Culture Making is now archived. Enjoy five years of reflections on culture worth celebrating.
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the book and Andy Crouch, please visit andy-crouch.com.
Posts tagged public art
"Mending for the People," filmed and edited by Andrew Galli, 30 December 2009 :: via MetaFilter
Once a month, artist
Michael Swaine sets up an outdoor sewing machine in San Francisco's Tenderloin district, and offers free on-the-spot clothing repairs for people in the neighborhood—a particularly friendly and useful form of public art.
Nate:

AP Photo by Karim Kadim, from "Scenes from Iraq," The Big Picture, 3 September 2008
AP caption: "A painter decorates a security wall sealing off the southern section of the Shiite enclave of Sadr City in Baghdad, Iraq on Wednesday, Aug. 6, 2008." I love the particular choice of scenery, which I'd guess is as foreign to Baghdadis as ... well, as this particular type of wall itself.
Nate:

panel from "The El", by Daniel Hauben, photo by David Goldman for the New York Times, from "Bronx Artist’s Glass Work Is Recognized," by Sewell Chan, NYTimes.com, 13 August 2008
One of six colored-glass panels at the
Freeman Street Station in the Bronx. The medium is a sturdier version of stained glass, with inch-thick colored segments joined together with epoxy. I love, obviously, the vibrancy of the panels, and the fact that they're a celebration of, basically, the neighborhood just below the station (which you can glimpse through that gap below the partition) -- saying, in effect, this isn't just a way-station on your journey to somewhere else, but a Place in itself.
Nate:
