Art & PNC Park

The two subjects don’t normally coincide with each other, but they will tonight at PNC Park.
Here’s the official press release on this interesting combination:
Eight works of art are now on display on Pittsburgh-area billboards as a result of a collaboration between School of Art students at Carnegie Mellon University and Lamar Outdoor Advertising. This is the second time in as many years that School of Art students have had the opportunity to make their art visible to tens of thousands of people around Pittsburgh every day.
“Lamar Outdoor Advertising is providing a unique opportunity to our students,” said Visiting Assistant Professor Christopher Sperandio. “No other art students in the country are making new artworks as billboards, and certainly not on a scale like this.”
The project began last year, when Sperandio contacted Lamar Outdoor Advertising about using billboards as a way to train students in creating new graphic artwork for a general public. Lamar provided four 11′ by 24′ billboards in locations around Pittsburgh. This year, Lamar doubled its contribution to eight billboards, and Sperandio, along with School of Art associate professors Ayanah Moor and Kim Beck, have engaged their sophomore printmaking students in the task of making new artworks for billboards.
“The School of Art is really lucky to have the support of Lamar Outdoor. It’s not only an opportunity for our students to think about art-making beyond the traditional definitions, but a great way for them to experience corporate generosity first hand,” Beck said.
For the billboards, students designed new art specifically for a Pittsburgh audience. Forty students competed for the eight billboards. The winners were chosen by Elizabeth Thomas, the Phyllis Wattis MATRIX Curator in Berkeley, California.
“Carnegie Mellon has a long history of fostering the inter-relationship of art and public life. These collected works, which take advantage of scale, visibility and conventions of commerce, will no doubt provide Pittsburgh drivers with fodder for reflection, amusement and engagement,” said Thomas, former associate curator of contemporary art at the Carnegie Museum of Art and a guest curator at The Andy Warhol Museum.
A sample of the billboard art descriptions by the artists themselves:
“My Secret” by sophomore Alissa Osial
“The work looks like a partially destroyed billboard. The viewer can read ‘My secret is I like…’ but the rest of the message has been ripped away. The viewer is able to interact with this piece by creating their own message, letting them imagine what the secret is. I am not telling the viewer what I am hiding, or what the meaning is. I want to leave it up to them to decide that.”
“Chaos” by sophomore Robin Scheines
“My billboard is a drawing of a seated man, and all around him is a chaotic cityscape. This work is about the viewer and their relationship to the urban environment. The seated man surrounded by the bustling city is meant to invite viewers to pause for a moment, and listen to their environment. To enjoy the present even in so much chaos and movement.”
“Popular” by junior Terry Boyd
“My billboard is a fake graffiti tag on an existing billboard. By creating this image in the comfort of my studio and superimposing it digitally on an existing billboard image, I have eliminated the danger and risk associated with vandalism. I’m trying to buy street cred by defacing a modest advertisement with an image of wealth and hedonism.”
“Sprawl” by junior Ryan Woodring
“For my billboard design, I wanted the flooded suburbs to leak back out on to the highways. It would be interesting to see an entire neighborhood of these images all projecting themselves out on to the street. By eliminating the role of perceived space within the image, the billboard hopefully reads more like the facade of a house and less like a copied image.”
“Say Something” by sophomore Jessica Jackson
“My billboard features brightly colored demonstrators holding up signs that read: ‘Say something, anything.’ I made it to show my respect for those of us who put ourselves out there and tell people what they think. I want viewers to be reminded that they have the right, and really the responsibility to voice their opinions about their concerns.”
The event is free and open to the public. The Warhol will host an after party from 9 to 11 p.m. at the museum.
“PNC Park is a unique venue for video art. You don’t typically expect to see art at the baseball stadium, but it’s an amazing experience,” said Jill Kraus Visiting Assistant Professor of Art Christopher Sperandio. As far as we know, no other art school in the country is using an 85” x 35” high-definition screen as a venue for student and faculty art work.
For more information, visit CMU’s website here.
And speaking of art, check out one of my previous posts here on submitting work to various local projects.
Pittsburgh, art, PNC Park, Carnegie Mellon University

April 22nd, 2008 at 7:15 pm
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