Tuesday, November 18, 2008
book on the radio
My first stab at a book illustrating two different radio segments. My pieces are Studs Terkel on NPR's "StoryCorps," and the other is Bill O'Reilly on his show, "The Radio Factor," where he tells a caller to shove it. Fun stuff. It'll be accordion-folded with one segment on each side.
home improvements
Thursday, November 13, 2008
garage interventions continued
I gave up on trying to address the political 'urban renewal' aspect of the parking garage and just trying to make whimsical interventions to play off of the oppressive space. Above is a kind of 'car wash' curtain of party streamers to be installed in the garage. The curtain was all of one length, but somebody decided to give it a haircut last night. I'm kind of annoyed about that. Below is confetti in the shape of leaves that you scatter as you leave the parking lot. The garage is enormous and difficult to navigate, so the confetti is supposed to help you locate your car when you return. The pink is really neon pink.
emoticons continued
election day coverage
Watching the poll results come in in the GD atrium. On the left we projected YouTube, in the center MSNBC, to the right was Fox News. We primarily watched MSNBC, but during commericial breaks, we'd switch over to YouTube and watch dance videos. There were really nice decorations of red, white, and blue objects hanging all over the atrium, unfortunately you can't really see them in the photo.
garage interventions
These are two separate interventions for my parking garage site. The Temple Street parking garage is at the heart of a major urban renewal project in downtown New Haven, which has included razing a mall and moving Gateway Community College next door to the parking lot. Providing enough parking spaces for the Gateway students in the Temple Street parking lot is part of a larger puzzle to create enough parking infrastructure to accomodate all the incoming traffic to New Haven. New Haven was also the site of a major urban renewal effort in the 1960s which displaced many local residents and which actually hastened the city's decline. Whew.
That said, above are small postcard-size panels depicting historical scenes of downtown New Haven. The text on the panels, says "The more things change, the more they stay the same"—referring to how this second urban renewal project may be similar/different from the initial attempt.
The shapes on the bottom are neon-colored paper cut-outs of oil blobs that drip from cars. I was trying to draw attention to a kind of "green message" without being too didactic.
Monday, November 10, 2008
poster machine
I'm starting to get lazy about posting stuff. Or, conversely, I'm starting to get too busy to post ? It's probably more about the lazy, honestly. This is from a lovely poster show in the GD Atrium exhibiting posters generated from 'poster machines' as supervised by Roel Wouters. Sometimes they were literally machines, sometimes the machine was just a mechanized approach to generating form/content. I didn't make any poster/machines bc the workshop was geared towards first and second years. Next year.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)