Monday, February 13, 2012

Yulia Tikhonova, Ninja Artists vs. the 1%


I am a Moscow-born, Brooklyn-based curator who promote public awareness and practices that strengthen art and culture’s central role in civic life. 

Group exhibition NINJA Artists vs. the 1% brings together the artists who responded to an unstable job market and a precarious economy. Tens of thousands of art school graduate enter the scene every year, and each wants to make a living from their work, while pursuing a meaningful career. The prospects for success are slim, yet the flow of new talent continues unabated. The soon graduating students will face the forces of the art market which is currently near its lowest ebb. 

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Paul Talbot, Exhibit


3 different projects in one space.


- Photograph from different sources, also video to run in a loop. The video would run through actions and marches from different aspects of the movement.

http://www.youtube.com/user/NEREphotography?ob=0


- signs from occupy archives that would hang from the ceiling so people could simulate themselves in a rally. They would be able to hold the sign and get photographed or a group of people could be photographed together to look like they are in a march.


- the third part of the project would be collages of a large scale put together of many 4x6 photos with plywood as the substrate. Along with the collages would be scrapbooks made by OWS material from marches and rallies.

Glenn Leisching and Violet Snow, African Seminar/Workshopr


2012: Catastrophe or Opportunity? – An Indigenous Perspective
Whether you're heeding the Mayan prophecies of cataclysmic change in 2012 or witnessing the upheavals of climate change, seismic tectonic shifts, the Arab Spring, and worldwide economic recession, you may be wondering what's happening to our planet.
How can we prepare for fundamental change and help to create a constructive revolution rather than a disaster?
Glenn Leisching, an initiated elder of the West African Dagara tribe, offers solutions based on ancient teachings about our relationshipswith nature and our familial ancestral heritage . A friend and ally of shaman Malidoma Somé and other indigenous African wisdom keepers,Glenn has been to Africa three times in the past year, bringing back powerful insights from his visits with respected medicine men and women.
Glenn is available to give talks to the public, emphasizing empowering yet practical steps we can take as individuals to harness and direct this energy of change.
He will address such concepts as:
  • a new yet ancient paradigm for envisaging a new society
  • tools for finding each person's life purpose, essential to the flourishing of our communities
  • deepening community ties to a level almost unknown in the West
  • honoring the seen and the unseen worlds, and how this practice enlarges our understanding and intimacy within our lives
  • participating in the truth of nature's unfolding as our birthright
  • simple everyday acts for expanding personal power and insight

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Franc Palaia, Sustainable Energy Workshops/Demos

Since 1990, my mixed media works have been about light. I make illuminated photo-sculpture using found and recycled materials and fitting these constructions with photographic transparencies and light. Since 2005 I have shifted my light source from a traditional power grid electricity source to a natural sunlight and solar powered light.  I have been striving to make my illuminated photo works as natural as possible.

I can add a more obvious art component to my Occupy Bottle Bulb project by incorporating photo or hand painted transparencies to the illuminated bottle bulbs. Doing this also relates the project to my own illuminated photography works which I have been making for over 20 years.


My Occupy Catskill project proposal is a continuation of this philosophy. I recently became aware of an amazing simple way to create a lighting device that is as  green as possible. It is called the “Bottle Bulb”. 

The Bottle Bulb was invented by a Brazilian named Alfredo Moser in 2002.

The plight of the poor is an overwhelming global ordeal in terms of lack of food, water, shelter, healthcare and electricity.  However, the bottle bulb is a simple and easy solution for the approximately 35% of the world’s population without domestic electricity.
The Bottle Bulb is made of recycled two liter plastic soft drink bottles. They are  filled with clean water along with an added soda capful of chlorine bleach which prevents algae growth over a long period of time.   When the bottle is exposed to sunlight a prismatic reaction occurs and magically, this creates a luminescence equivalent to a 50-60 watt incandescent bulb. The water in the bottle simply defuses sunlight so it spread out after passing through the water rather than in a straight sunbeam if the light was going through a hole in the roof.
   The process of making a bottle bulb is very easy. The bottle is fitted with a 12”x12” metal skirt that fits around the middle of the bottle, then the bottle is inserted vertically with the top half the bottle sticking out above a tin or similar thin roof and the bottom half the bottle hangs down inside the structure below the roof. The skirt is then screwed or glued to the roof and the holes filled with water- proof sealant or caulking and that is all there is to it.  A soft glowing natural illumination will automatically come from the bottom half of the bottle and brightens a dark interior living or work space. This only works during the day when the sun is shining, however there are always interior spaces that are dark during the day for lack if windows or sky lights.  The Bottle Bulb will assist in lighting sheds, club houses, tree houses, tents, cabanas, any small structure and even homes and work spaces with a thin penetrable roof exposed to sunlight.

