The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Thursday, September 19, 2013 - 3B The Michigan Daily - michigandailycom Thursday, September19, 2013 - 3B Tree Town grows with new art installation Leaving my phone behind Catherine Widgery chosen to spearhead latest AAPC project By ANNA SADOVSKAYA SeniorArts Editor Naturally garnished with big burrs and ornamental oaks, Ann Arbor's "Tree Town" nickname is appropriate, given the nearly 50,000 trees lining its streets. Struck by the vast presence of mature trees within Nichols Arbo- retum and throughout the rest of Ann Arbor, artist Catherine Widg- ery designed an art installation set to decorate the East Stadium Bou- levard bridges and underpass. The search for an artist was conducted through the Ann Arbor Public Arts Committee, which sanctioned a set budget for the public-art project. "Usually what happens is (the committee) sends out a call to art- ists when we have a project idea or alocation in which the commission has selected to put an art project in," said Public Art Administra- tor Aaron Seagraves. "We review them based on the criteria of the project goals, evaluate the artists based on qualifications." From there, three or four art- ists' concept designs are chosen as finalists and after interviews and closer inspections of design attributes, one artist is selected. The committee, made up of stake- holders and community members, elected Massachusetts designer Catherine Widgery to undertake the project. "I think with this particular proposal, it used a lot of the area that we were hoping to place art- work in," Seagraves said. "The theme of using imagery of trees and placing them in a transpar- ent background, on glass, using acrylic, so it's see-through, I think it was the theme that really struck people." Having completed close to 40 public art installations across the United States and Canada, Wid- gery is no newcomer to the art scene. Her interest in environ- mental sculptures and infusing nature into art led her to a career involving public installations. "Public art puts art in the pub- lic spaces and in an environment where it's not a museum," Sea- graves said. "It can be enjoyed by a lot more people, viewed by a wider audience. What I think public art does, when it's really successful, is identify a particu- lar spot or area, and lends an identity to an area." Along with lending an iden- tity, public art creates a common culture for the community and distinguishes a city from others. The Rock, on the corner of Hill Street and Washtenaw Avenue, is a notable Ann Arbor landmark that unites the city's inhabitants through a paint-based tradition. "It's not public art in the sense that it's an art sculpture, but it's a participatory type of art project," Seagraves said. Though arts funding has been kept up in Ann Arbor, many municipalities and institutions in the United States have seen cuts and decreases in their resources. But Widgery calls to mind success- ful art installations that gave pur- pose and notability to an area, like Millenium Park in Chicago. "I think people underestimate the financial as well as the aes- thetic aspect of art," Widgery said. "I'm a great believer that it really contributes to the quality of life in the town." Her own project, "Arbor Winds," aims to do just that. Without giving too much away, Widgery explained that it will be situated on the East Stadium Bou- levard bridges and feature tree- inspired prints on pieces of glass and a larger, more immersive installation at the passageway. "There's the underpass and then the raised elements that will be all along the bridge, so that when people drive over them there will be colorful points of animation across the bridge, and a larger work right at the entrance," Widgery said. "It's still in development, but it's exciting to feel there's this give-and-take, back-and-forth exchange based on all the public feedback that there was." Though the feedback allows for the project to grow, it also makes pinning down an exact design difficult. Widgery believes it is this aspect of col- laboration that gives artists their work edge. "When you first come to an idea, it still has the possibility of evolving into something better," Widgery said. "I don't even know myself how the creative process works, except that I am very open; I keep the blinders off." Too much input could lead to difficulties for the finished prod- uct, as taggers and graffiti artists' input could come in the form of an art installation of their own covering the "Arbor Winds." But Widgery is not afraid of this out- come - she believes that her art will coincide with what graffiti artists are attempting to do. "The community has to embrace the work, and by involv- ing the public in every step of the progress, there's a sense of own- ership. Art should be considered like everything else: It needs care and some maintenance," Widg- ery said. "(Graffiti artists) respect fellow artists' work." Despite having visited Ann Arbor only twice, Widgery seems to have a grasp of the city's