Wednesday, December 25, 2013
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
2013 Installation Celebration!
Dear Friend of PAL,
You're invited to our annual Installation Celebration. On the evening of December 11th, 2013, we will be celebrating the installation of several new sculptures in Champaign-Urbana over the past year. Please join us for a night of drink, food, and friends of the Public Art League.
Sincerely,
Whitney Hartman
Public Art League
Installation Celebration
Celebrating CU's new sculptures and their sponsors
Entertainment will be provided by The Bryan Holloway Somethin'.
Appetizers and a cash bar will be available.
December 11th, 2013
5:30pm-7:30pm
Buvons Wine Bar at the Corkscrew Wine Emporium
203 N. Vine St., Urbana, IL
Please RSVP by December 6th to Whitney Hartman at: whitney.wheatman@gmail.com
About UsPublic Art League's mission is to promote creativity and improve the community's aesthetic by cultivating awareness and appreciation of public art.
Friday, November 8, 2013
Circle of Friends
Public Art League is proud to
announce the installation of Circle of
Friends, a sculpture by Karen Crain, on November 6th. Public Art League worked with the City
of Champaign to complete the installation at the corner of Park and Neil streets
in downtown Champaign. Circle of Friends represents the 41st
sculpture Public Art League has brought to the community, and its installation
is possible thanks to the generous support of the Friends of PAL.
Sculptor Karen Crain has been
creating exhibitions for over 20 years and has won national awards in major
juried shows including the National Sculpture Society, American Women Artists,
and Allied Artists of America. Her works
have been featured in cities and galleries across the country, and she has won
People’s Choice awards in South Dakota, Arizona, and Colorado.
Crain’s love of the human spirit
and form are what give her art its emotional depth. Circle
of Friends is a tribute to her family and the books she enjoyed with them
as she was growing up. She explains,
“Books can have an enormous impact on us, helping to form our beliefs, morals,
and dreams. The circular shape the girl
sits in echoes the theme of how books encompass our lives and become a valuable
part of who we are.” The band around the
outside of the circle contains the engraved titles of several books that appeal
to young readers, and Crain hopes these titles will encourage young readers and
their families to makes these books a part of their lives.
Saturday, November 2, 2013
PAL's Latest Installation Shines Day & Night
The Public Art League is proud to announce the installation of Glory Pipes 2.0, a sculpture by the Fairfield Enterprises Public Art Collective on Friday, November 1st. The Public Art League worked with the City of Champaign to complete the installation at the corner of Main and Chestnut streets in downtown Champaign. Glory Pipes 2.0 represents the 40th sculpture Public Art League has brought to the community, and its installation is possible thanks to the generous support of "The Old Depot".
The designers and engineers responsible for this sculpture are part of the Fairfield Enterprises Public Art Collective, a team which strives to create contemporary yet organic sculptures that bring to the site a shining presence by day and a radiant light show by night. Lead by Stephen Fairfield, Ph.D., and supported by Patrick Marcus, Ph.D., E.E., and Emily Taylor, the Collective creates energy efficient, solar powered new media sculptures that utilize color, light and motion sensors incorporated in contemporary forms.
Glory Pipes 2.0 contains 26 red/green/blue light emitting diodes, capable of displaying 16.4 million different color combinations. When a passive infrared sensor detects people within its range, the brightness of the LEDs increases greatly, and they change colors, patterns and frequencies more rapidly. The high activity state remains until a short time after people leave the area, at which point the program returns to a low activity state, conserving power. By moving in and out of the sensor’s detection area observers may become participants, switching the software and “playing” the sculpture’s display.
