Tag: canton arts district

Thanks for a great Paw Parade!

Wow! What a Paw Parade we had on Twitter today! I feel blessed to have so many wonderful friends who made this such a huge success! If you missed it, you can watch the recap video:

The Paw Parade was a virtual parade that I and my Spokescat @BrewskieButt hosted in the Canton, OH Arts District to celebrate our friends’ support of my artwork.

There were lots of bands, floats, balloons, etc. The featured balloons had artwork by BZTAT on them! We had DJ’s spinning parade tunes and street vendors pushing food and beverage carts with the fabulous menu by @JavatheCat!

We also raised money for @RomeotheCat‘s January Furpower charity, Last Hope Inc. !

And, we also had a drawing for a FREE Pet Portrait by BZTAT! The winner? @PepiSmartDog, who, sadly, went to the Rainbow Bridge in 2009. I am honored to paint his picture.

Special thanks to: @FrugalDougal, @Romeothcat, @JavatheCat, @YourDailyCute, @Quadpawd, @FergustheDog and @PerrytheBirman and their staffs for helping organize the Paw Parade!

And Special thanks to all that participated. Your support means so much to me. I love you all!

Life is an Adventure!

BZTAT

Line the sidewalks folks. It's a Paw Parade!!!

Artwork by BZTAT

UPDATED: See updated info below.

2009 has been a phenomenal year for me and my development as an artist. Social media has opened up a whole new world for me in finding people who appreciate my artwork, and I have created more art this year than I ever have in such a short amount of time.

It may seem strange, but I owe it all to my cat.

Over the past year, my cat Brewskie (@BrewskieButt, AKA “The Brew” on Twitter and Facebook) became a social media sensation, helping me to develop friendships with hundreds of people who enjoy pets as much as I do.

These people have become great fans of my artwork, and as a result, I have had numerous commissions for pet portraits that were generated straight through internet contact.

To celebrate the wonderful adventure that we have embarked upon, Brewskie and I are going to host a parade on Twitter for all of our anipals!

The parade will center around a virtual march through the Canton, OH Arts District, with each of the critters that I have painted over the past year sauntering down the parade route.  Other anipals are welcome to join in the parade, walking down the parade route and celebrating their joys of the Twitter Anipal Kingdom over the past year.

We will have music, food, treats, and all sorts of fun as we celebrate the accomplishments of 2009 and the joyful expectations for 2010!

As is tradition for the anipals when they gather for fun, we will use our shared revelry as a time to help homeless pets. Our purpose is to celebrate the friendships we have made over the past year, so please consider making a donation to  Romeo the Cat’s FURPOWER benificiary, Last Hope Animal Rescue, to honor our anipal community. You can donate here.

We will also be holding a special drawing. One lucky winner from the drawing will win a 16″ X 20″ single animal pet portrait by BZTAT!!!*

You can enter the drawing by Make a comment on this blogpost explaining why you would like your animal painted by BZTAT.

No purchase or donation is necesary to enter. Winner will be drawn randomly from all entries.

Preliminary Details about the Paw Parade:

  • Date:  Sunday, January 3, 2010
  • Time: 2 pm – 6 pm EST
  • Hashtag: #PawParade
  • Where: Virtual Parade Route thru the Canton, OH Arts District via Twitter
  • Grand Marshal–Brewskie Butt
  • Food by @JavatheCat
  • DJ’s will play parade themed music

Anipals are welcome to pawty in the Canton, OH Arts District for as long as they want after the parade!

You do not have to have a Twitter account to follow the parade or participate in the drawing, although it is a lot more fun that way! Simply follow a Tweetgrid search of the hashtag #PawParade to watch all the fun.

More information about the Paw Parade will be coming in future posts here as well as information being posted on @FrugalDougal‘s official PawPawty website.

So get ready to stake out your spot along the parade route!

Thank you to all for being such great friends and supporters over the past year. May the New Year be full of love, peace, joy and adventure for you!!!

(*Special rules and circumstances will apply. Portrait is for a 16″ X 20″ painting on canvas of one animal, valued at $175. Winner will provide 3-5 digital images of the animal to be painted to the artist. The painting will be created according to the artist’s schedule and availability. Must be redeemed by 1/31/11.)

Life is an Adventure!

BZTAT

Shattered Expressions? How About Comedy and Tragedy?

Shattered Expressions Public Art by Tommy Morgan

Canton is all abuzz about its latest piece of public art.

With little fanfare, “Shattered Expressions” by artist Tommy Morgan was installed on the side of a building at Cleveland Avenue and Fifth Street NW in the heart of the Canton Arts District on December 16.

This piece has been anticipated for quite a long time. Those of us intimately involved in the arts district learned of it’s plans about this time last year. Many of us wondered if it would ever be completed.

Now that it is completed and installed, it seems that there is a wealth of opinions about it.

If you check out the Canton Repository’s story and scroll down to the comments, you will find what would be typical of any city’s public commentary on a non-traditional piece of public art. Some reject any kind of “modern art”; some see it as an opportunity to take potshots at the city government; and some see it as a positive sign for Canton.

I am actually surprised at the number of positive and supportive comments on the Rep page. By and large, the general public seems to embrace the notion of public art as a means of bringing downtown back alive, even if they are not thrilled with the content of the artwork itself.

The more interesting comments come from those within the arts district proper. The responses are both comic and tragic.

Local arts bloggers and acccomplished artists Tom Wachunas and Judi Krew seem to echo the sentiments of most artists with whom I have discussed the piece.

They don’t like it.

They are more eloquent in their stating it, but that is the gist of it.

I do not know if it is a personal dislike of the artist, jealousy, or what, but most artists in Canton are quite upset about “Shattered Expressions”. Mortified is more the word for it. Honestly, I think their outrage is a bit rich.

I will be straight up honest that I am not a big fan of this artist and his work. I think that there are some legitimate questions to be asked about the cost of the work in relation to other public artworks in Canton. That said, I think that we could all use a bit of lightening up about it.

As much as I hate to admit it, I think it works on that building, which was an incredible eyesore before, but now is kind of intriguing.

Mr. Morgan would like us to believe that there is some deep profound expression of emotion in his work:

“I am trying to capture all the essential emotions of joy and rage and sorrow. As human beings, we cannot have one of these emotions without having all the others.”

I am not sure that I would go there. To me, the piece is reminiscent of the ancient Greek comedy and tragedy paradox with an extra face thrown in. It is not all that profound or unique. Just a clever new twist on an old theme.

But it is interesting, and it does liven up the building. It gets people talking, and it is something that people will drive to downtown to visit and discuss.

Lets not kid ourselves, folks.

Canton has a fabulous arts district that is truly amazing in its quality and importance of artists and artworks. We have a museum that brought in a huge show this year that received worldwide praise, and we have innovative galleries and studios producing very vanguard stuff.

The amazing “Gaia’s Hope” by Canton Artist Joseph Close could easily rise above many public artworks worldwide in its artistry and importance.

But we are not New York. We cannot assume that everything that goes up on a building is going to be worthy of shaking up the worldwide art scene (“Gaia’s Hope” is worthy of that, and I hope it receives its due someday).

Every work of art does not have to be a masterpeice. Sometimes making your city a little more interesting is enough.

And I think this piece does that.

Heck, at least it isn’t a bust of some football hero.

The paradox of comedy and tragedy is very much at play here. It would be very easy to have a chuckle at the ways some folks are getting so worked up over this piece–if it wasn’t so tragic.

We are a young and fragile arts community here in Canton. Although artists have been creating great things here for many, many years, the collaboration between arts groups, business associations and individual artists is very new.  Opportunities that never existed before for artists are present, despite the economic stress in our communities.

Although I do not want to suggest that artists should withhold artistic judgment and freedom of expression, I do think that the  intensity of snarkiness is unwarranted.

Is our dismay about this one artwork really worth making folks think twice about funding more public art? It would be a real tragedy if the business community decided that we were a bunch of ungrateful art-snobs who couldn’t get over ourselves.

I would like to think that we could rise above such nonsense.

Let’s move on to the next great thing folks. How many artists in Canton are out there developing projects themselves instead of sitting around and complaining about the ones who do?