Last night, we attended the first Downtown Gallery Crawl of 2010. In Pittsburgh, there are two main types of Gallery Crawls: the Cultural District every-so-often ones, and the monthly Unblurred First Friday ones. The Cultural District Gallery Crawls are held just where you'd think they'd be, spanning the Downtown galleries and event spaces, and covering a lot of the same ground as the First Night happenings. First Fridays, or Unblurred, are held on the opposite end of Penn Avenue, spanning the galleries and restaurants of Garfield from end to end.
Typically, it's an easy decision of which crawl is best - First Fridays happen more regularly, and this (plus their location in Garfield) makes them a little less hectic and crowded. It's easier to get a decent glass of wine, and the galleries all serve snacks in addition to the alcohol. The Cultrual District crawls happen immediately after the workweek ends on Fridays, and if you don't get there early, all the galleries are going to be out of food and drink, and you're going to be standing around for ages trying to see any of the art.
However, we decided to hit the Cultural District Gallery Crawl to check it out, and I can say that we had an honest-to-goodness decent time. It started out slow - we were at Wood Street Galleries first, and they never seem to have anything truly interesting - but gradually improved as the night went on.
The highlights: Future Tenant's installation DO.YOU.ND3R5T@ND? Communication Through Technology. I was a little slow coming around to this when we first got into the gallery, but the more time I spent looking at the exhibit, the more I liked it. As it sounds, it was art focusing on technology that involves communication, from the soup cans on a string to IPhones and hands-free phones (probably my favorite piece - a painting of human-like birds on a telephone wire wearing headsets). It also featured a video of two dancers projected onto the wall, expressing non-verbal communication and lack of communication in relationships.
707 Penn Gallery: Particulate Behaviours. Some of this was a bit weird, mainly the two works of strips of paper on the wall that were meant to be 'activated' by pulling away the strip and allowing colored dust to fall to the ground. However, I really liked one part of the exhibit where you had to go into a little dark room that had a ceiling covered in clear globes of different sizes that reflected light. I'm all about light-art.
709 Penn Gallery: Adam Welch's A Few Objects on a Theme of Contradiction. This exhibit really fell flat for me. I'm going to just admit the truth: I didn't get it. The main piece when you entered the gallery was a dildo on a jackhammer that pounded against a piece of flat metal. Totally didn't get it. Sorry, call me a philistine, but I just don't understand. We didn't stick around too long in this gallery.
901 Penn Ave: Matthew Conboy's Pittsburgh Project. This one was probably the most interesting to me, as it was an exhibit of Pittsburgh photography, comparing work done by W. Eugene Smith from 1955-1956 with photographs taken in the past few years by Conboy. I thought the concept was fascinating, although the photographs themselves were a little lacking (this gallery and artist do get bonus points for the wine and snacks though!). One of my favorite things is comparative photography (this is a term I have made up), for example, a set of photos showing the same stretch of a city street in the early 1900s and then in present day. I really think there are so many possibilities with this type of project, and I was glad to see that other people out there have an interest in this same sort of thing that I do.
Northside Urban Pathways Gallery. This is a charter school (grades 6-12) located right in the midst of the Cultural District that always hosts a steel drum band and a bake sale. We checked out the bake sale, but happened to be stopping by between steel drum performances, so we just wandered around to look at the kids' projects that were on display. My favorite was the HIV/AIDS awareness project on display. I believe the boy who did it was named David, and I just thought he did a really great job explaining on a high school reading level the importance of getting tested, being safe, and spreading the word. I swore I wasn't going to ever get political in this blog, but I really appreciated his pamphlet on how teens and young adults should approach abstinence and safe sex, and also how these two things can be very much related. It didn't get religious or political, just very down-to-earth and common-sense. We need more of this kind of awareness in high schools, particularly our city schools. Good job. :)
Material Witness Showroom. This could be the totally wrong name of the place, but it's all I can find. We stopped in this gallery on First Night, but a bit of the art had changed, so we came back for a second round. The gallery is half-furniture (awesome, wooden furniture and fireplace-free active-fires) and half-art (this time paintings by Rachel Hallas, which were beautiful). It was a really nice atmosphere to hang out and relax for a little while, and enjoy some cheese, grapes, and delicious mini muffins. Yet again, you get a bonus point for feeding us while we enjoyed your art!
PA Culinary Institute. Just had to mention them again, since I stopped in for another brownie. They were just regular fudge brownies this time, and not the peanut butter and cashew ones of First Night, but man oh man were they good. Yum!
All in all, it was quite a good time, and I'm thoroughly proud of the Cultural District for keeping up with First Fridays. There isn't much that'll prevent me from going to any free Pittsburgh event, but it's nice to get the most out of my visit as I can.
The night was also noteworthy because my student ID that has given me free reign to PAT busses since 2001 expired on December 31st (your guess is as good as mine how it was in-date a full 2.5 years after I graduated), and this gallery crawl was the first time I've ever had to pay cash for a bus. Did you know that it costs $2.00 to take the bus?? And apparently, if we'd had to transfer, it would have cost even more! I'm mildly outraged by this. At Pitt, we paid something like $55 a semester for 'transportation fees' which included unlimited use of the PAT system, the inclines, the T, our Pitt busses, and VanCall. There must be a way around this... Anyone want me to TA their class for a free Pitt ID? I can do science or English, I promise!
Things to work on... :)
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