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Palm Springs, paint this desert. Wait, not so fast.

4/25/2014

 
After the city’s Art Commission and PLANet Art project commissioned street artists to paint walls for a week and many were getting excited, including businesses. "It's going to bring people down to downtown Palm Springs, and not only are we going to benefit but all the shops and all of our neighbors around us are going to benefit also," said Willie Rhine, general manager of Lulu California Bistro, to KESQ. 

Then Palm Springs City Manager David Ready ended the project, stating that that property owners did not have proper permits for the murals, nor requested it. And, there is no policy to paint murals in town. 


Some street art style murals were completed before this project. “They are out of compliance,” Ready said to the Desert Sun.   

Evidently one tactic was dispatching police to sites inform artists painting murals is illegal, and according to CV Independent, threatening then with arrest. 

PLANet Art Palm Springs was formed by Debra Ann Mumm, and said her group did everything possible to get all the proper approvals.

But there is no official mural policy set in place.

There were some street art style murals completed before this project. “They are out of compliance,” Ready said to the Desert Sun.  City Council will vote on moving forward to create a mural policy on May 7, may require a mural project to be considered first by the Palm Springs Architectural Advisory Committee, who will decide if a proposed mural is a commercial sign. If it’s deemed public art, then will be heard by the Palm Springs Public Arts Commission.

 

The Cosmopolitan 2014 Artist-in-ResidencE program announced

4/23/2014

 
The Cosmopolitan and Art Production Fund announced their 2014 Artist-in-Residence programming, the public art initiative that brings immersive installations to P3Studio through the year. “Art is such a focus in this city full of creative forces, and there is so much openness and acceptance that it makes art a natural fit,” said Lisa Marchese, Cosmopolitan’s Chief Marketing Officer, in an interview with Complex. 

Selected Artists: Alexander Lee, Alexis Dahan, Lucas Michael, Pearl C. Hsiung, Nao Uda, Anthony Holbrooke, Todd Duane Miller and JW Caldwell, Taxiplasm and Renzo Vitale, Justin Favela, Paula Wilson, Mark Brandvik, and JK Russ.


 'Marquee Theology:  When Convictions Collide' opens May 1 at Trifecta Gallery

4/22/2014

 
Picture
"Marquee Theology:
When Convictions Collide"
Opens May 1, 2014

Runs Through
Trifecta Gallery 
107 E. Charleston Blvd.
Studio 135 Las Vegas, NV  

Picture
"Bullet-Proof Tupac" 
Sainted stained bullet proof glass.
“Marquee Theology” is Kansas City based artist, Dylan Mortimer, navigating the concepts of marketing, soliciting, and evangelism.  It opens at Trifecta Gallery May 1.  

The exhibition is Mortimer ongoing testing of what is sacred and spiritual propaganda that, according to the artist, is  “public expression that bridges the permitted and the prohibited.” Mortimer,  who is also an urban pastor, plays off his daily processes of expressive personal conviction that collides with public pop culture, which the artist feels can be messy, but is mandatory.

"Marquee Theology” prompts are the unpredictable winds of religion, and Las Vegas itself. There will be three wall-mounted signs that combine the functional form of multidirectional arrows, a marquee reference to the biblical passage on the wind blowing wherever it pleases from Gospel of John 3:8:  “You hear its sound, but you cannot tell where it comes from or where it is going. So it is with everyone born of the Spirit.”

Mortimer also taps in the outspoken saints of rap martyrdom, Biggie and Tupac. “In hip-hop, there’s total permission to express things directly, and there’s no sense of  ‘This is what I believe but I’d better not say it out loud.’  I find that really compelling,” stated Mortimer in Trifecta's release. Images of Biggie and Tupac are haloed pop icons -- installed in bulletproof stained glass.

"Marquee Theology”  also features Mortimer’s second Las Vegas installation, a choir robe colored in highway orange, fabricated from warning cloth and embellished with reflective tape and other symbols of soulful safety. From that, one can call Mortimer a Man of the Safety Cloth.

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