In Dubai

We have limited access to the internet at the hotel for now so we won’t be doing any streaming tonight. It’s 11:30 pm here and we are off to bed. The usual travel mishaps: delays and close connections, no hotel reservations but we are here and all is well with the world. It’s beautiful and hot.

Plush Alley

Below is the description of a project that Beth and I worked on with the invaluable assistance of my sister, Sarah. We had proposed the installation for the Northside Charm Bracelet grant and the text is taken from the grant application. Unfortunately, the grant was not received and the idea remains unfunded. We have had a few leads lately, but since we are on our way out of the country and things are a little hectic, we are sort of letting it drop for now. Perhaps we will find a similar space in which to install it in Dubai and there will be people there who think that it is worth funding such a cutting-edge new media installation. Sorry Pittsburgh…keep painting your murals. We’ll just have to wait for you to catch up to the rest of the public art world. Meanwhile, we are off to a place that is receptive of new ideas.

  • Plush Alley is a solar powered outdoor video art space accessible to the public 24 hours a day on Pittsburgh’s Northside.



    Visual History of the Site (pdf)

    Located adjacent to the parking lot at the corner of Sandusky and Lacock Streets (near a street once named Plush Alley) it will display two projections of video art projects that pay homage to the history of the Northside. The projectors will be powered by solar panels mounted above the projection boxes.

    The videos will be programmed and controlled remotely through a wireless broadband server. There will be no need to access the on site equipment except for the occasional replacement of projector bulbs (4000 hour life), which will be done easily about twice a year with a ladder to a locked projection box access panel. In fact, the mounting height of nearly 20 feet will discourage any would be vandals from tampering with the equipment. This use of technology plus environmentally conscious design will innovatively assist in weaving contemporary art into the fabric of historical Pittsburgh. The binocular projections can be related or unrelated and could have the potential to be viewed stereoscopically.

    The chosen location has extensive foot traffic on any given day, which includes pedestrians in route
    to work downtown, sports fans, art lovers walking from the Warhol Museum (the projections would
    be visible from the front door of the Warhol Museum) to the Mattress Factory, as well as residential
    foot traffic. This diverse group of people moving through the Northside shares the common thread
    of intersecting with this historical space. It is exciting to imagine the footsteps of history overlapping
    with the activities of contemporary culture.

    We wish to poetically illuminate a bit of this history, while at the same time standing as a model of art practice in the 21st century—a practice that understands that art, history, environment, and audience experience exist symbiotically. The location was also selected based on its southern orientation for prime solar exposure, and yet perpetual shade at the plane of the projection. These two elements existing together is quite unique and perfect for the use as video art space. It easily turns a once blighted space into a neighborhood asset that has relevance to a broad audience.

    The inaugural video projection to be debuted on New Year’s Eve 2008 will be created by Elizabeth Monoian and Robert Ferry and will be a stereoscopic design that metaphorically references Plush Alley’s history as researched at the Heinz History Center. We believe that Plush Alley meets the Charm Bracelet’s goals of innovation as well as enhancing the experience of the residents of and visitors to the Northside.

    We perceive of the Plush Alley installation as Phase 1 of a larger community outreach project, eventually incorporating the Charm Bracelet’s other focus area of Educational and Youth Programming
    as Phase 2.

    Phase 2
    Educational and Youth Programming (beginning June 20, 2009):
    Merging the history of the Northside into educational programming with the children of the neighborhood. We will organize 2-day art day camps every other weekend in June and July pending availability of space. Potential spaces that we will approach include Northside churches, the Children’s Museum, and the New Hazlett Theater. During these 2-day art camps children will be introduced to various histories of the Northside, art making techniques, and the works of artists such as Jacob Lawrence. The children will have the opportunity to express their responses to these histories through art making.

    The projects that the children create will be archived into a projected video at Plush Alley, as well as
    into a growing archive contained on a website designed and maintained by Elizabeth Monoian. The value for the youth participating in these day camps and the public presentations of the artworks created during them are far reaching. The end results, we believe, are of self worth, neighborhood pride, and community accountability.

