FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
May 2, 2011
Announcing Illuminate, a new site-specific art installation by Elizabeth Isakson, in Anna Scripps Park in Detroit’s Historic Woodbridge neighborhood, opening on May 14, 2011 from 3-8 pm, made possible by Access Arts Detroit.
illuminate
vb [ɪˈluːmɪˌneɪt]
1. (tr) to throw light in or into; light up to illuminate a room
2. (tr) to make easily understood; clarify
3. to adorn, decorate, or be decorated with lights
4. (Bookbinding) (tr) to decorate (a letter, page, etc.) by the application of colors, gold, or silver
5. (intr) to become lighted up
On May 14, Isakson will launch Illuminate, a site-specific installation in Scripps Park, that will feature messages from Detroiters attached to thousands of glowing LEDs that will shed light on the energy that is surrounding the revival of Detroit. The exhibition will run until May 21.
Isakson is inviting participants to attend the event on May 14th, where they can write a message on a slip of handmade paper. This message can express their view as a citizen of Detroit, or answer a posed question, such as:
How does it feel to be from Detroit?
What is a way to make Detroit a better place?
What do you want the rest of the world to know about Detroit?
Detroiters and friends of Detroit from all walks of life are invited to attend and invite others to participate in Illuminate by writing their own unique message.
Once written, the messages will then be encased in a layer of waterproof contact paper, and attached to a small, colored LED light and placed in the park. The end result will be an illuminated park that also serves as a manuscript, and viewers will be invited to interact with the lights, reading messages and re-arranging them throughout the space. The glowing lights in the park will symbolize the ideas Detroit’s people have to make the city a better place, and Scripps Park will be as vibrant as the community surrounding it.
The LED message lights in Illuminate will be attached to objects throughout Scripps Park- hung from trees, scattered on the grass, magnetized to the playground equipment and the iconic gate surrounding the perimeter. The ideal result will be noticeable to street traffic from Trumbull, Grand River, and Martin Luther King Drive. The event and installation will take place from 3pm until dusk, so participants can witness the park becoming illuminated with their messages in the dark.
The messages, process and final installation of Illuminate will be photographed and formed into a print-on-demand artist’s book, which will be available for sale online, with a portion of the proceeds donated to the Greening of Detroit. A limited edition artists book will also be made in later months and copies of this book will be donated to the Detroit Institute of Arts, MOCAD, The Detroit Public Library, and The School of Fine, Performing and Communication Arts at Wayne State University.
Illuminate is inspired by two trends in 21st Century graffiti tactics: LED Throwies and Book Bombs. Throwies are small LED lights attached to a watch battery and rare earth magnet, that can be thrown onto a ferro-magnetic surface (ex, a train car or steel building) to create safe, non-damaging light graffiti. Book Bombs, a collaboration between artists Mary Tasillo and Michelle Wilson, is a project that places printed books and zines in the “invisible city within a city”- park benches, empty lots, and abandoned buildings- in order to re-contextualize public spaces.
Elizabeth Isakson is a Detroit artist and musician, currently residing in Chicago where she is an MFA Candidate in the Interdisciplinary Book and Paper Arts program at Columbia College Chicago.
For more information, please visit:
Access Arts Detroit: http://www.accessartsdetroit.org/
The Illuminate Project Blog: http://illuminatedetroit.blogspot.com/
Elizabeth Isakson’s Blog: http://elizabethisakson.blogspot.com/
The Greening of Detroit: http://www.greeningofdetroit.com/
To help fund a portion of Illuminate, please visit:
The Illuminate Kickstarter page:
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1683502915/illuminate-a-site-specific-art-installation-in-det
Thank you,
Elizabeth Isakson