Category Archives: Mural Arts Program

Large Format

Large Format, Philadelphia Sketch Club

Large Format, Philadelphia Sketch Club, Prospectus

Online Submissions deadline: Aug 30, 2013 Enter at: www.entrythingy.com/d=sketchclub.org

Jury Notification: Emailed notification sent on Sept 2, 2013

Hand Delivery of Accepted Works: September 6 – ­7, 2013, 1-­‐5pm at Philadelphia Sketch Club . Online entry fee: Active PSC members: $25 for one, $5 each added entries Non-Member: $40 for one work, $10 each added entries No limit on the number of entries per artist. Reception: Sunday September 15th, 2013, 2-4:00pm. Awards will be presented at 3:00 p.m.  The Philadelphia Sketch Club 235 Camac Street (between 12th & 13th and Locust & Spruce) Philadelphia, PA 19107

Exhibition Chairs: Chair: Faad Ghoraishi (faad@ghoraishi.com)

Co-Chair: Pearl Mintzer (Pearl@GiftWithPurchase.com)

Co-Chair: Sylvia Castellanos (sylviacastellanos@gmail.com)

Juror: David Guinn, Mural Artist

David Guinn has fourteen years of experience designing and painting large-scale public murals. Responsible for all facets of community mural creation. He participated in the 2006 International Mural Conference in Mexico City. Founder and Curator of the Freewall, The Artists’ Wall, Mural Project Space in Philadelphia, PA. Adjunct Faculty, Moore College of Art and Design. Guest Lecturer at The University of Pennsylvania, University of the Arts, Earlham College, Indiana, Johnson State College, Vermont, Philadelphia University. Instructor at Mural Training Program, Philadelphia Mural Arts Program, 2007. Resident Artist, Delphi Art Futures Program, Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2007.

Columbia University, New York, NY. Bachelor of Arts in Architecture, 1994.Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Studio for Advanced Studies, 1998. http://www.davidguinn.com

Prizes: The Juror will select works for exhibition & award prizes. Works Eligible:

• Any number of 2-dimensional works utilizing any medium, including digital art

• All submitted work must be offered for sale during the exhibition.

Minimum size is 40”, maximum is 60” on any one side including frame.

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Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe Grand Opening

Mae Downs & Co. Grand Opening, fine home decor, interior design, antiques and vintage

Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe Grand Opening, fine home decor, interior design, antiques and vintage.

Mae Downs & Co. has been operating out of the artist studio building 1241 Carpenter Street for years but now they have taken the leap to opening a lovely shop at 1118 Pine Street in Philadelphia. The studio shared by Brian Campbell, the dish and pottery collector/connoisseur and Kevin McLaughlin, the fabulously creative fabric artist was inviting and inspiring but hard to find in the maze of studios.

Now, with a simply gorgeous storefront window decorated with vintage pottery such as Clarise Cliff pots and Kevin McLaughlin‘s own aspirational handmade pillows, the duo have staked a claim for elegant home decor among the galleries, restaurants and antique stores along Pine Street.

Mae Downs & Co. Grand Opening, fine home decor, interior design, antiques and vintage

Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe 1118 Pine Street, Philadelphia, PA 19107

Quirky yet homey the collection of elegant china, fun vintage finds and handmade pillows and sachets creates an aura of fine living Philadelphians have longed for after existing too long with Swedish flat-packed furniture. The collection isn’t old fashioned at all with a mix of mid-century modern, art deco and 21st century craft proving good design is timeless and desirable.

Mae Downs & Co. Grand Opening, fine home decor, interior design, antiques and vintage

Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe

Kevin McLaughlin‘s handmade strawberry shaped sachets are made with vintage fabrics and stuffed with luscious lavender. Each piece is unique and have even been sold at The Philadelphia Museum of Art gift shop. When DoN visited the workshop during a Philadelphia Open Studio Tour a few years back, Kevin chatted while not missing a stitch as he assembled each berry from fine flannels, linens, wools and re-cycled knits. The sachets are so popular that design maven Brini Maxwell even featured the fine sachets on her popular webpage and YouTube channel.

Mae Downs & Co. Grand Opening, fine home decor, interior design, antiques and vintage

Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe

Each of these gorgeous pillows are handmade by Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe proprietor Kevin McLaughlin and are affordably priced in the low three figure range. Considering the time and effort lovingly put into each piece, these pillows will need to be re-stocked as Philadelphians discover the beauty of these fine American made products.

