Thursday, October 29, 2009

Mention on KPRC's Bumper to Bumper blog

Jennifer Reyna of KPRC's Bumper to Bumper blog wrote a short piece on Inbound: Houston


http://www.click2houston.com/bumpertobumperblog/index.html

Rehearsals for recording session

A lot of notations were made during the rehearsal
Here are the members
Paul Wadle's score

I am collaborating with the University of Houston's Moores School of Music. Two graduate student composers have created original scores inspired by my billboard installation. The scores will be performed by Aura Contemporary Ensemble, conducted by Professor Rob Smith. Yesterday I sat in on the rehearsal of Paul Wadle's piece titled "Exertion/Distortion". It was wonderful and thrilling. This evening there will be a recording session for both pieces, which will be available for download through KUHF's website. The two scores (the other composer is Joel Love) will also be performed by the ensemble at Moores Opera House with an accompanying video I am creating with the assistance of Grant MacManus, a graduate student also at the university. The concert will take place on November 16th.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Monday, October 26, 2009

Houston Chronicle story

Check out the story in the Houston Chronicle.

BAD WEATHER

The billboard unveiling will be postponed until tomorrow morning. There is word of a bad storm coming in. Big big bummer.

Will keep you posted. But the launch party at Diverseworks is still on for 6 o'clock tonight!

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Inbound: Houston Media Alert

MEDIA ALERT

‘INBOUND: HOUSTON’ BILLBOARD UNVEILING

Major public outdoor art exhibition along Houston’s highways revealed on October 26

WHAT: University of Houston Cynthia Woods Mitchell Center for the Arts visiting artist Karyn Olivier is replacing 13 billboard ads along Houston’s freeways with life-sized photographic representations of what drivers would see if the advertising did not exist: sky, buildings, homes, trees and other elements of the environment. Olivier’s major public art project, “Inbound: Houston,” will reveal this new view of the city Oct. 26 through Nov. 22.

With Karyn Olivier’s assistance, CBS Outdoor will transform the 13 billboard ads across the city into artwork the morning of Monday, October 26.

BILLBOARD UNVEILING & INTERVIEW OPP

  • Photos of the unveiling of one of the 13 transformed billboards
  • Interview with artist Karyn Olivier
  • Interview with Nancy Zastudil, Associate Director of the UH Mitchell Center for the Arts

WHEN: Monday, October 26, 2009

10:00 AM Billboard Unveiling

WHERE: 11939 EastTex Freeway

For best view, park in parking lot of shopping center with T-Mobile store and Club Ritmo Latino

MORE: Presented by the UH Mitchell Center in collaboration with the Moores School of Music, Creative Capital, DiverseWorks and CBS Outdoor, “Inbound: Houston” will be located along Houston’s major freeways including eight points along U.S. Highway 59 (Southwest Freeway), one location along Interstate 10 at Wood St. (in between I-45 and Hwy 59), and four points along North Beltway 8.

Houstonians can celebrate the launch of this exciting project at a free kickoff party on October 26 at 6 p.m. at DiverseWorks (1117 E. Freeway). The event will feature an artist talk with Olivier and billboard viewings as well as live music and details of a special geo-caching scavenger hunt.

For more information, visit the Mitchell Center online at www.mitchellcenterforarts.org or Olivier’s blog at karynolivier.blogspot.com

ON-SITE CONTACTS:

Susan Elmore Jordan Oberthier

Cell: 713.702.4331 Cell: 903.240.5269

Friday, October 23, 2009

University of Houston News

There's a story on my project Inbound: Houston under Top Stories. See the link on the right

Houston Chronicle

Yesterday I did a phone interview with Houston Chronicle writer Douglas Britt. It was a fun interview and should go to press in Monday's paper. I think there will be an image too of one of the sites!


Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Earlier this evening I took part in Spacetaker's Artist SPEAKeasy via Skype (I'm teaching at Tyler in Philly and couldn't make it down to h-town). I took this from their website--it's an evening of artist networking where three artists present in an informal atmosphere their creative dialogs/talks/presentations about their work, followed by a question and answer period from which the audience can glean further insight into the artist and the artist’s aesthetic and creative process. Spacetaker is a Houston-based organization that provides artists and small non-profits access to economic, educational and networking opportunities. Check out their website!

Spacetaker's Artist SPEAKeasy

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

Press Release

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

                                                                                                                                                               Media Contact:  K.C. Scharnberg

                                                                                                                                                                                  Elmore Public Relations

                                                                                                                                                      713.524.0661 or kc@elmorepr.com

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

 

 ‘INBOUND: HOUSTON’ TO REDEFINE COMMUTERS’ VIEW OF CITY’S BILLBOARDS

Visiting artist Karyn Olivier replaces billboard ads with life-sized images of surrounding environment

 

HOUSTON, Texas (October 14, 2009) – Drivers on Houston’s freeways are used to seeing billboards promoting fashion, fast food, beverages and other items. Starting October 26, they will have a new view of the urban landscape that lies beyond the ads, courtesy of the University of Houston’s Mitchell Center for the Arts.

