|
|
|
|
Public Art: Artists Take It to the Streets, Prisons & Discos
Table of Contents
"Does allowing employees to make decisions about selecting art inspire
demands for more input into corporate decisions of all kinds? [Lynne] Sowder
suspects that this is the case...[But] put another way, the paradoxical
contradiction inherent in First Bank System's visual arts program is that
the employees don't have unusual power outside the realm of the division of
visual art. FBS's visual arts program became a lightning rod for discontent
by simultaneously focusing attention on--and distracting attention from--the
real problems at FBS."
-Village Voice, 1990
|
-
"Artisco: Strobe Light Becomes You," ARTS, 1985 A-list art for clubs and discos
-
"Stop, Signs!" Village Voice, 1987, and "Mall Brawl," Village Voice, 1990.
David Bermant, the Lorenzo de Medici of the shopping mall, courts controversy
-
"Artworkplace," Village Voice, 1990 The birth and death of First Bank System's revolutionary art program
-
"Art as Shelter," Village Voice, 1990 The Artist/Homeless Shelter collaborative
-
"Continuing Coverage: Public Art," Village Voice, 1987-94 From contentious art in malls to an artist who won't take down her work
-
"A Message On The Wall: Race and Rifles in Mike Alewitz's Maryland Mural Project," The Media Channel, 2000 Gun-totin' heroine Harriet Tubman's heritage is up for grabs
-
"When the Art Is Public, the Making Is, Too," New York Times, 1995 An account of Judy Pfaff's realization of one of the largest public-art projects of our day
-
"Girls With Wheatpaste and Web Space," The Media Channel, 2001 An interview with DAM! (Dyke Action Machine!) the culture-jamming duo, that targets the lesbian online and on the street
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
© 2003
|
|