Categories
Unbound

Outsider art: Our favorite plein-air murals and sculptures

In a self-styled art town like Charlottesville, you don’t have to step into a gallery to have an art encounter. There are lots of places to see murals, sculptures, and even interactive works from your car or the sidewalk, or while strolling through the IX Art Park. Increasing the accessibility, the Charlottesville Mural Project—which has installed more than 20 murals since 2011—has a new interactive map to help you locate beautifully painted walls around town. Here are six of our favorite outdoor art pieces.

“Rivanna River by Poseidon”

5th Street Station

Influenced by both graffiti art and classical mythology, this large installation by PichiAvo, two collaborators from
Valencia, Spain, has inspired love and hate in equal measure
from locals. Where do you come down?

 

The Rita Dove poem “Testimonial” inspired this mural by David Guinn on West Main Street. Photo: Skyclad Aerial

 

“The World Called And I Answered”

1309 W. Main St.

Artist David Guinn has some amazing murals to his credit. Oh yeah, and poet Rita Dove—whose “Testimonial” inspired this one—is kinda famous, too. The poem’s full text is painted at street level on an adjacent wall.

Free speech monument

East end of the Downtown Mall

Some might argue that the nearby Belmont bridge graffiti wall is the true monument to free expression. But we
prefer the mall’s public chalkboard for its visibility and ease of use: just scrawl whatever deep or banal thought lurks in your mind, and you’ll have contributed to public discourse in Charlottesville.

“The Nest”

IX Art Park

Of all the murals, sculptures, and ever-changing craziness at IX, we love the vegetated dome by Kasia Borek the best. It’s inviting in such a simple way, and we have a soft spot for art that photosynthesizes.

Barracks Road mural

Barracks Road and 250 Bypass

Of the nearly 40 murals listed on the CMP interactive map (charlottesvillemuralproject.org), this one by Chicho Lorenzo deserves a shout-out for its location in a place where people would otherwise be totally distracted by cell phones and traffic. Thanks for waking us up.

“Spirits of the Piedmont”

Georgetown and Hydraulic roads

Albemarle High School students commissioned and helped
to paint this one by Emily Herr and Eleanor Doughty. We’re impressed with its beauty and sheer size—the length of a football field!

Categories
Arts

ARTS Pick: The Oratorio Society of Virginia celebrates 50 years

In the 50 years since The Oratorio Society of Virginia made its debut with a performance of Handel’s Messiah in the auditorium of Albemarle High School, the group has infused choral excellence into the community through its vast repertoire, high-caliber singers and annual holiday performances. In looking to commemorate the group’s half-century mark, Music Director Michael Slon became inspired by the mural on West Main Street featuring Rita Dove’s poem “Testimonial.” He commissioned Virginia composer Adolphus Hailstork to set it to music, which resulted in The World Called, to be showcased at OSVA’s gala celebration concert. “Hopefully this musical work—along with the poem and mural—will become art for our community,” says Slon.

Friday, May 25. $10-35, 7pm. Old Cabell Hall, UVA. 924-3376.

Categories
Arts

Matthew Burtner-Rita Dove collaboration takes flight

What was the last thing you made? Be honest with yourself. Perhaps you made dinner last night, but think hard about the last time you spent an afternoon knitting, strumming a guitar or doodling in a sketchbook. Maybe instead you’ve been reading, listening to albums, looking at paintings or watching “Stranger Things” on Netflix? Are you creating, or are you consuming?

Too often, “our own creativity gets written out” in place of consuming media, says Matthew Burtner, a sound artist and professor of computer and compositional technologies in the University of Virginia’s music department. “We are not creating spaces for imagination and free thinking in our society,” he says, and that worries him. “Being creative, being imaginative, is part of the human condition that’s unique. It not only defines us as an animal, but defines us individually among our species.” When we let go of our creativity, we risk letting go of our humanity.

With The Ceiling Floats Away, a collaboration with Pulitzer Prize-winning former U.S. Poet Laureate (and fellow UVA professor) Rita Dove, and the EcoSono Ensemble (a collective of performers bringing ecoacoustic music to the public), Burtner isn’t ready to let us lose our grip entirely. “It’s about re-engaging with creative art-making,” he says. “Even if you’re sitting in the audience, you’re supposed to be making something in this piece.”

The Ceiling Floats Away is a series of 13 composed poetry-and-music movements interspersed with audience-produced bridges. Officially issued in album form on January 12 by Ravello Records, a contemporary classical label dedicated to forward-thinking orchestral, chamber and experimental music from composers around the world, the piece has its origins in Charlottesville, during the OpenGrounds opening in 2012, where Burtner performed music from his telematic opera Auksalaq and Dove read from her work.

As Burtner tells it, Dove was intrigued by the audience participation software Auksalaq employs, and she thought it might be something poets could use. Not long after, Burtner called Dove and asked if she wanted to collaborate.

“I’m always interested in ways to expand the perceived boundaries of my own primary art form, poetry,” Dove wrote in an email to C-VILLE. And as an amateur musician herself, she was “curious to see how [Burtner] would approach this from his side.”


“Poetry began as an oral tradition; speech was a musical instrument, and language its mode of notation. In this album, poetry turns into music, while music melts into utterance and communal murmurings.” RITA DOVE


Burtner and sound engineer Mark Graham recorded Dove reading her poetry aloud. That recording session turned into a bit of a jam, Dove recalls, with Burtner feeling inspired to create music in the moment. After that, Burtner wrote the music over a few months, considering the phrasing, cadence and tonality of Dove’s voice, as well as the strengths of the EcoSono Ensemble, as he composed.

As Burtner composed, he sent Dove bits of what he was working on, which surprised her—she thought her part was done when she walked out of that first studio session. “When it comes to collaboration—especially one like this, involving a number of moving parts—it’s best to leave your ego on the stoop; so I bowed out to allow Matthew some artistic ‘elbow room,’” says Dove. Once the EcoSono Ensemble recorded the composed parts, Dove re-recorded her parts, speaking along with the music (an experience she describes as “quite exhilarating”). From there, Burtner added electronics until he was satisfied with the overall piece.

“It was exciting to hear what he had done with the texts, extracting syllables and repeating words,” says Dove. “And then to experience the final product, with those amazing audience interaction interludes…well, I was blown away.”

During live performances of The Ceiling Floats Away, the audience is invited into the creative process by using what’s often accused of zapping our creativity: a smartphone.

Equipped with the Burtner-invented NOMADS software, audiences can reply to what they’re hearing in real time. Text “the ceiling floats away” into the NOMADS system and the sound responds, either via the musicians or in Dove’s recorded voice. Because the software knows where in the audience you’re sitting, it can send an individual sonic reflection directly back to you. So you might hear something completely different from the person next to you. The ensemble plays along with this improvised sound until it feels like time to move into the next composed part.

“Poetry began as an oral tradition; speech was a musical instrument, and language its mode of notation,” says Dove. “In this album, poetry turns into music, while music melts into utterance and communal murmurings.”

The Ceiling Floats Away has been performed a handful of times, including at Second Street Gallery and during the ACCelerate: ACC Smithsonian Creativity and Innovation Festival in Washington, D.C. In 2016, it received a judge’s citation in the American Prize in Chamber Music competition for its “unique nexus of acoustics, electronics and audience interaction.”

It sits on the threshold between experimental and classical music, says Burtner, and it’s not likely to sound like anything you’ve heard before.

“By participating, and becoming part of the creative artwork itself, the listener can understand the creativity that goes into writing poetry or composing music,” he says.

When the ceiling floats away, when there’s no longer a limit to the possibility of creation, there’s endless opportunity for the imagination to grow.