Winston Salem it’s your time to “Rise Up” and Shine!
SECCA's Rise Up, Winston Salem project needs to make artful use of ladders temporarily loaned by the community. The deadline approaches. Can "The City of the Arts" rise to the occasion?
Awaken, O “City of the Arts” to the call for assistance by one of your own! SECCA’s inaugural project kicking off a yearlong outreach into the community via public art installations (Inside Out: Artists in the Community II) has one incredibly simple request. Could you please lend them a ladder? ANY ladder?
Artist Charlie Brouwer is being brought in to construct a temporary sculpture titled Rise Up Winston-Salem that will be on display at Old Salem Museums & Gardens from March 6th through April 12th. Brouwer’s work utilizes the lent ladders as both metaphor and material, representing the aspirations of the communities he collaborates with by creating skyward-striving, ethereal monuments. Right now, I’m afraid Winston’s aspirations don’t seem set to climb very high, with just sixteen ladders (falling far below the targeted 100+) collected this past weekend and only two more drop-off dates this coming weekend, Saturday, February 28th and Sunday, March 1st, to go. Additionally, if transportation of your ladder is an issue, you can call SECCA, 336-725-1904 to arrange to have it picked up on Sunday, instead.
This is a cool project, folks. It’s the very definition of “bricolage” as well as being incredibly green, considering the building materials are all lent to the artist and then returned to their owners. On top of that, SECCA staff and volunteers will record any story, memory or personal anecdote you care to associate with your ladder or with ladders in general, which will be incorporated into the project as well. It’s also a chance to turn one of your ordinary household items (that’s likely collecting dust somewhere) into a surpassingly noble symbol of devotion to the arts in your community.
Speaking of communities, ladder contribution is far from being restricted to Winston Salem alone. Anyone within the reach of my words can collaborate with their own ladder of any type or size and their own story as well. Chances are you’d lend your slacker neighbor a ladder with scarcely a concern, even if he waited a month to return it. Well, Winston (and Triad), SECCA is not just your neighbor, but also a valuable partner in the vibrancy of arts community here in the “City of the Arts”. If you care about what art means to the future of our region: Stand your ladder up. Be counted. “Rise”, and shine!
Drop off this weekend, Feb 28/Mar 1: Old Salem Facilities Building (former Coca Cola Plant) on the corner of Walnut and Poplar Streets, Winston Salem
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2 comments:
Thanks for the excellent Blog on this project. We are receiving a significant number of ladders now. But, that is not the only point of the project. If "Rise Up Winston-Salem" is truly going to represent the WHOLE community, we need a full range of its parts. It will be my goal this week to expand the range of sources of ladders. I'll be trying to convince churches (of multiple types), funeral homes, hospitals, tattoo parlors, grocery stores, hardware stores, public officials, banks, individuals from a variety of types of neighborhoods, etc. etc. etc. etc. that this is an opportunity for them to stand up and be counted as wanting to be recognized as integral parts of the community, supporting each other and rising up together.
I'll be doing my best, but it would really be helpful if everyone out there who supports the project would spread the word - wherever they go this week - explain the project and invite everyone they encounter - "Come on let's rise up together".
We can accept loans of ladders throughout this week - contact SECCA Program Assistant Endia Beal at 336-397-2109 and she will help you include your ladder in the community of ladders.
An update and congratulations to all those who stepped forward to help the project "Rise Up". I've been told that SECCA and artist Charlie Brouwer did indeed cross the 100 ladder mark!
Check out the opening, Saturday March 7th during a day-long community celebration in Old Salem. You can find out more at www.secca.org.
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