My Occupy project will consist of workshops in an unused storefront or empty building where we can set up tables and teach people how to make Bottle Bulbs. An extra salient bonus of this project is clearing the environment of empty discarded plastic bottles.
The materials involved are basic and easily procured such as scrap metal, metal snips, drills, sealants, putty knives, plastic bottles, water and chlorine bleach.

My part will consist of one or several demo workshops with a short power point on the history of the Bottle Bulb and then the workshops can be conducted with assistants and community artists and volunteers.  The finished Bottle Bulbs can be distributed to local citizens who need them and we can ask for a nominal donation in return to help with supply costs.  This idea can be taken to a national level because even today there are many places in the United States where electricity is still a luxury.





Jessica Eis, video/audio

I have created two video/audio pieces that would be installed in a storefront or isolated room. The images will be displayed in the storefront window by video projection or in an isolated room/space in a larger exhibition and would be on a loop. While, speakers strategically placed outside, or within the room depending on location, will be playing an audio loop as well, creating a micro-environment of what life through my eyes was like at Zuccotti Park, a functioning village in the heart of New York City, created by people that could no longer stand idly by as our society yearns for change.

The first piece is called Sights&Sounds, 30min video piece, which is the combination of still images from a day at Zuccotti Park as well as audio from another day. My hope with this piece is to put the observer in the heart of Occupy Wall Street, the village and the movement created in the middle of a bustling city, where everyone was fed, sheltered, and nurtured, and where the possibility for change was palpable and ideas for that change were welcomed. Images will be inter dispersed between black screen or “empty spaces” forcing the viewer into a closed eye state, which encourages the observer to listen and feel what an amazing environment was forged at Zuccotti Park, creating a moment of imagination and interaction for the viewers to place themselves in the OWS movement.






The second piece, Take Back, 16min video piece, during the day after the NYPD had raided the park, while everyone awaited the court’s decision and then eventually the inevitable re-taking of the park. And although Zuccotti Park never got back to its previous incarnation of what I like to call “Village of the People”, it was a incredibly symbolic moment, that no matter what the government organizations would do, they could not stop the movement of enlightenment and change that had begun. This piece too has both audio and visual components that would be set up in a loop just as the previous piece. However, Take Back has an expanded format- in addition to the black screen there are quotes by Thomas Jefferson interspersed throughout that address the need for public dissent- forcing and focusing the listener/viewer into both a closed eye state as well as a reflective state on our society and its founding ideals and principles.

Both pieces, Sight&Sound and Take Back, create a space that transports the viewer back to a moment of origination of Occupy Wall Street, and shows how ideals and change can reverberate through time, people, and space.




Monday, February 6, 2012

Sparrow, Poetry Workshop/Performance


 
"Listening to Poetry, Speaking to the Gods"
 
This workshop combines listening to and reading great poetry -- by Longfellow, Shelley, Milton, Langston Hughes, and others -- with honest talking. Participants may speak to the group about their political struggles, their spiritual life, their personal difficulties. It will be a "conversation" between ordinary people and great poets. Simultaneously, we will take notes, and make drawings, and by the end will have an art show, which we will tape to the wall.
 
"The Politics of Silence"
 
In this lecture/demonstration, I explore John Cage's essential musical composition, 4' 33", which consists entirely of silence. In particular, I will discuss silence as a political act.
 
 
 
Sparrow lives with his wife in a doublewide trailer in Phoenicia, New York. One of his "jobs" is writing bumper stickers. Probably Sparrow's greatest achievement in life was creating the slogan I'M ALREADY AGAINST THE NEXT WAR. Soft Skull Press has published three of his books, including America: A Prophecy -- The Sparrow ReaderTheNew York Times ran three of his op-ed pieces. Sparrow plays ocarina in the post-Buddhist pop band Foamola.

