All posts tagged: Polina Soloveichik

Various & Gould Tell a #PublicTale as Scavenger Hunt in Berlin

Various & Gould Tell a #PublicTale as Scavenger Hunt in Berlin

A new elaborate and inventive public art / scavenger hunt installation in Berlin brings you back inside the combined imaginations of Various & Gould, where you must trust them as they lead you along a colorfully quirky and storied path to find their next installment to continue the story. If art is truly a projection of your internal dialogue, Various & Gould must never sleep, or rather, they possible live in a dream-like state.

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

To follow this installation you merely need to stumble upon it on the street and follow the map with directions to the next location. Along the way you are given excerpts from a friendly and riddling tale written to accompany the illustrated collage scenes, which in themselves are each an installation. It helps if you have a sense of adventure, an inquisitive mind, and an afternoon to stroll. It probably also helps if you read and comprehend German, although V&G have thoughtfully translated this story by artist Polina Soloveichik into English.

Gould tells us that it was quite an undertaking to conceive of and create this #PublicTale in studio, and then they had to stick it all up. “It took us seven hours and loads of glue. We were totally exhausted, but happy, when we finished.” They have already been contacted by people who have completed the full hunt, and “So far the pieces and text posters are intact,” he says.

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

The outdoor exhibition is part of a project that V&G completed for BackJumps, a Berlin-based graffiti zine-turned-arts movement that is celebrating 21 years. As part of their new show BackJumps is hosting international and local artists and presenting a series of events this spring/summer that include workshops, lectures, and guided walks, among other activities. Various & Gould had conceived of this project as a public art component of the show and even though they had chosen their ideal locations for the collage illustrations……they confess that they had not actually secured permissions.

“We had chosen the specific spots beforehand and when we went wheat-pasting during day it happened; we encountered people at the locations!” says Various, explaining that they suddenly had doubts about being able to finish. Luckily, they were charming enough to persuade the owners to let them put up their corresponding chapter.

“Three times we had to ask spontaneously to see if it was okay to paste on the respective house/wall/gate, and – to our total surprise – all three times we were given the permission!!” It was a happy ending. Also, says Gould, it was an unusual experience for the duo, “Asking for permission is rather new to us.”

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

One more thing as a point of clarification, and hopefully without spoiling the story or confusing you, dear reader: an actual halted construction project is one of the sites of the art installation and its status as an unfinished project runs parallel to the project in the storyline. Also, the joke told within the story is never revealed, but we have learned that it is actually sprayed upon the wall of that same stalled project. It doesn’t really sound like a “joke” in English; it reads more as a pithy proverb. The text is high upon the side of a building is right next to the famous squat “Köpi”. You can see it also here and here.

Various and Gould have translated it for us.

„Die Grenze verläuft nicht zwischen den Völkern sondern zwischen oben und unten“

or “The border doesn’t run between the nations but between the top and the bottom (or the rich and the poor).

Enjoy this extensive documentation of #PublicTale and check out the hashtag on Instagram.

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Boris Niehaus)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Boris Niehaus)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Boris Niehaus)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Boris Niehaus)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Boris Niehaus)

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Various & Gould: Public Tale in collaboration with Polina Soloveichik. Berlin, 2015. (photo © Various & Gould)

 

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Fun Friday 07.15.11

Fun-Friday

Fun Friday stories this week:

1. Multicolored Disappearing Horizon on Williamsburg Bridge
2. CAKE on Juxtapoz : New “Back Talk” Conversation
3. Street Artist TES One Gets Down with Ice Cube for a Print

Multicolored Disappearing Horizon on Williamsburg Bridge

It’s summer and people are taking to the streets with their art. If you have taken a stroll or skateboard ride across the Williamsburg Bridge recently, you’ve seen a public art installation entitled “Baji Lives!”.

(VIDEO STILLS)

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In this short film by Danielle Barbiari, five friends show how a collaborative project can also come alive with very modest resources and some elbow grease.

“During the wee hours of a warm summer night, several friends conspired to bring color to the Williamsburg Bridge. Inspired by the unique vantage point offered by this public space, Baji Lives! responded with a site-specific composition that accentuates the spatial dynamics of the pedestrian pathway. This piece is an offering to those who use the bridge”

CAKE on Juxtapoz : New “Back Talk” Conversation

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To introduce readers to some of the Street Artists in the upcoming show “Street Art Saved My Life: 39 New York Stories”, BSA asked a number of the artists to take part in “Back Talk” with one of our most trusted and underground and sweet sources for modern art, Juxtapoz.

Today we hear from CAKE.

Artists you admire:
Tomma Abts, Jenny Saville, Olga Romashuk, Kathe Kollwitz, Herakut, Polina Soloveichik, Alice Neel, and Edvard Munch are my tops.”

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CAKE (photo © Jaime Rojo)

Read “Back Talk: A conversation with CAKE” on Juxtapoz:http://www.juxtapoz.com/Features/back-talk-a-conversation-with-cake

Street Artist TES One Gets Down with Ice Cube for a Print

Tes One has done a new print with Ice Cube to raise awareness and funds for The Minority AIDS Project.The proceeds from the limited edition artwork will benefit the project.

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Tes One Signing his print of Ice Cube (copyright Tes One and Rareink)

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brooklyn-street-art-ice-cube-rareinkIce Cube (photo © RareInk)

RareInk and ICE CUBE partner to deliver music fans original, authentic autographed works of art from their favorite recording artists created in conjunction with a collective of fine artists from around the world.


Expanding the interaction with fans of my music by offering limited edition, signed artwork that they are able to share and enjoy with their friends and family is something I feel my fans deserve,” said Ice Cube, who in addition to being the RareInk’s first artist will serve as the company’s strategic advisor.

Click on RareInk’s site for more information regarding the sale of the prints and how to purchase the art.

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Braddock Street Art: A Town Ready for Renaissance

A Small Town Mayor Invites Street Artists to Revive His Abandoned Town – Swoon and Others Heed the Call.

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By Salome Oggenfuss

    An abandoned church now referred to as "Transformazium" by Street Artist Swoon and some friends who recently purchased it for renovation in Braddock, PA. (photo © Salome Oggenfuss)

An abandoned church now referred to as "Transformazium" by Street Artist Swoon and some friends who recently purchased it for renovation in Braddock, PA. (photo © Salome Oggenfuss)

Artist and photographer Salome Oggenfuss recently took a trip from Bushwick, Brooklyn to visit the town of Braddock, Pennsylvania. She invites us to take a look at the beautiful work she found on the streets there, and to consider moving.

Braddock is a small town about a half hour drive outside of Pittsburgh in the Pennsylvania “Rust Belt”. In its heyday in the 1970s, the town used to boast about 20,000 residents, but when the steel industry started collapsing soon after, people moved away. The crack epidemic in the 80s further diminished the town’s population, and nowadays only about 3,000 people are left in Braddock and almost half of the town’s buildings are unoccupied.

A view inside an abandoned house. (photo © Salome Oggenfuss)

A view inside an abandoned house. (photo © Salome Oggenfuss)

A long view of Braddock with a mural by Noah Sparkes on the building on the right. (photo © Salome Oggenfuss)

A view inside an abandoned house. (photo © Salome Oggenfuss)

Click “Read More” below for the rest of the article

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