feel. Though local artists were also considered for the project, ulti- mately Widgery believes that her outside perspective can add something. "I try to come to a place with no preconceptions. I don't come with any visual ideas in mind," Widgery said. "I've been back now twice (to Ann Arbor), two different visits. There's a lot of physical beauty because of the trees and the nature every- where, and I think that it has a youthful energy that people respond to. My use of the imag- ery of wind in relation to the energy of trees has the embodi- ment of that intangible, but pres- ent, energy in the town." A and fit to take concep "healt focus explici the me aspect what's on insi plays a role in ing wh happei on the does fo Thi techno want t ing. In an equ detrim revolut indust jobs an expres a sede plane, the ext helpu see ou and va use ax metho killing Soci similai an ind nected globe these a tives. 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At least, I know it I have, ifI'mnot participatingin r me. my life outsidethe cyber world, I'd s week, I want to talk about become depressed. logy. More specifically, I Playing devil's advocate, I'llpose o talk about social network- that it's not the vehicle that births ventions ostensibly provide theconsequences,it'showaperson al number of benefits and uses it: Gunsadon't kill people, peo- ents: The movie camera ple kill people; junk food is never tionized the entertainment forced downourthroats,etc. The ry and provides millions of key for me is to "Facebook respon- d opportunities for artistic sibly." I needtorecognizewhenit's sion, but it also encourages appropriate to pay attention to my ntary lifestyle. The car, the phone and when it's important to the train ... these allowed pay attention to mycompany. pansion of our country and Atthe end ofthis pastasummer, s get from place to place to I went up north with my family r loved ones, do business to fill my tank with as much R&R cation. But the widespread asspossible before the semester d heavy reliance on these kicked off, and we stayed at a beau- ds of transportation is now tiful cabin on the water. My main our environment. concern: Is there Wi-Fi? I couldn't ial networking offers a notrtake my laptop. I didn't have rbenefit in that it's created homeworktodo,obviously.,ididn't ustry and helps us stay con- have a specific reason for bringing to individuals across the it other than the fact that, without with the click of a mouse; my laptop, a device Iuse every re just a few of the posi- day, I feel... odd. That experience lut in a recent study on the forced me to evaluate my behavior, nship between Facebook butI didn't feel inclined to change pression, it appears that it quite yet. stime can foster a severe As soon as I admitted that vc impact on our mental tehnology possesses some level of"power"overme,thingskept happening. Recently, avideo went viral called, "IForgot My Phone," Live in the which depicts personal scenarios where the need to "capture the moment. moment"on a phone prevents *individuals from capturing the moment inherently, andI found myself saying, "Yup, I do that, too." May2013 studytitled, "Is At ascomedy showI attended ok creating'iDisorders?,' at DTE Energy Music Theatre, ornia State University despite the fact that copious chers tested whether the signs stated, "No photography," pecific technologies or I instinctively whipped out my (including certain types of phone to film segments from ok use) would predict clini- our sixth-row, center seats - not nptoms ofsix personality because I wanted to relive the ers (schizoid, narcissistic, experience later, but because I ial, compulsive, paranoid wanted to show off the killer view strionic) and three mood to my friends who were sitting on ers (major depression, dys- the lawn in cheap seats. iand bipolar-mania). But the clincher occurred last ns, young adults and adults Friday when I went to seeYellow- ted an anonymous, online card, one of my favorite bands of innaire that addressed these all-time. At the start of the show, ns. 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Ladies and gentle- A- men, Britney - Spears has Work Bitch brought another Britney Spears dance track ve into our midst. "Work Bitch" builds progressively while straying from excess. The beat is mighty, yet built over a single, dominant kick. The synth is single-layered and dirty, but nothing short of an adrenaline rush. The pop princess also car- ries some "Scream and Shout" aftershock. The recent #will- Despite will.i.am's posi- for a fresh, contemporary power collaboration, and this tion as executive producer for accent to his production, mak- debut track from Spears's Spears's new record, "Work ing him the foremost choice eighth studio album, suggests Bitch" is said to be the only for the cutting-edge trendset- some curious new trends for track on the album that he will ter that Spears has proven to Brit - specifically that she pointedly produce. The former be. still sounds like a Brit. Black Eyed Peas rapper strives -GREGORYHICKS i