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SOMERVILLE ARTISTS TRANSFORM PHONE BOXES INTO ART

City of Somerville, Somerville Arts Council, and the NAVE Gallery announce a roving art opening for The Phone Art Box Project, Sunday, Oct. 27

SOMERVILLE – As cell phone use increases, phone
booths have lost their purpose, but many still remain forgotten on urban
streets. So what's a City to do with abandoned phone boxes on sidewalks and
building walls? The City of Somerville’s answer is: Turn them into public art—then
hold a roving citywide art opening to celebrate the creative works made for The
Phone Art Box Project. 

At the behest of Mayor Joseph A. Curtatone, The Nave Gallery and the Somerville Arts Council teamed
up to recruit the City’s industrious public artists to transform what was once
just urban clutter into public art that both surprises and engages
passersby.  All are invited to the
opening of The Phone Art Box Project on Sunday, Oct. 27, from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
for a tour of the first five completed phone art boxes. Follow Mayor Curtatone
from box to box for mini-openings with refreshments at each box, or visit any
box during the two-hour event at your leisure. Artists inspired by the display
may apply to create additional art boxes. Artists receive an honorarium.

This thoughtful public art project takes on the
re-purposing a rapidly disappearing material culture—the once ubiquitous phone
booth.

“Yet again, a public
art project that makes sense for Somerville. We’ve taken an unused public
space—the abandoned phone booth—and brought it to life.  With all of our public art projects, we
strive to be responsive to artists’ needs and their energy in the
community.  This is another perfect
example,” said Gregory Jenkins, Director of Somerville Arts Council.

Though each artist began with roughly the same raw
materials—a roughly 2-by-3-foot abandoned call box—the results vary from an
imaginary urban landscape to “Phone Fossil,” a monument to outdated technology,
and even includes a functioning mini book-lending library. Participating
artists include,
Joe Barillaro, Gary Duehr, Pauline Lim, Rachel Mello, and James Fox and Akil
Williams of the
Friends of
the Somerville Public Library
.

“Art
lovers can always expect the unexpected on the streets of Somerville. The Phone
Art Box Project continues a long line of innovative public art driven by the desire
of local artists to display their work, engage their community and improve
their city,” said Susan Berstler, Director, Nave Gallery/Nave Annex.

“We
are not just lucky to have such a high concentration of artists in our city,
with that resource comes a responsibility on the City’s part to engage local
artists in creating public art for all to enjoy because public art that you
stumble upon can sometimes be the most powerful,” said Mayor Curtatone.
“Somerville isn’t just a great place to live, work, play and raise a family.
It’s a great place to let public art surprise you, startle you out of your
usual day, and inspire you to reflect on the world around you, and the Phone
Art Box Project is an exciting contribution to that.”

Please join Mayor Joseph A. Curtatone to kick off this
project and to tour five completed phone booth projects. 
The tour will start at 2 p.m. on Sunday,
October 27
th, at the booth of Rachel Mello at the corner of Highland
Ave. and Vinal Ave. and will continue to booths in Ball and Davis Square.
  For a full listing of the finished phone art
booths and how to submit to create a booth go to:
  www.somervilleartscouncil.org/phone
or
http://navegallery.org/wp/phone-art-box-call/ .

 


END –

 

City Contact:

Denise Taylor 617-625-6600,
ext. 2103

Arts Council Contact

 

Rachel Strutt 617-625-6600,
ext. 2995

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