Mae Downs & Co. Grand Opening, fine home decor, interior design, antiques and vintage

Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe

DoN had the opportunity to chat with shop co-proprietor Brian Campbell and asked about the challenges of opening a small business in these harsh financial times? “Well, the economy has certainly been a challenge. I started by collecting pottery and turned to china, and I started collecting obsessively. And then I found I had too much stuff so I started selling it on ebay and then opened the studio to keep it all and sell. I share the studio with Kevin McLaughlin of Mae Downs and Co., so we had his shop and my storage and we would have open houses but it wasn’t a retail space with little foot traffic.”

Mae Downs & Co. Grand Opening, fine home decor, interior design, antiques and vintage

Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe

Brian Campbell explained, “We wanted a place where people could come and get to us easily. And we found it. ebay worked out when I first started doing it but after America tanked after 2007, sales started going down. The last year or two it’s been on the rise again, there’s definitely, um, people are paying more for things. So, that was kind of a clue that maybe it was time to start thinking of opening a shop. Whenever I go to a shop I ask them, ‘How’s business?’, because in the back of my mind I was always thinking about opening a shop.”

“As I started getting better reports from small shop owners, I thought, ‘OK, maybe it’s time?’, and this kind of fell into our lap. We saw it in the City Paper and we met with the realtor. I stopped in early on my way to work, I have a job at The Mural Arts Program, and we loved it so we applied and they loved what we do and felt really good about what we were doing. And that it would be a good fit for the street. The timing couldn’t have been more perfect, we found the space in August, we took the lease beginning September 1st. All we really had to do was paint the floor and then move stuff in, we still have some work we want to do but we want it to be open so people can walk around and not feel like they’re in a museum.”

Mae Downs & Co. Grand Opening, fine home decor, interior design, antiques and vintage

Mae Downs & Co. Shoppe

“I was trying to describe to someone what the feeling was like and the line came up, “Where Sister Parish meets Dorothy Draper“, said Brian Campbell before he was drawn back into the shop to answer questions about the eclectic merchandise by excited shoppers.

Written and Photographed by DoN Brewer

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Shagging – Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

Shagging - Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

Shagging – Shagging – Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

DoN asked Kathryn Pannepackerr about the title of her fiber arts show at the William Way LGBT Community Center at 1315 Spruce Street called Shagging, what’s it mean?  “Get your jiggy on!  The title I started with was much too long, it was called Shag Tagging Graffiti Art for All, it was just too wordy, so I kind of just broke it down to the essence, Shagging. So, you know, working with fibers, a lot of texture, real simple knotting, kind of like shag rugs, my whimsical, funny, playful side, the sexy side of shagging.”  So it is a double entendre like rolling around on the rug?  “Well, it’s good to know that under it is chain link fence.”  Another metaphor?  “In a way, yeah.  A lot of this work came from doing a lot of guerilla work outside on chain link fences around abandoned lots around the city.  Just wanting to bring art outside for everybody, so that it’s really accessible for anyone.”

Shagging - Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

Shagging – Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

“I’ve been known to go around and tag, make little checker boards or little, beautiful ditties, on fences and gates throughout many years.  But, the last year or two in particular mostly on chain link fences.  So, I got this idea, why not get a huge roll of chain link fence at Home Depot?  You have to get it on line, and like an eighty pound order came, a huge roll, the idea was just to break it up and start doing huge wall pieces that I would exhibit in museums and galleries with the thought of art outside for everybody or art inside, sort of merge the two.  Inside/outside.  The other thing was I wanted to do large abstract painting-like pieces that were all about color and shape.  Sort of like intuitive, quick and expressive.”

What do you mean quick?  “Well, there’s nothing quick about textiles so I guess in a way it’s a funny way to think of it, but, it’s really just getting the juncture at the link of the fence and tying a knot and cutting it long enough so that it’s a shaggy knot.”

Shagging - Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

Shagging – Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

“But, quick in the sense of, the background study that I have with with very detailed French tapestry which is pictorial flat weave, hyper-intensive timing, this was doing my own designs, simple forms and shapes, abstract, painterly-like, so, even though there’s nothing real quick about it, it’s certainly quicker than flat weave tapestry.”

DoN asked, “How do you do it?  Is it hanging on the wall or do you just lay on the floor?”  Kathryn Pannepacker replied, “No, I actually would hang it between a door frame or I’ve got those pipe looms, like a coat rack, or something like that, so I just hang it from there.  The other thing is that people are always giving me yarns, it’s sort of like an ongoing thing.  It’s kind of like a joke, that when I run out of yarn, I’m going to change careers because I’ve got this idea in my head that it should be OK that everyone changes careers at least three times in life, that should be a cultural given.  Like at one point in time I would have liked to be a farmer or sell flowers on the corner.  But I think when I run out of yarn I’ll switch careers but people keep giving yarn, so I’ve got more work to make.”

