Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Pictures I Took Since August


I did not realize how long I had been working on my last art piece, until I posted the pictures to my blog.The last entry was in August. I have been taking pictures, but every time I was in front of the computer, I was working on that image.


These are some of the pictures I took.


I sometimes suspect that my phone camera increases the saturation on its images, but this silver fence really does throw some wild light and reflections around.


One morning in early October the rambling garden of the church arcross the street glimmered in the light.


Gentrification continues in Williamsburg. This brightly painted building facing the bridge is being eviscerated while its pretty shell remains.


I tried to photograph through the window to capture the sunlight filtering down through the roofless ceiling.


The graffiti monsters at the building's base looked forlorn behind the scaffolding, as if they were imprisoned. I wonder if they will be restored in the finished building.


This empty space will probably soon be filled in as well, the colorful tags hidden behind glass and steel.


A little November light

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Virtual Street Art

Lost Mural Runs Free

On Cooper Square near 6th Street, I have placed a label with a QR code. It is right outside that shiny new silver Cooper Union building, on the lampost.




If you scan the QR code with your smart phone, you can see the image.


Nothing could console me after September 11th, not the national day of prayer, or the Buddhist monks drumming in Union Square Park, the last spot before the streets were closed. We stood there in small groups talking in low voices, strangers at a funeral. The faces of the departed stared out at us from missing posters.

Weeks later, a mural appeared on the wall of a small old building on Bowery. It summed up everything I was feeling. It was a comfort to walk past it for a while.

The city recovered, the mural was painted over. The old 19th century building it was painted on was deemed unworthy of conserving and was torn down. Now a new building is rising up. It will be dormatories for the Cooper Union students who must now pay tuition for the first time since the university was founded over 150 years ago.

I wanted to let the mural loose on Cooper Square once again.