Gilbert Gambucci, Music Lesson/Performance


 A music teach-in and performance of participants:
  
 1/ Morning hour piano lesson:  A first piano lesson class (or classes) for beginners of any age. We'll learn to play Paul Strein's Occupy Wall Street Song at the piano. (It's a very easy straight forward piece of music).

 
 2/ Afternoon session:  Learning the words and how to sing the same piece, The Occupy Wall Street Song.

 
 3/ Any evening: a performance of this song (by the participants) at the piano (4 hands) together with the vocals, and possible audience joining in.
  
 www.ConsciousnessConcerts.com

Cate Woodruff, Altered Photographs



Cate Woodruff, Photographs







Friday, February 3, 2012

Imani Brown, contact for Canadian Graffiti Artist

Details soon...

Canadian graffiti artist teaching a spraypaint/stencil workshop for teens on cardboard for temporary exhibition.



http://joelrichardson.com/


Sam Truitt, 100 Texts, Library/Study Center + Panel Discussionss

I propose a collection of 108 texts (Buddhist model of 100 plus eight for any mistakes) related to the practical, theoretical and poetic underpinnings of the OWS movements. What we would shoot for specific to this 108-book project would be a room with books in it and a table and chairs. The table and chairs and floor and walls would all be painted white, and we would provide magic markers (can be colored, too) there, and visitors could write everywhere - thoughts, messages, quotes from books, etc."

The list is being built and contact with the OWS Librarians would definitely be among the next steps.

+ related events:

WS2MS Library Panels

This is an addendum to my proposal to collect and house the 108 books related to OWS movements' underpinnings. If that proposal is approved, I would like to set up three not-too-academic panels directed toward exploring OWS' practical, theoretical and poetic underpinnings. These three panels might elaborate in some respects the texts but are more likely to provide myriad offshoots relative to the unique perspectives of participants.

I would propose each panel would include about five participants and run about a hour and a half to two hours. I would propose having the panels run over the course of a Saturday in April and preferably on a day in which there are other activities/gatherings occurring.

We might partially seed these panels, but we should also do a call for papers in order to be as open as possible and to increase the range of what is possible.

Sam Truitt, Earth Day Action

Occupy the Rip Van Winkle Bridge on Earth Day (Sunday, April 22)


I envision on April 22 (Earth Day) at noon people from the East and West sides of the Hudson River converging on the walkway of the Rip Van Winkle Bridge. A large banner would be unfurled at the center of the bridge on which would be written "Earth day." There might be other things that happen, but I don't envision more than this simple human act.

Brutus Faust, Animated text for screen or projection

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0EBUcfrOsVQ

Brutus Faust, aka Adres Serrano

Buckminster Fuller Institute

The Buckminster Fuller Institute is housed in Williamsburg, Brooklyn above Hyperallergic,  where Occupy With Art has a residency through March.  Paul McLean reports that the BFI is interested in working with us on creative design and sustainability projects.

Tensegrity Structure


http://www.bfi.org/programs/prototype


Recap of conversation with the BFI Challenge Director, Jen Joy Roybal:

They have 4-6 project boards, 4'x6' mounted on foamcore.  Each board features 8 finalists from the Buckminster Fuller Design Challenge addressing whole system solutions and integrated strategies for solving sustainability issues and ecological problems- They show how art, energy, economy, design, science engineering, technology can all work together.

They may be interested in a presentation on alternative economies, land use issues such as the watershed, agriculture and tourism relating NYC to the Hudson Valley.  

Also Jen Joy is available for two weeks in March to help install.  We plan another conversation for Mon 2/13.

Mark Skwarek, Augmented Reality


Artist Mark Skwarek and select students from NYU Polytech will transform the city of Catskill NY as part of 
the OCCUPY Wall St. to Main St. Augmented reality mixes the virtual and physical world with site specific interventions. The works created will address the economic concerns of the local community and the nation. Mark Skwarek will drive an augmented reality boat down Main St in Catskill while giving a tour as a performance for the show's opening.



http://MarkSkwarek.com





















http://youtu.be/h0hUiHOMzGY




Susan Wides, Photographs

Photographs from Harper's Magazine story, Oct 5, 2011




Maria Byck and Antonio Serna, Forum and Workshop


ART & THE COMMONS: Beyond the Tangible

Traditionally the commons brings to mind a system where tangible resources are shared by a community. For practical reasons these types of tangible commons have built around them complex ecologies of functions that can be counted, sorted, and balanced to maintain the vitality of the resource as a commons. The advantage in a commons is that responsibility and care is distributed within its members whose livelihood in-turn depends on it, to a certain degree.

