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Massachusetts Ave. Billboard Project: Brad Wicklund


Honk if You’re Lonely by Brad Wicklund

 

 

Your Art Here presents Honk if You’re Lonely by artist Brad Wicklund for the Massachusetts Ave. Billboard Project. The billboard will be mounted April 2006.

Artwork Statement

Every human being has a unique story to tell that is influenced by his or her own experiences and perspectives on reality. Despite this individuality we are all inextricably linked. Even our most mundane actions, when repeated daily or by many people, can have global ramifications. My recent work illustrates those moments when the tension between the personal and universal becomes noticeable by forcing the observer to consider his or her own relationship to a larger community.

Artist Bio

Brad Wicklund was born in Longview, Texas in 1982. While growing up his family moved often which lead him to live in Alaska, Illinois, and several cities in Ohio. In 2001 he began attending Indiana University, Bloomington, where he will graduate from in May 2006 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree in Printmaking and a Bachelor of Arts Degree in History of Art. Along with fellow printmaker, Andrew Maxson, he founded the LOVE FACTORY art collective in January 2006.

Visit: http://www.bradwicklund.com

Massachusetts Ave. Billboard Project: Joseph Traylor & Cate Whitcomb

Today’s Special by Joseph Traylor & Cate Whitcomb
Your Art Here presents a collaboration between two artists, Joseph Traylor & Cate Whitcomb, for the Massachusetts Ave. Billboard Project. Their piece is entitled Today’s Special. The billboard will be mounted January and February 2006.

Artwork Statement

Our goal was to take the vernacular of billboard advertising and apply it to the idea of promoting each day. This work subverts communication channels for product and service advertising into a promotion of the goal enjoying everyday.

Artist Bio:

Joseph Traylor graduated from Indiana University with a BFA in Graphic Design in December 2004. He currently works as a graphic designer in New York, NY.

Cate Whitcomb graduated from Indiana University with a BFA in Graphic Design in December 2004. She currently works as a graphic designer in Portland, OR.

Contact:

Joseph Traylor: traylor.j@gmail.com
Cate Whitcomb: cate.whitcomb@gmail.com

Massachusetts Avenue billboards- D. Morrison Lyman and Andrew Glenn


Cleanse, a photograph by D. Morrison Lyman is hanging on the 888 space.

Artwork Statment

Looks at My Loves
The latest series by D. Morrison Lyman
D. Morrison Lyman, a queer Chicago artist and activist, has been shooting and compiling this body of work over several years. Looks at my Loves is a collection of fragmented portraits of people in Morrison’s life and community. The images are snapshot glimpses of a delicious assembly of her loves and community members in all of their grief and glory. Images made are observations of individuals and relationships between: the subject(s) and the environment, the photographer and the subject, and often the subject and the viewer.
Subjects are each part of Morrison’s world in some capacity, as a friend, partner, ally, or advocate. Gender or sexual orientation-wise, they often transcend a common label or definition. For example, some of the subjects may consider themselves lesbians, but others may consider themselves transgender, queer, genderqueer, or genderrevolutionary, as essentially all of these terms represent anything considered ‘deviant’ or ‘alternative’ to/ of the ‘norm’. What constitutes ‘the norm’ is anyone’s educated guess: the dominant ideology, the commonly accepted norms as defined by the majority, and/ or the people in power. In this way, the images of Looks at My Loves serve to inform as well as observe this lifestyle. Consider these photos a true representation of real, queer life in the contemporary Midwest, today. In regards to the April 2005 Your Art Here Billboard image, the artist writes, Untitled (Liz in the tub) is a portrait of my (now former) partner. This image shows the intimacy and vulnerability of being in a loving relationship, and all of the complex emotions that accompany it.

Artist Bio

Morrison Lyman is a Chicago artist, performer, and photographer, and teacher. Raised in a small Midwestern farm community by a single mother artist, Morrison was taught the value and necessity of self-expression at a very early age. She has since developed this need to express into art that comments on and explores such issues as gender, body image, class, relationships, and fractured identity.

Yucca Flat, Andrew Glenn

Detail from Yucca Flat, NV, by Andrew Glenn, is an image that coincides with his MFA Thesis Exhibition, April 13–24, at the Indiana University Art Museum, Bloomington, IN, is hanging on the 922 space. Andrew’s opening reception is Friday, April 15, 6–8pm.

The Patriot Art Series


Does Your Vote Count by Shana Berger

This series of four billboards was exhibited on the YAH Massachusetts Ave. billboards, leading up to the November Presidential Election of 2004. Each piece took a unique look at the media’s influence on the mainstream perception of ‘patriotism.’ Lies, Lies, Lies, by Owen Mundy, Does Your Vote Count?, by Shana Berger, #2, by Dan Reidy and Wendy Taylor, andDang, It Feel Good to Be a Gangsterer!, by Dana Sperry and Chuck Jones

Press

Politics, passion & property, by Paul F. P. Pogue, NUVO, Indianapolis, IN, December 15, 2004
Off The Wall: Stories Behind the Art, Shana BergerThe Herald-Times Scene, October 7, 2004

*The Patriotic Art series was a new Your Art Here series. All art billboards were displayed on privately-owned buildings in Indianapolis, IN. All art billboards were paid for by the artists themselves. There was no affiliation with, nor did any additional funding for this series come from, any outside agency including, but not limited to, Public or Private Corporations, Political Parties, 527 Organizations, 501(c)(3) Organizations, Educational Institutions, Churches, or City, State, or Federal Governments. Additionally, Your Art Here does not endorse any candidate for public office.