Deconstructing Ways at the Sydney Public Art Festival | Jackalope Ranch | Phoenix | Phoenix New Times | The Leading Independent News Source in Phoenix, Arizona
Navigation

Deconstructing Ways at the Sydney Public Art Festival

One new idea for every day in 2011. We're talking big, small, local, international, in action, and on the drawing board. Here's today's -- what's yours? For the next month, the streets of Sydney, Australia belong to the artists. Through October 23, the city is hosting Art & About Sydney, an annual public...
Share this:

One new idea for every day in 2011. We're talking big, small, local, international, in action, and on the drawing board. Here's today's -- what's yours?

For the next month, the streets of Sydney, Australia belong to the artists. Through October 23, the city is hosting Art & About Sydney, an annual public arts festival with work from international artists including Barry McGee, Rebar, Magda Sayeg, Brook Andrew, and Isidro Blasco, to name a few. 

Blasco's, Deconstructing Ways  (pictured above), is described by curators below: 

"It takes you a moment to realize what you are seeing: a reconstruction of the space that surrounds you, distorted but strangely more real than the street you are standing on. For a second or two you will be surprised that your own image is not actually reflected in that new street...or is it? The acute perspective has a vortex-like effect. Although you cannot walk through it, your mind is guided into another way of looking at reality, where the multiple aspects and details of any living moment are broken down and represented through a layering and overlapping of surfaces to create perspective and three-dimensional volume."

The annual open-air gallery aims to bring art to the public in unexpected spaces and to engage neighborhoods that might not see artwork on a daily basis. 


For more information, check out the Art & About Sydney website. 


Follow Jackalope Ranch on Facebook and Twitter.


BEFORE YOU GO...
Can you help us continue to share our stories? Since the beginning, Phoenix New Times has been defined as the free, independent voice of Phoenix — and we'd like to keep it that way. Our members allow us to continue offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food, and culture with no paywalls.