 

UH Mitchell Center visiting artist Karyn Olivier is replacing 13 billboard ads across Houston with life-sized photographic representations of what drivers would see if the advertising did not exist: sky, buildings, homes, trees and other elements of the environment.

 

Olivier’s major public art project, “Inbound: Houston,” will reveal this new view of the city

Oct. 26 through Nov. 22. Houstonians can celebrate the launch of this exciting project at a free kickoff party on October 26 at 6 p.m. at DiverseWorks (1117 E. Freeway). The event will feature an artist talk with Olivier and billboard viewings as well as live music and details of a special geo-caching scavenger hunt.

 

Presented by the Mitchell Center in collaboration with the Moores School of Music, Creative Capital, DiverseWorks and CBS Outdoor, “Inbound: Houston” will be located along Houston’s major freeways including six points along U.S. Highway 59 (Southwest Freeway), one location along Interstate 10 at Wood St. (in between I-45 and Hwy 59), three points along North Beltway 8 and two locations along Loop 610 North near Main Street.

 

“We are thrilled to present this wholly original event in Houston,” said Karen Farber, director of the Mitchell Center. “Karyn Olivier will bring a totally new experience to our daily trips on Houston’s freeways. What is invisible will become visible, and vice versa.”

 

According to Olivier, the project’s goal is to confront drivers with an “unsettling and uncanny” experience in which the replacement images suggest a different reality. Photos of the behind-the-billboard landscapes will vary considering they will be taken at different times of the day and during different weather and lighting conditions.

 

“I want to see how each change affects the way people understand the pictures when the landscape is no longer the same as it is in the image,” Olivier said.

 

“Inbound: Houston” is inspired by works such as Rene Margitte’s painting within a painting “The Human Condition” (1933) and Felix Gonzalez-Torres’ 1990 billboard piece detailing an empty bed (symbolic of the artist’s partner’s AIDS-related death). Olivier said it also uses concepts from literature such as Ralph Ellison’s “Invisible Man” and Italo Calvino’s “Invisible Cities.” Both novels address false appearances and fabricated existence.

 

“Inbound: Houston” also spurred the Mitchell Center to commission a musical score from UH Moores School composers Paul Wadle and Joel Love.  A concert on November 16 at 7:30 p.m. by AURA, the Moores School of Music’s Contemporary Ensemble, will include the premiere performance of Wadle and Love’s compositions, featuring videos and photos of Olivier’s billboards. The concert will be made available as a Podcast on www.kuhf.org that can be listened to while driving past the “Inbound: Houston” billboards.

 

During her residency, Olivier will also work with UH students in the Mitchell Center Mentorships course to produce collaborative projects in the community.

 

For more details on “Inbound: Houston” or to track its progress, visit Olivier’s blog at karynolivier.blogspot.com or visit the Mitchell Center online at www.mitchellcenterforarts.org.

 

Photo by: dabfoto creative

High resolution photos available upon request

###

 

About the Mitchell Center

The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Center for the Arts at the University of Houston cultivates interdisciplinary collaboration in the performing, visual, and literary arts.  From its base at the University of Houston, the center offers public events, residencies, and curriculum that fuse artistic disciplines, ignite dialogue, and open doors to new ways of seeing and understanding the arts and the world around us. The Mitchell Center forms an alliance among five units at the University of Houston: The School of Art, Creative Writing Program, Moores School of Music, School of Theatre and Dance, and Blaffer Gallery, the Art Museum of the University of Houston.  For more information about the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Center for the Arts at the University of Houston, visit www.mitchellcenterforarts.org.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

And here's what the billboard will look like on site..

Here's another billboard image

Here's what the billboard image will look like on site

Actual billboard Image

Billboard Photos

All of the images to be placed on the billboards were uploaded this past Wednesday to the printing company, Circle Graphics, based in Colorado.
Yesterday we saw the proofs (we needed to sign off on them before they begin printing thirteen 14ft x 48 ft vinyl images!) and they look great. Many thanks to Anthony Thompson Shumate, the image designer and photoshop extraordinaire who worked like crazy to prepare the images for print. Here are some of them...

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

great little poem

I think that I shall never see a billboard lovely as a tree. Perhaps, unless the billboards fall, I'll never see a tree at all--Ogden Nash

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Two billboard images

Two sites on 59 South near Almeda

So here are mock-ups for two of the billboards that are just south of downtown. What exist behind the billboards is sky. When you emerge from under the Alabama Street overpass, these billboards immediately present themselves. They are across the freeway from each other and appear to be equidistant from the driver. I think I will use the same image of sky replicated on both billboards. I hope these images will speak very directly on our understanding and perception of artifice vs. veracity.


Sunday, October 4, 2009

Creating photographic images

Just got back from a quick trip to Houston. I met with David Brown, a wonderful Houston-based photographer who will help shoot the images for the billboards.
We spent Friday/Saturday figuring out which vantage point to shoot the billboard images from. We spent most of the time making u turns around the freeway exists as we tested each lane. We tried to find the lane that would yield the most interesting landscape image.