With this basic information about tangible commons, can we begin to think about other types of commons, commons who’s functions are less tangible and cannot be enumerated and written as clearly and precisely as those such as land, water, and air? If so we can begin the process of negotiating a relationship to the commons that has no physical form at all, such as ideas and culture.

OCCUPY WALL STREET & THE COMMONS: A New Lens for Analysis

Occupy Wall Street has directly confronted the issue of privatized public space, or the commons, and its impact on the social and political landscape. Through this we can see how the value of the land moves beyond its physical properties to the intangible outcomes of bodies in a shared space: expressions, serendipity, imagination and engagement. What is the potential when we open up spaces that provide an alternative to sitting in our American Dream homes isolated observers of world through the mediated images on our screens?
Through the Occupy Wall Street lens we can see how corporate and capitalist thinking has lead to the commodification of the cultural commons. What is the impact of copyright? As corporations own much of our culture how do we interact with our culture if it is off limits? How is value created in a market driven economy in which art is horded as a luxury item rather than shared as a public good. Does this lead the artist to self-censorship? Does this affect our imagination of the possibilities? Where are the borders of this system? How can we push up against them? Can current practices in technology, such as open source, hacking and killer apps that take privately owned and coded entity and redefine it as public, provide some insight? How do the evolving dynamic of OWS actions provide a chance to challenge the current boundaries between the public good and private capital?

OPEN FORUM:
Exploring the commons beyond the tangible.
WORKSHOPS:
In an effort to harness the potential of moving between the intangible to the tangible, we will explore how to move from ideas to actions and back again. Various workshops focus on furthering our understanding and relationship to the commons, for example: Art & the Commons or Music & the Commons.
OTHER EVENTS:
-A discussion exploring the political, economic, and social intersections and conflicts within painting: Van Gogh, Casper David Friedrich, Bruegel family, Da Vinci, Jacques-Louis David. - In Practice Events: post-workshop gatherings and events to implementing sustainable solutions beyond WS2MS.


PENDING COALITION OF OWS ARTS GROUPS:
Arts & Culture Arts & Labor Occupy Museums Occupy with Art as well as other autonomous artist and individuals within OWS

Akenshai Towns, U Arts Philadelphia

I propose an idea of a visual exhibition that comes to life.   As I child I think one of the greatest influences on me to become an artist was the movie FAME.  It was based on a performing arts school where the students always used their talent to express themselves the world enjoy this because it was passion with a purpose.
            I attend The University of the Arts in Philadelphia, PA this is a very unique place because we are a visual and performing arts school. I found that the best way to get a reaction out of people is to give them action. Dennis Ferrer sings a song titled “Change the World”.  I propose to have our music department play this song while our dance and drama department preform it live. I propose that our visual arts programs allow student to make work around the theme of "together we can". These will not only produce art that supporters see visually but also it will give them a chance to be apart of the art itself and experience it.
            This type of exhibition works on many levels because not only is it themed about togetherness. It is only possible if we work together. No one man can put on this show no matter how vast his talents just as no one man or entity should occupy Wall Street.


http://youtu.be/P3nk0-AZFGA

Mark Read, radio


About the Show

The #Occupy movement, born less than three months ago, has spread like wildfire around the country and the globe, taking root in towns and cities everywhere, connecting local struggles to the wider struggle for social and economic justice.  Something powerful is surging and stirring in the people of the world, a hunger for true democracy and a demand for transformative change.



The affiliates network of Pacifica Radio, with more than 300 stations dispersed all over the country, is in a unique position to tap into the energy of this historic grassroots movement, reflecting and amplifying its power by collecting and broadcasting the stories of movement participants from all over.    The affiliates network represents a pool of talent and a range of perspective that has yet to be fully utilized.  Occupied Radio will harness the skills and passion of our affiliate producers to generate an energetic, intelligent, entertaining program that will in turn further strengthen the affiliate network.



Occupied Radio will utilize new technology to enable production and ensure distribution.  We have created an area on audioport that will allow local producers from around the country, and the world, to easily upload content (segments) and become contributors to the program.  These segments will themselves become a library of content available to programmers from around the country to use if they wish to do so.



