AltWeeklies Wire

How a Germantown Artist Found His Muse in a Stained-glass Menagerienew

Founded in 1980 by a husband and wife in their garage, Beyer Studio has grown over its 28 years to become a nationally renowned source for stained glass design and restoration.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Shaun Brady  |  09-23-2008  |  Art

SPARKcon Looks to Its Futurenew

For its third year, SPARKcon continues to wage the battle to help brand the Triangle as "the creative hub of the South." The three-day conference and showcase of local talent is designed to bring together the area's creative community, helping it connect with the public—and itself.
INDY Week  |  Zack Smith  |  09-18-2008  |  Art

Architect Cameron Sinclair Aims to Marry Design and Developmentnew

On the Open Architecture Network website, created by TED Prize winner Cameron Sinclair, you will find global shelters made out of straw bales, shipping containers, and beer crates.
Charleston City Paper  |  Eugenia Payne  |  09-17-2008  |  Art

Shooting the Breeze With Children's TV Legend Dear Old Captain Noahnew

For 27 years, Captain Noah and His Magical Ark was a Philly institution, greeting bleary-eyed, pajama-clad children over sugary cereal. The Ark has been in drydock now for 14 years and will soon be on display, along with puppets, props and costumes, when the new Please Touch Museum opens next month.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  Shaun Brady  |  09-16-2008  |  Art

Temporary Worlds: Visits to Three New Art Showsnew

Last weekend, I visited three exhibitions: Private Spaces: The Kansas & Florida Project at the Crealde School of Art, Migration 2 at Julio Lima's Orange Studio and Mixed at the Pound Gallery. A process of narrowing the field ensued and essentially came down to which art left a significant impression in my memory and why.
Orlando Weekly  |  Megan Bardoe  |  09-12-2008  |  Art

How and Why a Free Arts Magazine will Become a Storefront in Philly's Chinatownnew

For 30 days, Megawords' frequent contributors and like-minded friends will take over a burnt-orange storefront in Chinatown to allow the mag's playful personality to "come to life," according to co-founder Anthony Smyrski.
Philadelphia City Paper  |  A.D. Amorosi  |  09-02-2008  |  Art

Filmmaker and Genius Clifton Childree Talks About a Junk Obsessionnew

Since learning he won the Hilger Artist Project Award last December, Clifton Childree has been hoarding discarded wood, ornate headboards, piles of fabric, and sundry cast-off junk from the curbs that line the homes on the outskirts of Miami's Design District.
Miami New Times  |  Carlos Suarez De Jesus  |  08-25-2008  |  Art

Funny Munnys: What is It About Vinyl Toys That Gets Everyone So Excited?new

Just about any artist can take the Munny, a chubby doll with an oversized head and cartoonish ears, and turn it into a unique character, a diminutive reflection of his tastes and sensibilities. What is surprising is the childhood glee that burns in the eyes of someone who has just opened a box containing one of these three-dimensional canvases.
Charleston City Paper  |  Kevin Murphy  |  08-20-2008  |  Art

Artists and Others are Using YouTube for More Than Just Home Videosnew

The biggest video-sharing website isn't just for lame home videos or amateur soft-core porn anymore: San Diego artists are using it as a new medium for what they're calling "X-stream Dadaism."
San Diego CityBeat  |  Kinsee Morlan  |  08-20-2008  |  Art

Two Chicago Exhibitions Memorialize Polaroid's Heydey with Fervent Nostalgianew

Polaroid announced in February 2008 they would cease production of both consumer and professional instant-developing film and cameras. Now, as the distribution line trickles to a stop and the price of the film has nearly doubled, photographers are beginning to feel the bite of loss.
Chicago Newcity  |  Jason Foumberg  |  08-20-2008  |  Art

Q&A with L.A. Painter, Muralist, Educator: Steven Lopeznew

Offers a Q&A with one of L.A.'s up and coming painters, chronicling his time spent in Eugene, Ore., and the difference between graffiti and public art.
Eugene Weekly  |  Chuck Adams  |  08-12-2008  |  Art

Fiberglass Giants: Chicago's Last Bastions of Marketing Kitschnew

During the 1960s and 1970s, the sight of massive pop-art fiberglass figures greeted drivers on streets and smaller highways across the country. From California to Maine, drivers and their families were alerted by figures in the forms of hotdogs, hamburgers, cowboys, clowns, alligators and oranges, lobsters and loons.
Chicago Newcity  |  David Witter  |  08-06-2008  |  Art

Chicago's Street Art Community Mourns the Loss of One of Their Ownnew

On the morning of June 14, 23-year-old Brendan Scanlan, a street artist who went by the name Solve, was stabbed to death in a late-night altercation. Within a few days of the incident, you could find "Solve RIP" painted all across Chicago sidewalks, and at the memorial service, a fellow street artist brought a handful of tees depicting Solve's signature name design.
Chicago Newcity  |  Molly Each  |  08-06-2008  |  Art

Chicago Makes it Easier to Panhandle than to Sell Art on Downtown Streetsnew

Unless you're at one of those cookie-cutter annual art fairs, you're not likely to encounter artists selling their work on the street here at all. If you do, you'll probably also see a cop rapidly approaching. Street sales are illegal downtown and -- at the discretion of the local alderman -- in other areas as well.
Chicago Reader  |  Deanna Isaacs  |  07-28-2008  |  Art

After Ten Years in Berkeley, Eric Drooker Still Dreams of New Yorknew

His drawings have a very specific time and place (Brooklyn or Manhattan, usually in the 1970s, almost always the same view), but they employ metaphors that anyone could pick up and understand. His mass-produced poster art, some of which is collected in the new postcard book, Slingshot, operates in much the same way.
East Bay Express  |  Rachel Swan  |  07-24-2008  |  Art

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