Shagging - Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

Shagging – Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

At this point in our conversation a group of students entered the gallery and DoN followed around while Kathryn Pannepacker described the work.  “Many of these pieces are done by homeless men and women or people in recovery, so we would use the pellum fabric, to ask lead-in questions like, ‘What does home mean to you?’  So, they would write their comments into the weave and add that to the fencing.  The fabric is called pellum, a non-woven interfacing that a tailor might use inside of a coat.  And the beauty of working with this material is that after they would write and tie a knoe you don’t necessarily read the message on it.  So, it’s a nice opportunity for folks to share their thoughts and feelings but if they want to keep it private they can keep it private.  So, in some of the cases they wanted to share their thoughts, so, I also recorded on a paper a list that writes it all out, like blessings, and prayers, poems and words of advice or things they’re looking forward to.”

Shagging - Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

Shagging – Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

“What gave me the idea was for a number of years I’ve been doing little weavings between fences and gates around the city, in fact, I was doing little ditty weavings between fences and gates wherever I would travel around the world and it would be a way of leaving a popcorn trail of what I was doing.  So, then I started to use chain link fences around abandoned lots around the city because, around different neighborhoods where I was living, it was so depressing, I just wanted to add some color and life to that abandoned lot.  I would do large, or smallish it didn’t matter, but like shags, colorful checker boards or whatever and the idea came from that and what would it take to bring that into a gallery.  You might find yourself, you know, you work so much in your studio, then we work in a classroom situation, you need your own time to feed yourself or refuel.  So I was like,’What’s the good link between what I’m doing in the community but also that going to inform my own personal work?”

Shagging - Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

Shagging – Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

“In fifth grade we were introduced to macrame and we were making plant hangers with macrame and so immediately after that I was doing these like wall pieces with macrame knot but then I got into latch hooking and all that, so I love all that.”

Professor of Fibers at Tyler School of Art, Pazia Mannella, was with the group of students, so DoN took the opportunity to ask her feelings about FiberPhiladelphia 2012?  “I think it’s just amazing, especially someone who works in textiles and fibers, it’s so exciting to see so many examples of textile work and fiber arts work and really ranging from very traditional to experimental installation.  I was at all the opening events and it’s an amazing community that is in Philadelphia.”  DoN asked Professor Mannella about the political discussion surrounding women at this time and how fiber is often associated with women and her opinion of the political attack on women?  “Well, I do think historically fibers has been linked with women and I think that it’s important that the voices are heard within this political realm.  And that’s been kind of the issue with it being predominately men commenting on the health of women. I think that both men and women can react to a range of issues through fiber work.”

DoN commented that men seem to forget that women are taking care of business – the clothes we wear, the food we eat, the homes we live in, are often made possible by women.  Professor Mannella replied, “We’re really trying to increase our enrollment of men in our area, we have a male major, and we’ve had male majors in the past, but I think there has been a bit of a stigma with the word ‘fibers’ among, at least, the men, the male student population, in my experience.  But I think it’s interesting, some of the men that are taking our classes that are in their early twenties, they seem less affected by these gender debates, it’s just like there’s a difference among these young men, especially the ones in our class, they have a different point of view and they have respect for this craft and don’t feel stigmatized by it as a woman’s art.  So, it’s great to see all genders working with this technique.”

Shagging - Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

Shagging – Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

Kathryn Pannepacker said to DoN, “I have this funny way of just using up yarn, just shagging, being textural and fun.” The art in the William Way LGBT Community Center shows influences of Mondrian and KleeDoN wondered if this was fulfilling a need to paint?  “Well, I do paint, but I don’t paint like this, I tend to paint more, sort of, art naive Matisse-like, paintings that might be narrative in a way or self portraits.  I think of me rolling a ball of yarn looking at my easel, like will you take me back when I’m ready to start painting again?  Because sometimes I get real affixed with weaving and then I shift over to a mural project or a painting project or get real intensely focussed with my time in community work.”

Shagging - Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

Shagging – Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

“I wanted to share this with you, I’ve got this way of thinking, that may be a little nutsy at times, that you can’t call yourself an artist unless you’re making artwork.  The whole idea of really taking care of yourself in the studio and making sure you have enough of solitude time in the studio.  This work here, and the garland that’s outside the door is all part of the one-a-day series that I did.  When I get really intensely focussed on a project and I get back home in the studio, I like to do a one-a-day or something that’s going to bring me to my own series of exploration – color, texture…”

Shagging - Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

Shagging – Kathryn Pannepacker at William Way LGBT Community Center

“I got the good news about the Leeway Foundation grant, I wanted to start on my website, slowly, slowly, a blog charting the process of how I’m spending my time and what I’m doing.  I have all these great ideas but for now it’s a little now and then.”