Occupied Radio is being produced by Mark Read, a radio producer from new affiliate WGXC in Hudson NY, and the former Outreach Director for Democracy Now!  Mark has been deeply involved in #Occupy Wall Street and is an active member of both the Labor Outreach Working Group of #OWS, and the Movement Building Working Group.  He views this as an extraordinary opportunity for both Pacifica, and the #Occupy movement.



The Pacifica Radio affiliate task force has taken the lead and has marshaled its limited resources in order to produce 3-4 pilot programs in the hope that more resources will be found quickly in order to continue this important work.



The #Occupy movement has created a rare and vital moment, opening up a space within which people can come together to work for the kind of transformative change that the current crises (economic, political, environmental) demand.  Let us seize this moment together and create the kind of media that such a moment deserves.

Laurie Arbeiter, We will not be silent

PROJECT PROPOSAL 



A small group of artists from NYC created a language-project in 2006, when we began wearing and distributing shirts that said WE WILL NOT BE SILENT, a historic statement that dated back to a 1942/1943 resistance movement in Germany called the White Rose. We translated the statement into six languages and over 50,000 were distributed all over the world. This project was chosen to be included in a curated exhibition in Sienna, Italy, dealing with artists and their response to war. 



We have recently been inspired by the liberation and occupy movements worldwide and in October designed over 35 new statements that are now being distributed and worn by people in the public realm and inspiring communication between those who wear the shirts and those they encounter. 



We also create public happenings with people wearing the shirts during site-specific actions. Our goal at these actions is to capture public attention and to be captured by photo-journalists who then, through their framed images, help continue to spread the messages worldwide through the media. Our efforts have been documented in many publications.



Our proposal for participation in the OCCUPY WALL STREET TO OCCUPY MAIN STREET exhibition would include:



1. An ongoing installation, through the course of the exhibit, in which the shirts would be displayed either in a storefront space and/or a gallery space. We would also include photo documentation of images of people in action in the shirts. The shirts would be available for purchase for people who wanted to join us in embodying the different messages. We are considering setting up a video camera to document some of the people who would choose to wear the shirts, to have them speak about the meaning of the language that they will now embody and what it brings to their mind.



2. A public happening in the streets with people unified by wearing the different shirts to capture people's attention and compel involvement by others passing by. This event would also be documented.  



Thank you for your consideration,

Laurie Arbeiter





www.wewillnotbesilent.net


Violetta Vollrath, painter, installation artist, Germany

I am an artist (painting, installation, action) from Germany (Mainz).

Probably and unexpectedly I will be in NY some when between July 23 and august 11.

When I was looking for an opportunity to make some art there I found your site. I would like to contribute a series of 42 paintings. (see below how to show them in NYC) Each of the 42 pictures shows, what is worth or could be a billion (1 000 000 000) Euro (1 320 000 000 US$). This
value is derived from


#the different valuation of different achievements and products within a
currency area and


# from the different costs of same or similar achievements or products in
different currency areas, to attribute to the rates of exchange.


The data, which stand behind the pictures, from the Internet and other
sources, were investigated for example from the statistic yearbook 2008 of
the statistic federal office. Inaccuracies result from the changing rates of
exchange, which were as far as possible always determined for the proven
year. Annual details indicate the newest available data, which are
accordingly differently old depending upon origin of the data and the
statistic processing. The most important sources are indicated in a source
collection (internet link), which can be requested by the authoress and
painter.



See all titles (although not well translated), an example of pictures with titles and my biography in the attached files.

HOW TO SHOW :


As I can not be there during the exhibition time I want to ask you to exhibit copies of the pictures. If you can sponsor some prints (e.g. in a copy shop) you may print all pictures and all titles and make an exhibition how you like, e.g. simply glued by tape on a wall or a window. 


As weel anybody may find all pictures and titles in



  

You can also publish the link to any interested people.


In 2009 the work was exhibited in Worms/Germany:


 



I also can send you cheap copies of the pictures on paper with all titles and you may fix them as described above.
 

I would be pleased, if I could contribute to a better comprehension of money with my project.


