The Little Library competition, Italian entry |
Have you noticed those little boxes sitting atop posts in some neighborhoods, what at first look like mail boxes but not? These might be “Little Free Libraries.” The first one was built in 2009 in Hudson, Wisconsin. Todd Bol placed a birdhouse sized box full of books on top of a post on his lawn, shared his idea with partner Rick Brooks and the rest (as the cliche says) is history.
Little Free Libraries became a nonprofit organization in 2012, quickly won all kinds of kudos from such places as the Library of Congress and today, there are more than 50,000 of these small weathertight boxes standing on neighborhood lawns throughout 70 countries.
What good idea couldn’t stand a little improvement? Last year, the American Institute of Architects opened a competition for designers from around the globe to design unique “little libraries.” The containers had to appeal to both kids and grown ups, could be any size, shape or form, but be equipped with lights. 300 submissions poured in from 40 countries; the first place winner was a four foot oval that holds forty books, designed by a firm in London.
Here are two entires that did not win - one from Italy and the other from China. For information on how to become a part of this effort, go to their web site at littlefreelibraries.org.
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Little Library competition entry, China |
Collage: a technique of art production where the artwork is made from piecing together smaller sections of a variety of materials, affixing these to a backing (canvas, paper, wood) to create an entirely new art “picture.”
I love collage…I love quilts which I include in collage…I love the combination of materials that popped up in sculpture 30 or more years ago.
It’s always thrilling to discover new artists whose work is fresh - especially if they work in this genre.
Check out David Shrobe’s collage exhibit (hyperallergic.com) and read the description by Seph Rodney “…elements in his works that are evocative of other artists, like flavor notes I recognize for having tasted them before in other wines.”
(Don't you love that " flavor notes I’ve tasted before" bit?)
Collage by David Shrobe |
Detail of another David Shrobe collage |
Gina Adams is a descendant of John Adams, part American Indian and a working artist. She’s turned antique quilts, purchased at flea markets, into subversive folk art.
Adams was caught up in news of the Dakota pipe line protests and spent time looking up past treaties the U.S. government struck with Native American Tribes. She hand-cut calico letters repeating these abandoned promises and appliquéd them to the quilts in a spiraling maze of meaning/history. A solo exhibition of her art is on view at Colorado’s Naropa University in Boulder, Colorado.
Broken Promises quilt installation, Naropa University |
Broken Treaty Quilt: Fort Laramie (detail) by Gina Adams |
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