Written and photographed by DoN Brewer

 

David Guinn – Mural Dedication, Garden of Delight, Locust Street, between 11th & 12th Streets, Philadelphia, Friday, April 15, 2011, 5:00 PM

David Guinn - Mural Dedication, Garden of Delight, Locust Street, between 11th & 12th Streets, Philadelphia, Friday, April 15, 2011, 5:00 PM

David Guinn – Mural Dedication, Garden of Delight, Locust Street, between 11th & 12th Streets, Philadelphia, Friday, April 15, 2011, 5:00 PM.

Philadelphia owes David Quinn a lot for it’s friendly reputation, as you come off the Schuylkill a beautiful mural greets you, drive down Bainbridge Street and Quinn’s Four Seasons murals offer color in the depth of Winter and accents for Spring, in West Philly he’s brought together community members to form coalitions that revitalize the neighborhood and he regularly exhibits his own paintings in galleries across the city all with apparent calm and secure leadership.  The new mural on Locust looks like a David  Guinn painting instead of a community collaboration; Guinn has more than earned the right to decide what should be painted or maybe the community taste of the Gayborhood is more refined, either way, Friday night is the perfect time to experience a unique Philly tradition – honoring a great artist, leader and taste-maker with speeches and heart felt thanks for improving the vitality of the city with art and beauty.

David Guinn - Mural Dedication, Garden of Delight, Locust Street, between 11th & 12th Streets, Philadelphia, Friday, April 15, 2011, 5:00 PM

An early 21st Century mural by David Guinn, his style is evolving from the cubist realism to fluid naturalism.  In the new mural is a door representing the house of his parents; David Guinn opens a portal for all of us to see the world around us as home.

Photos by DoN.

October is Mural Arts Month in Philadelphia – MAM10

October is Mural Arts Month in Philadelphia

Meg Saligman re-imagined the mural (the previous two artists Bill Friedman & Sam Donovan were unavailable) @ Broad & Vine Streets incorporating LED lights that will morph the painting into a multimedia art installation that is one of a kind in the world.  The three panels tell a story about nursing from personal care to record-keeping-to technological expertise in the dreamy style Saligman has developed in her many beautiful walls through the city but this one lights up – Cool!.  The Mural Arts Program has twenty-two separate events throughout October, Jane Golden said there are thousands of sites seeking murals.  The mural @ Broad and Vine is dedicated to Florence Nightingale and all nurses everywhere.

October is Mural Arts Month in Philadelphia

Many local nurses are portrayed in the enormous painting; DoN has always relied on the kindness of nurses, his favorite Aunt Fran is a nurse, still helping even in retirement.  Meg Saligman made sure to invite all the participating artists and models to take the stage with her, the platform was crowded with volunteers and artists alike, a testament to Meg’s ability to make people team up and the crowd cheered their achievement.

October is Mural Arts Month in Philadelphia

Jane Golden introduced Mayor Nutter to the crowd attending the dedication of the mural; Philadelphia’s Mayor addressed the crowd to celebrate the mural and it’s importance to the city, he praised Jane Golden and her team of artists at the Mural Arts Program and the value of nurses and medicine to Philadelphia.  DoN really likes Mayor Nutter and his support for the arts in Philly but in a surreal twist, the mayor’s speech was cut short by protesters from ADAPT, a very organized group of demonstrators of disabled people trying to close nursing homes and encourage group home living instead.

Kathryn Pannepacker - Woven Mural

This mural @ 13th & Ludlow Streets is a handmade woven mural, master-minded by Super-Artist Kathryn Pannepacker in association with the Mural Arts Program, using mats made by homeless and disaffected people living in shelters.  When people start weaving they start to heal and learn a skill, find self satisfaction and hope.  The piece was created as part of the Finding Home Project gaining Katheryn and the project kudos on NPR’s Dr. Dan Gottleib, Volunteers of America website and American Craft Magazine.  You can help by shopping at the handmade by the homeless Gallery on South Street and talking to your representatives about rights for people who can’t help themselves.

Kathryn Pannepacker - Woven Mural

detail of the woven mural @ 13th & Ludlow Streets, Philadelphia.

 

Photos by DoN.