Nary a Cheesesteak

Street art is undoubtedly the most exciting and powerful contemporary art movement. At its core street art is an ephemeral exercise, often disappearing within days of its installation. The precarious, and often politically fraught, nature of street art necessitates dedicated chroniclers. Fortunately, here in the Philadelphia area we have the zealous crew at Streets Dept cataloging the dizzying array of art showing-up on Philly streets every day.

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Is It Overdue

Italian-born, Berlin-based artist Frederico Pietrella uses diverse medium in his work, but lately he has added a unique tool—library date stamps. The time-intensive, large-scale images takes weeks to complete and are selling for up to €20,000. The DW video below offers a glimpse into the artist process.

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Open Air Philly

“Open Air is an interactive art installation designed to transform Philadelphia’s historic Benjamin Franklin Parkway, between tonight and October 14, 2012.

In this project, twenty four powerful searchlights create unique, dynamic light formations in the sky which react to voice messages sent by participants using a free mobile app and this website. The public is invited to record and submit messages of up to 30 seconds in length — shout-outs, poems, songs, rants, dedications, proposals. As the messages playback in Philadelphia, the lights react in brightness and position to the frequency and amplitude of the voice recordings, which can be heard through the mobile app, the website and public speakers located at the Project Information Center at Eakins Oval (24th Street and the Parkway).

Priority is given to mobile app messages sent live from the Parkway during the show, but messages can also be sent through the website at any time. Messages submitted through the web are archived and played-back by the lights if other web visitors rate them highly. A personalized webpage is created automatically for every participant, featuring their message, comments, rating and images of the light designs that their voice created.

Depending on atmospheric conditions, Open Air will be seen up to 10 miles away from the Parkway each evening from 8 to 11 p.m. The Project Information Center at Eakins Oval will be equipped with app download, free mobile loan stations and seating areas for watching the lights and listening to the messages. There will also be an Information Outpost located at Sister Cities Park (18th Street and Logan Square).

The Open Air voice archive also features selected “Voices of Philly,” recorded messages from distinct individuals both past and present who have inspired and influenced the flavor of Philadelphia. “Voices of Philly” messages are accessible on this website and will be played at various times throughout the project. Content for “Voices of Philly” will be collected by Rafael Lozano-Hemmer, project partner WHYY executive producer Elisabeth Perez-Luna, and the Association for Public Art.

Inspired by the city’s rich tradition of democracy and respect for free speech, Open Air is at once a visible voicemail system, a rant line, a public stage and an archive of recordings from Philadelphia’s past and present. The piece is the largest and brightest to date of Lozano-Hemmer’s searchlight installations. Despite its monumental size and its wide visibility, the project is not intended as a cathartic pre-programmed spectacle like a fireworks display or a son-et-lumière show. On the contrary, the piece is designed to attract personal participation that creates a sense of global connection, complicity and public agency.”

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The Key to Character

In celebration of the bicentennial of Charles Dickens’ birth, the New York Public Library has opened a wonderful, special exhibition called “Charles Dickens: The Key to Character”. Running through January 27, 2013, and held in the iconic Stephen A. Schwartzman Building, the show displays a wealth of Dickensiana, along with a wide range of work inspired by Dickens over the centuries.

“The exhibition looks at characters across Dickens’s career, from beloved novels like A Tale of Two Cities, Oliver Twist, and David Copperfield to lesser-know works including Martin Chuzzlewit and Dombey and Son…Also on display: an 1867 pocket diary filled with the code Dickens used to communicate with his mistress, Ellen Ternan; a couture gown by Prabal Gurung, a contemporary fashion designer inspired by the decayed elegance of Great Expectations‘s Miss Havisham; and recordings from the special collections of The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts.”

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Making Public Transit Cool

There’s not much humor to be found in public transportation here in the U.S., but the Danish transit organization Midttrafik knows how to make public transit fun. Here are two versions of their recent, very amusing commercial aimed at making bus riding “cool”. The Danish version is funnier, but the U.K. video is good for a giggle too.

By the way, Midttrafik also runs many of the transit companies around Central Denmark, including in Aarhus and two regional railways.

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Literature vs Traffic

This past summer our favorite Spanish street art collective Luzinterruptus  visited Melbourne, Australia and made a lasting impression with the reprise of their installation called “Literature vs. Traffic”. The work, which they previously offered in New York City, incorporated more than 10,000 discarded library books. At the end of the nine-day event, the books were offered to passerbys and motorists.

The objective of the piece?

“…a river of books overflowing into the physical pedestrian spaces and installed itself in the space allocated to cars, stealing precious space to dense traffic in the area, in a symbolic gesture in which literature took control of the streets and became the conquerer of the pblic space…in which traffic withdrew yielding ground to the modest power of the written word.”

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Painting Europe

This Spring, Berlin-based Bruno Levy and Blake Shaw, better known as the performance art group Sweatshoppe, video-bombed five European cities. Utilizing a technique that they call “Video Painting” based on their own secret software blend, the duo temporarily covers urban sites, including the old Berlin Wall, with mindblowing disappearing paintings.

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Book Store of the Month

Urban dwellers in the U.S. are getting ready for their mass pilgrimages to the higher elevations for the autumn leaf-peeping season. Residents of the Northeast often head for the Hudson River Valley region of New York State and the easily accessible Catskill Mountains.

Bibliophile leaf-lovers would do well with a detour to the town of Hudson (home of Martin Van Buren, Frederic Church and Philip Glass) and the amazing home of The Spotty Dog Books & Ale.

Not only does the shop offer thousands of well-curated titles and a super selection of artisanal beers, but they are housed in an authentic 19th century firehouse. The prevervation award-winning building was once home to the Rip Van Winkle Hook and Ladder Co. (for real).

The Spotty Dog also hosts frequent author events and great live music. Be sure to try the Poor Soldier Porter.

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Ride the SkyCycle

London’s colorful and controversial mayor Boris Johnson has endorsed a new scheme to attack the city’s transport mess with sky high bike lanes connecting the City of London with east London. The proposed SkyCycle project won’t be free though, access fees are planned to be £1 per ride. Still, it seems to be an eminently practical way to challenge congestion. The first bike lane in the sky should be in place by 2015, if the funding gets approved.

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A History of New York

Drawing inspiration from last year’s BBC/British Museum collaboration called “A History of the World in 100 Objects”, the New York Times selected a group of historians to decide what should be part of “A History of New York in 50 Objects”. The compilation of quintessential items chosen to represent the narrative of New York features many objects so emblematic of the city that most would agree with the selections—a bagel, a MetroCard, a yellow Checker cab—but some items that made the list are surprising.

Take a look at the New York Times article by Sam Roberts on the project and decide for yourself what to add or subtract. Personally, I’d consider replacing the MetroCard with a subway token. And where’s the traditional NY slice?

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