Friday, November 1, 2013
Two New Sculptures by Artist Mike Helbing
It's a Mistree
Newly installed near the Illinois Terminal Building
The Public Art League is proud to announce the installations of It’s a Mistree and Ascend the Wind, two sculptures by Mike Helbing, on Thursday, October 31st. The Public Art League worked with the Champaign-Urbana Mass Transit District to install It’s a Mistree on the University Avenue side of the Illinois Terminal and the City of Champaign to install Ascend the Wind in front of the Champaign City Building on Neil Street. These sculptures, the 38th and 39th brought to the community through PAL, are possible thanks to the generous support of these two sponsors.
Mike Helbing’s sculptures have been featured in museums, galleries, and public spaces across the United States and in Canada. Helbing received his M.F.A. from Northern Illinois University in 1991, but long before was influenced by his tour of duty with the U.S. Army in Vietnam, of which he recalls, “War is like a crucible where elements of life are placed together and heated to incredible mental temperatures and the very assumptions and basis of existence are challenged, changed, rearranged and reconstructed.” Helbing sought to rebuild his reality through his work as an artist, and his art examines his place in the world and invites visitors to share the journey of discovery.
Both It’s a Mistree and Ascend the Wind are composed primarily of found stainless steel. According to Helbing, “Much as writers form thoughts that grow into stories using words, my found objects are analogous to language, and these objects are reassembled to create new meaning. The things I collect are rearranged and modified, cut and attached, grouped, bent, reduced, chipped, welded, ground, assembled and polished. This presents the familiar in a new light, causing the everyday to be looked at with new wonder.”
Ascend the Wind
with artist Mike Helbing and David Wilcoxen (PAL President)
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
"Uppercutted" Arrives in Westside Park
The Public Art League is proud to announce the installation of Uppercutted, a sculpture by Ted Sitting Crow Garner, Wednesday, October 23rd. The Public Art League worked with The Champaign Park District to complete the installation on the south side of Westside Park at noon. Uppercutted represents the 37th sculpture Public Art League has brought to the community, and its installation is possible thanks to the generous support of The Champaign Parks Foundation through The Michael Carragher Fund.
Sculptor Ted Sitting Crow Garner received his B.F.A. from the Kansas City Art Institute, where he was also responsible for the proposal, development, and construction of a student gallery. His works have earned acclaim from numerous cities and museums from across the country, and he has received major commissions from the City of Chicago, the City of New York Department of Parks and Recreation, the Chicago Children’s Museum, and the Field Museum of Natural History, to name a few.
His aim is to make art which combines the power and aesthetics of his Native American heritage (he is an enrolled member of the Standing Rock Sioux Indian Tribe, of Sihasapa and Minneconjou band affiliation) with modern techniques, theory, and materials. He also draws inspiration from world art history, feeling that the incorporation of a broader perspective can result in a more profound examination of the world and our place in it. With Upercutted, Garner wanted to create an evocation of surprise and shock.
Saturday, October 19, 2013
"Stanchion" Arrives in Hazel Park!
The Public Art League is proud to announce the installation of Stanchion, a sculpture by Dan Perry of Waterloo, IA. The Public Art League worked with the Champaign Park District to complete the installation at the corner of Neil Street and Bradley Avenue on Friday, October 18. Stanchion represents the 36th sculpture the Public Art League has brought to the community, and its installation is possible thanks to the generous support of Barham Benefit Group.
Sculptor Dan Perry, M.F.A., is an instructor at University of Northern Iowa and co-supervisor of the Public Art Incubator in Cedar Falls, Iowa. He has exhibited work throughout the United States and has completed residencies in both Italy and Nebraska. The imagery in his work is “an amalgamation of candid recollections and fabricated realities constructed in the guise of toys, props, architecture, and machines.”
In describing Stanchion, Perry states, “Constant exposure to films, music, folklore, science, and the events of the world around me influence my work as I attempt to recreate events sculpturally. Stanchion is based in the notion of a portable landscape. By combining references to common building materials such as cinder blocks with the imagery of an idealistic cloud, I aim to explore the human desire to control our environment.”
For more information about this installation, please contact David Wilcoxen at 217.898.8263. For more information about joining Public Art League, please visit our website.
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