 Violetta Vollrath



FURTHER DETAILS
IN ENGLISH
One Billion Euro is ...
Could be: a good non-fiction book for every household 2008
Coffee consumption of Bavaria, Baden-Wurttemberg and Rhineland-Palatinate, 2007
Annual income of 520 000 coffee workers in Brazil 2006
Triple fold of the annual expenditure of all world states for humanitarian demining, 2005,
which equals to 500 000 units or 0.6% of landmines lying around
Cost of 176 million anti-personnel mines in stockpiles of the armies of the world, 2007
Price for 12 fighter-bombers 2007
Cost for seven G8 Summits 2008
Salary increase for all 540 000 metal workers in Germany 2008
Gross Domestic Product of Bhutan, 2007
Could be: sports, music or art lessons for everyone of these 3 million children receiving social
assistance, Germany 2008
Could be: tax rate increase from 41 to 45% for every income greater than € 1 million in
Germany, for the year 2003
The governmental UNICEF contributions worldwide, 2005
Power consumption of all tumble driers in Germany in 2008
Could be: public annual housing allowance increase to more than double from 90 to 200 € /
household / month, 2008
Fuel for car traffic in the district of Kassel (administrative district in Germany), per year 2006
Could be: 2200 km of amphibian protection fence on both sides with tunnels, satisfies about
the needs in the new federal states of Germany and the state of Hessen, 2008
Could be: slaughter cattle farming in organic farms in Germany, extra cost per year after
conversion (2008)
Gross income of the geriatric nurses in Brandenburg, Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia
(countries in Germany), 2006
Operating costs of all national parks in SE and Central Africa, possibly the whole of Africa
2008 (estimated)
Price for 77 000 hand prosthesis with movable fingers 2008
Could be: annual investment / depreciation for solar power systems for all households in
Mittelfranken (region of Germany) 2008
Electric power of all German internet servers 2001 (estimated 1 / 4 of 2010)
Construction costs (without additional expenses) for 100 km highway with an average bridge
portion of Germany, e.g. from Münster to Wuppertal, 2007
1 / 3 of public expenditure on coastal protection the EU 2006
Cost for 1 / 8 Gotthard Base Tunnel, 2008
Approx. 1 / 250 of the federal budget of Germany, 2007
80% of the annual investment of the producing industries for environmental protection in
Germany, 2005
Could be: construction costs for all urgently needed drinking water wells for the whole of
Western, Eastern and Central Africa, 2008
1.1 times the expenditure of federal and countries research 2008 for nuclear energy, retreating
of NPP, fusion, coal and renewable energy
Public expenditure for all 154 000 asylum seekers in Germany, 2007
Add-on cost for pork instead of (theoretically possible) substituttion by lentils in Germany
during two weeks / year (retail price) 2008
Could be: cost for 21,800 student apartments 2008
Prescribed lipid-lowering drugs in Germany, Netherlands and Belgium, retail prices 2007
Global public spending on malaria treatment, 1 / 5 of the needs, 2008
Could be: 25 new theatre buildings in Germany 2008
Annual income of the 20 most earning individuals in Germany, 2001
Annual spending on diapers estimated in Germany, 2008
Black market price for the annual consumption of heroin, of approx. half of the 120 000
heroin addicts in Germany 2008
Punishment of the EU Commission for a well-known IT chip company because of
competition-distorting arrangements and contracts, 2009
0.6% of the World Rice Production (stock market prices) 2007
Could be: 13 million solar- or crank-powered learning laptops, e.g. for all children of Dem.
Rep. Congo, 2008
The sales prices of the 15 most expensive pictures in the world, 2009

Timothy McMurray, Photographer, Occupy Albany








Taha Awadallah, Thyme Seller


The Thyme Seller


For 35 years, my mother’s collected thyme herbs in her village
near the 1948 Israeli borders line, carrying the thyme to the streets of Beit
Jala city, going door to door trying to sell it and make some money so
her family could survive.

The Thyme Seller, is online:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vNVfClykRdU




Stephanie Keith, Photographer









Sarah Barker, Paintings

x



4 ft. painting on steel,  Star Series + one on paper I am finishing now. The star series questions power structures and has a lot of environmental and political edges.  More on my website. www.sarahbarker.com.

Yellow Rose references to the oil industry, lost souls and a desire for things past. 



Prey, Pay, Pray, Relates to matters of war and money corruption and peace. The piece is on Steel 4'x4', it is painted with the same pigments as on the stealth bombers. In the middle you will find a goldfish band relating to the anti fraud band running try money and the laurel or peace plant is represented in the center circle.

Health and Wealth is from the plant series still using the stars and referencing chamomile for its calming effects and wealth, This piece contemplates a deeper meaning of the term wealth, that of spirit and soul.