    The specific histories that we will research and present to the children will be as follows:
    1: Underground Railroad
    2: Northside Architecture
    3: Personal Histories

    Phase 3
    Curated New Media Space with Online Posted Weekly Programming Schedule
    (beginning December 2009):

    Taking Plush Alley to the next level, the videos projected during each day would be scheduled for
    smaller periods of programming time. The schedule would be posted online and would be programmed
    and updated weekly. An example of a typical day would be as follows:

    6am-9am
    Video Blog: Scrolling Text of Stories Told by Neighborhood Children

    9am-12pm
    Local Art Day Camp Production, Ages 6-8: A History of Charles Avery

    12pm-3pm
    Local Art Day Camp Production, Ages 9-12: The Underground Railroad in
    Pittsburgh’s Northside

    3pm-6pm
    Video Artwork by Local Artists – Documentary

    6pm-9pm
    Video Art by Pittsburgh Students Age 13-18

    9pm-12pm
    Video Artwork by Local Artists – Avant Garde

    12am-3am
    Concept Pieces of Independent Artists: International Forum

    3am-6am
    Video Blog: Scrolling Text of Stories Told by Neighborhood Adults

  • Larger Screen

    Well that was really hard. I finally figured out how to make the column with the screen 100px wider. The learning curve has been steep, but I finally think I’ve tweaked this thing just right. I’ve placed some Dubai related videos that I cued up from youtube on automatic rotation that will be stand-in for now until we get things rolling on the webcast. There are about 12 of them that play in order and then if you are there at the right time, you’ll see Elizabeth and I get married in the video that Deborah Hosking shot and that her husband, Randy Kovitz, edited. I’ll replace these videos with other things (perhaps less touristy and more heady) as soon as I can get the right stuff.

    Today is Sunday and next week we’ll be landing in Dubai at around this time. It’s really hitting me now. Still have to hook up with Mike to give him the title to the old Ford Explorer. He and Anthony are gonna pimp the shit out of it and drive it fast through mud and jumps or something. Of course we will have live footage here of that. Here’s some interesting footage of the old white whale from 2006:

    Movin’ on Up: The Explorer Takes on the Johnstown Incline

    This mogulus thing is completely amazing and it would have been very difficult for me to have set the tv thing up on my own. Perhaps impossible. So let’s hope they have staying power. I guess they make their money through advertising since I didn’t have to pay them anything. There is a little box that came up last night about Pittsburgh waterproofing or something, but you can click it away quite easily. In any case, if you have something to advertise, consider supporting them.

    Today, Beth and I are heading to the old Allegheny City to take some more photos for the Allegheny Commons website. I hope the weather stays good.

    Overture

    The curtain is still down and the house lights are on. But things are stirring and it won’t be long now. It’s exactly ten days until the show begins. Between now and then this blog will be getting a very big design overhaul, and Elizabeth and I will be looking into getting more away from this default style and into something more customized with interactivity and video and streaming and, and, and…

    miss our garden a little...
    we miss our garden a little...

    So we moved out of our house on Avery Street almost one week ago and a lot has happened here on Hatfield Street since then. We hosted the Ferry Family on their victory lap with father Jack Ferry riding on shoulders after his triumphant and harrowing first place finish in the 1st annual Harrisburg Pub Golf Tournament. They are generously letting us borrow their PT Cruiser after Elizabeth was so nice to give Matt and Danielle her Honda Accord. And they were here to see Sarah into her new home in Lawrenceville. Sarah is settling in and has an interview tomorrow after pounding the pavement with resumes for a couple of days.

    Ruthie and Tiger are doing great and are happy to have Sarah here as the new den mother (co-mommy once Barb moves in from Alaska in September). They have a suspicion that something is going on, but they are rolling with it and enjoying marking new territory in Larryville.

    We’ve done some work on the house like fixing a clogged drain. I bet you didn’t know that one of the most important steps in fixing a clogged drain is to first flood the floor below you with water that pours out of the hallway light fixture (but it is). Anyway, that all worked out great in the end and we’ve dried things out. We got a new pantry shelf today for the kitchen and I fixed the front door hinge. All we have left is to do a little waterproofing of a few areas on the back of the house.