and Time: Tuesday, Feb. 17; 6:00p-8:00p

New Roots
Instructor: Michael Molina
Date and Time: Thursday, Feb. 19; 5:00p-7:00p

Adobe Illustrator II
Instructor: Marcus Williams
Date and Time: Thursday, Feb. 19; 6:00p-8:00p

Critique Group
Instructors: Cuyler Hovey-King & Molly Evans
Date and Time: Thursday, Feb. 19; 7:00p-8:00p

Introduction to Flash
Instructor: Dave Berzack
Date and Time: Saturday, Feb. 21; 1:00p-3:00p

Darkroom Basics
Instructor: Kevin Griggs
Date and Time: Saturday, Feb. 21; 1:00p-4:00p

New Roots
Instructor: Michael Molina
Date and Time: Saturday, Feb. 21; 3:00p-5:00p

Recording Studio Techniques
Instructor: Roy Hinshaw & Jonathan Putnam
Date and Time: Saturday, Feb. 21; 1:00p-5:00p

Pro Skillz
Instructor: Dale Stephenson
Date and Time: Monday, Feb. 23; 5:00p-7:00p

Photography Mentoring
Instructor: Ryan Nabulsi
Date and Time: Tuesday, Feb. 24; 5:00p-7:00p

Recording Studio Basics
Instructor: Rica Reed
Date and Time: Tuesday, Feb. 24; 6:00p-8:00p

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The Photographer’s Print Studio holds open house Saturday in Decatur

Monday, February 16th, 2009

D.I.Y. AND DO IT RIGHT: A volunteer demos a machine for color photo printing.

The Photographer’s Print Studio is a darkroom cooperative “for photographers by photographers” organized by a group of locals including Michael David Murphy, Kathryn Kolb, Laura Noel, and those two adorable Click Clique founders, Stephanie Dowda and John Paul Floyd. It’s the only darkroom co-op of its kind in Georgia and the Southeast. The studio will open its doors to the public this Sat., Feb. 21 with a reception from 2-5 p.m.

Earlier this month Photographer’s Print Studio kindly invited me to check out its Decatur facility located on New Street, just around the corner from Figo and PushPush Theater. Although I’m no expert, I can attest that, yes, the lab has all the gadgets and gizmos necessary for printing your high-quality color photographs (including access to two separate dark rooms). Plus — for greenhorns and veterans alike — the studio has a knowledgeable staff of volunteers on-hand for answering questions on printing techniques, equipment, and the basic aesthetics of the camera-wielder’s art.

Services will eventually include workshops and tutorials, art markets featuring contemporary and vintage photography, and of course, gatherings of the “social” nature.

More from the event flyer:

Tour our studio, watch print demo, enjoy refreshments, converse with TPPS photographers, membership discounts, and enter for free photographic supplies!

130 New Street, Decatur GA

The Photographer’s Print Studio is dedicated to the art of the traditional color photograph. Owned and operated by photographers for photographers, we offer the only darkroom facility of its kind in the Southeast! Our clean and expertly maintained studio accommodates printing negatives from 35mm to 4×5 and our RA-4 processor handles paper up to 31 inches wide.

Amateurs and professionals welcome!

For further details, go to the Photographer’s Print Studio website or send an email to Kathryn Kolb (kathrynkolb@bellsouth.net).

(Photo by Brittany Collins)