CONTACT

E-mail: smoresgrant@gmail.com
Phone: 913 406 8076

Thursday, June 17, 2010

S'mores Mission

The S'mores Grant Project is a capital raising opportunity that can benefit and enrich public spaces. I intend to generate funds by selling s'mores from a street vending cart and distribute partial profits, in the form of micro-grants, to individuals or groups in the community that are involved in public art.

 A street vending cart is  a simple and self-contained profit-generating vehicle with low overhead costs. It is mobile and efficient, impacting multiple public sites. The urban street environment is the optimum context for spontaneous education and information exchange.

 This project functions in multiple public environments and opens up a dialogue that concerns 1). the placement and space available for art discourse in our community 2). economic structures as a medium with which to craft and traverse 3). activating public space with the intent of generosity, education, and enjoyment.

 I am interested in the evolving functions of art in the world. Participating in apparent structures,  be they urban street-scapes, commercial art venues, or a system of for-profit-maximization, motivates me to focus on their boundaries and limits. Operating in ambiguous and co-created  public space provides the greatest reward for my own understanding of how I position my work in the world. At the same time, I aim to generously activate my community and help others do the same.

 My past involvement performing as a musician,  crafting functional wood-working, making furniture and lighting, and most recently public sculpture, has led me to making work that is contextually based. The sites where these works are negotiated is the content I explore.

 

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Boris Groys on Public Art

Every urban population believes in having its own collective psychology. One can ridicule this belief, but it has produced a lot of poetry, music and cinema that we are accustomed to valuing. The volume of poems about Parisian air or St. Petersburg’s weather is a sufficient justification for their architecture. However, if we don’t speak about art that is stimulated by a city but about art in the public space, then one should be very careful. The chance that any really good artwork can go though all possible channels that evaluate it is minimal. And, in general, art that is exhibited outside of arts institutions has to additionally identify itself as art. That makes art shown in the public space even more conservative than art shown within the framework of institutions.

S'Mores Grant in the News

The Rocket grant recipients are featured in this Kansas City Star article: http://www.kansascity.com/2010/06/05/1990845/rocket-grants-boost-local-artists.htm
SMORES GRANT PROJECT WINS ROCKET GRANT

After a small set-back where we had to cancel our Chicago trip, we are bouncing back nicely by procuring a Rocket Grant. This funding will enable us to build a new cart this summer and therefore have a greater presence in the community. The Rocket Grant has been provided by the Warhol Foundation (see here http://www.charlottestreet.org/).  I sincerely hope more opportunities like this are available to creative people in our community. I want Kansas City to be on the map because of its creative population, in addition to BBQ, s'mores, hot n' sweaty
all night snake-bit evangelist trance-a-thons, and that bright new museum building. We can have it all!