In case you missed last Saturday’s public art panel, the audio is now available.
Archive Content by Tag ‘Pittsburgh’
02/15/13 Audio, Photos, and Insights From BURNAWAY‘s Public Panel on February 9, Hosted By {Poem 88}
Category: Public Art, Site News | Tags:
Tags: chosewood park, Chris Appleton, Cinqué Hicks, featured, Hyuro, Living Walls, Pittsburgh, Poem 88, Roti, WonderRoot
Tags: chosewood park, Chris Appleton, Cinqué Hicks, featured, Hyuro, Living Walls, Pittsburgh, Poem 88, Roti, WonderRoot
1 Comment
01/17/13 Living Walls and the Perils of Public Space, Part II
Our esteemed guest writer returns with his take on the role of ‘community’ and how the democracy of art can take a wrong turn.
32 Comments
01/11/13 Living Walls and the Perils of Public Space, Part I
Category: OPINION | Tags:
Tags: aesthetic common denominator, Allegory of the Human City, Alligator, Atlanta, Camille Rose Garcia, capitalism, Cinqué Hicks, community, Concerned Black Clergy, controversy, demonic, Doug Dean, Dustin Chambers, featured, fish, Gustave Moreau, interpretation, Ithaca, Ithica, Jason Butcher, Jason R. Butcher, Joe Tsambiras, low brow, Marcy Starz, Michael Kimmelman, myth, neosymbolist, New York, New York Times, Odilon Redon, Os Gêmeos, personal mythology, Pittsburgh, pop, Rilke, Rimbaud, Roti, state representative, statement, Stéphane Mallarmé, street art, street artist, Surrealism, Symbolism, Symbolists, Verlaine, Yeats
Tags: aesthetic common denominator, Allegory of the Human City, Alligator, Atlanta, Camille Rose Garcia, capitalism, Cinqué Hicks, community, Concerned Black Clergy, controversy, demonic, Doug Dean, Dustin Chambers, featured, fish, Gustave Moreau, interpretation, Ithaca, Ithica, Jason Butcher, Jason R. Butcher, Joe Tsambiras, low brow, Marcy Starz, Michael Kimmelman, myth, neosymbolist, New York, New York Times, Odilon Redon, Os Gêmeos, personal mythology, Pittsburgh, pop, Rilke, Rimbaud, Roti, state representative, statement, Stéphane Mallarmé, street art, street artist, Surrealism, Symbolism, Symbolists, Verlaine, Yeats
This two-part series asks tough questions and searches for historical context for recent controversies over public art.
































Jared: Excited for the Bowman collection. She is someone to keep an eye on
ruth: What do you do with difficult lines of memory? Fold them into a san
Beth Lilly: I know! That's exactly the type of work I had in mind with the call f
Jason Francisco: Davis' bulletin boards seem to me actually to be photographs themselve
burnaway: approved