2011 STL Design Week video from Kuhlmann Leavitt, Inc. on Vimeo.
I just picked up a loop for an amazing cause as part of St. Louis’s First Design Week! Check out more info here: http://www.stldesignweek.com/1-give
The aluminum hoop is 26″ in diameter. All the proceeds will go to cancer research!
Read about the loops on facebook: http://www.facebook.com/STLDesignWeek#!/notes/stl-design-week/make-some-art-with-this-hoop-raise-money-for-cancer-research-due-back-april-15/173246319390324
Here is the text from the page:
“As many of you know, we are well into planning the first ever STL Design Week, 18-23 April. STL DW is a weeklong celebration of design in St. Louis. With involvement from AGIA, AIA (special thanks to Michelle Swatek!), ASLA, IDSA, Ad Club and ASMP this will be a multi-disciplinary program. <span>Each day we’ll highlight the ways Design impacts our community, influences commerce and improves our lives. There will be daily studio tours and nightly events designed to inspire. Events will be happening throughout St. Louis. I have attached a calendar for you to see all that is planned! Posters will be printed next week and distributed shortly thereafter.
In the meantime, we need your help! 18 April, opening night, is our big kick-off for the week and is going to be a fantastic night at the Robert’s Orpheum Theatre. This special night is our Design For a Cause night where we will be raising money to benefit pancreatic cancer in honor of Scott Raffe who has recently been diagnosed with stage 4 pancreatic cancer. Scott has been photographing Circus Flora for nearly 15 years and has an incredible body of work to show for it. He also has made many lasting friendships with the circus performers. So, as a thank you to Scott and to raise money for a good cause, members of Circus Flora and the Zoppe Family will be performing a special “Raffe Circus” at the Roberts. Following that the internationally acclaimed Jeremy Davenport trio will play an hour plus long jazz performance. All of these artists are world class and will be coming in just for us to help us entertain the design community and raise money to fight cancer.
</span>So, where do you come in? Good question!!! We are asking St. Louis architects, designers, advertising people and photographers to make some art with a hoop. We will supply the hoop (see photo below) and ask you to make an artistic statement with it. The hoops will be auctioned off opening night. Money raised from the hoops will go toward cancer research. The hoops are being fabricated and donated for this event by Universe Corporation and we thank them for this kind and generous gesture. The hoops will be available for distribution the week of March 21 and are due back to us by April 15. Have some fun! Do something good! Be a part of STL DW!!!
Do let me know if you can help and thanks in advance!”
There has been a lot of great media coverage for the butterflies. Here are a few links:
A gallery of all the butterflies: http://www.wingsinthecity.org/gallery/index.html
St. Louis Magazine, Private Opening: http://www.stlmag.com/St-Louis-Magazine/October-2010/Wings-in-the-City-Private-Debut-October-9/
St. Louis Magazine, Public Opening: http://www.stlmag.com/St-Louis-Magazine/October-2010/Wings-in-the-City-Private-Debut-October-9/
KSDK 5, Butterflies Arrive: http://www.ksdk.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=201564
KSDK 5, First Preview: http://www.ksdk.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=205283
We could not have asked for a better night for the Wings in the City opening night Gala, Saturday October 9th! The evening was beautiful and so were all the butterflies! It was amazing to get to meet the wonderful people from Healthlink that will be giving my butterfly a great home. They even promised I can come visit ever so often!
The coffee table books turned out wonderfully. All the artists signed select copies. It was so great to meet all the other artists, everyone’s butterfly has a unique story. Many of the butterflies were painted in memory. Below are some images of the butterflies.
It it with much delight (and a little sad too) that I have completed the butterfly project! It has been an incredible journey, one that I would not have been able to travel without the help and support of many. First my husband, for his endless patience while hunting the city for the material, paint, brush, that may be required for my artistic pursuits, my family for their help in hand making and support, to BJC Pediatric Hospice and Palliative care for letting me attend Stepping Stones Camp, to the children who were willing to share their stories, to Daltile and MAPEI for their generous material donation, and to Wings in the City for creating such an amazing event. Thank you.
Now a few more fun glimpses and details before the big reveal, October 10th. Check out the post on directions here.
Thanks again everyone. I can’t wait to see all the butterflies in Forest Park. I hope you can come visit! I will be at the park from 1-4 PM on Sunday. The tile are covered for the clear coat.
Hope everyone is enjoying their Labor Day weekend. I have a few new photos of the Wings in the City butterfly base and handprint progress!! I decided on a playful base, the mimicked roots. Each of the dots represents the 59 children and their cabin colors from the Stepping Stones Grief camp.
“Last week we featured some photographs Patricia Parinejad shared with us of the Russian Pavilion for the Venice Biennale. Now she sent us the Hungarian Pavilion, where architects created some really nice spaces with an interesting use of wood pencils hanging from the ceiling.”
This is a beautiful shaping of space with a utilitarian object! I would love to walk through these!!
Check out the full blog post http://www.archdaily.com/75392/hungarian-pavilion-at-the-venice-biennale/
Amazingly, the wonderful people at BJC found a way for me to include 59 handprints on the butterfly wings. (That 15 prints a wing, front and back).
My design was to have the large handprints move to smaller handprints as they move up the wing for visual balance. It took a little clever spacing, but it looks like I have everything figured out! (For the children who participated, I have a master sketch at home, to show you your handprint in case you can’t find it on the final piece.)
I chose bright colors to tie the whole piece together, the hands transition from red to yellow from the base of the wing to top respectfully. The symbols will be painted on in white after I get all the hands placed.
Placing the first of the handprints! I pour the paint in the tray and place the hand on the butterfly!
From the beginning I wanted to find a way to incorporate the children into the piece. A few people from BJC Hospice and Palliative Care had a great idea to find a way to associate when the handprints were collected into the piece. I will be adding something on the piece to designate the Stepping Stone Grief Camp on the butterfly.
I asked a few of the children while I was at camp what they thought I should to incorporate the camp weekend into the piece. They had a great idea. Each of the campers stayed with a group of peers in cabins designated by color. They thought I should incorporate the colors from the cabin into the piece! I couldn’t agree more. I am currently revising the sketches of the base to include each of the colors of the cabins: Pink, Purple, Blue, Green, Yellow, Red, Orange, and Silver.
My hope is when the children see the colors on the base of the butterfly, they will remember their cabin and the camp.
It took several trials and many trips to the art store(s) but we tested a process we felt would work.
After we collected all the handprints the children creatively painted, we took them back to my workspace. I had found in my testing Crayola Model Magic worked best for what we were trying to do: create a positive cast of the hand without damaging the children’s artwork.
We made a quick assembly line and gently pushed the model magic into the hand prints. The results: a positive foam version of the hand I could use to paint the butterfly. Carefully collating all the sketch sheets from the children with their desired symbol, I now have everything to begin painting the butterfly.
Amazingly, we finished this entire process in just a few hours thanks to great help from my family. It would not have been possible without all their quick help!