According to Pitch readers, the S'mores grant project has been voted as the best public art in Kansas City! See the Pitch article here: http://www.pitch.com/bestof/2010/section/arts-and-entertainment-14652/
The S’mores Grant Project provides grants for creative endeavors that engage with public environments. The grant is funded by artists selling s’mores, merchandise and more from a street vending cart. We make money, activate and transform public space , and share our earnings so others can do the same.
CONTACT
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
S'mores Grant voted best public art in KC
According to Pitch readers, the S'mores grant project has been voted as the best public art in Kansas City! See the Pitch article here: http://www.pitch.com/bestof/2010/section/arts-and-entertainment-14652/
Thursday, August 26, 2010
KC Confidential Interview
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
September First Friday Leedy Voulkos
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.
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Boris Groys on Public Art
S'Mores Grant in the News
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Origins
The idea of marketing s’mores from a street vending cart was originally conceived around a campfire, in the summer of 2009, by Sean Starowitz and myself. It was obvious nothing like a s’mores vending cart existed; in fact, s’mores of any kind were rare to encounter in urban areas. With the realization of a niche and novelty marketing status as possible assurance of profit, the project appeared to have good chance of success.
Many contemporary artists utilize evolving marketing strategies while not critically inquiring about the subjective market in which these strategies are applied. I think this path of inquiry is fascinating because the over-arching for -profit economic system seems to be steering the way art is made, viewed and positioned in culture. I was hoping it was the other way around.
Most artists I know are confronted with the fact that romantic notions of art practice, content, and conceptual development are nurtured in a completely different environment than the limited, and often rigid, market for their work. Artists are encouraged to be saavy marketers, but a proper market analysis of the average local art market machinations would undoubtedly reveal a highly, subjective, ambiguous and capricious environment that may well be un-analyzable. This may be exactly the playing field artists are trained to deal with.
Why all the encouragement for artists to adopt the marketing status quo? Are questions about the very economic system artists operate in considered passe’ to talk about? Can they be approached in contradictory ways, using simple, effective market strategies? How do we feel about artists operating as venture capitalists in order to promote the work of others, for us all to share? Are s’mores easily accessible in your area?
These questions are at the source of this project. We intend this encounter with our local economic and social landscape to be a site for crafting community interaction and identity. This includes exploration of the for-profit system as a mode of generosity. We offer an opportunity to spark conversation on the street about public art.
Kurt Flecksing
Saturday, March 27, 2010
Glee
Saturday, March 20, 2010
S'mores Grant Project Participates in Glee Medicine Show 3/26/2010
s'mores Grant Project Travels to Chicago
Friday, January 29, 2010
S'mores Cart 1/15/09
The S’mores Grant Project
The S’mores Grant is a funding program, made by artists. The grant is awarded to individuals who work in non-traditional practices, which can include (but is not limited to) community projects, public practice, or socially-engaging work. The s’mores cart is a vehicle for raising funds while promoting work made locally. The individuals who receive the grant are chosen by a jury who have observed them within the community. These individuals have made efforts to invent new strategies for enriching their surroundings in some way.