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(via Now Is ArtPrize’s Chance to Prove It Deserves an Art World Spotlight)
Last night, artist Steve Lambert announced that he will not be keeping the money if he wins an ArtPrize award. ArtPrize is the large art festival that gives away over half a million dollars through a balanced formula of art professional and public voting (each group gives away roughly $300,000).
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Grand Rapids, Michigan
Shout out to Rick Devos and team in Grand Rapids.
Dandelion interacts around community development work all over the world. In Grand Rapids, two of their projects, Art Prize and Start Garden are two of the best examples of platforms that leverage the talent and expression of citizens in their community in order to build a more durable, interesting city.
ArtPrize Gains New Executive Director
Christian Gains joins ArtPrize as Executive Director (Image courtesy Brian Kelly)
Grand Rapids-based
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Last week Start Garden hosted the members of Design West Michigan to highlight the importance of design in startups.
Tim Murphy, founder of Hipshot Dot (funded company of Start Garden), explained the role the design community played in developing his idea (video).
The panel included David Rosen, president of Kendall College of Art & Design, John Barry, president of Design West Michigan, and Rick DeVos, CEO of Start Garden.
So You Think You Can Paint? Welcome to ArtPrize
Every September, a quiet, churchy city in the American heartland undergoes a Technicolor transformation. Art pops up everywhere—paintings, giant insect statues, experimental happenings. Sidewalks and parks turn into open-air museums; taverns become galleries. A huge pot of money is dangled before the artists, $250,000(!) for the grand prize. And here's the best part: You know who gets to pick the winner? You do. Matthew Power reports:
By September 29, 370,309 votes had been cast, and DeVos held a press conference to announce the ten finalists. The public would have six days to choose the $250,000 winner. Among the chosen: Rusty, the giant found-object puppy; the even more giant welded-steel praying mantis; the Tim McGraw–surfer Jesus mosaic; Gerald Ford; a crying octopus carved out of driftwood; a collection of chain-saw-carved bears; and a living statue of the sort you see in the piazzas of Europe, a dude dressed like a construction worker, covered in copper body paint and standing atop a scaffold.
The general critical consensus was that Rick DeVos's grand experiment in letting public opinion determine the outcome had yielded up a torrent of kitsch—the "crazy crap" he'd asked for. Twitter was not kind. "Looks like the DeVos family is going to be seriously overpaying for some bad art. #artprize." "Before announcing the #ArtPrize Top 10, Rick DeVos said it is not about the Top 10. I now understand why he said that."
I found Paul Amenta in the dark and empty Site:Lab a few days later. Not a single Site:Lab piece had made the cut. "Don't even get me started," he said, shaking his head. "I had this moment where I had to switch gears, 'cause if I didn't I would go crazy." He had dedicated months of his life to preparing the space and persuading artists to come exhibit. I asked him if he'd try again, and he laughed bitterly. "I couldn't get the artists to commit to a thing like this, given what happened with the voting."
This was exactly what he meant when he talked about the public fucking it up. He told me when DeVos had made the top ten announcement, the skies over Grand Rapids had blackened, and a windstorm with thunder and lightning had swept through the town. "It was freaky. Like God was registering disapproval or something."
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In fact, Rick DeVos was recently invited to join a panel. It's put on by the Awesome Foundation, which plays on a sympathetic frequency with Start Garden.
ON REGULATING ENTERPRISE
Regulators (like the Grand Rapids City Commission regulating food trucks) are tasked with making a marketplace more ethical. However, that higher goal is lost when protecting businesses and consumers overtakes the debate, as it routinely does. Protection is the byproduct of making an ethical market, not the driver.
THE PROTECTION POINT OF VIEW
I'm a food truck. I clutter your curbs with my bulky mass and turn your cities into carnivals. I run hardworking brink & mortars out of business. My cheap prices, low overhead and high mobility will turn your downtown into a restaurant wasteland where food is only found on wheels.
THE ETHICAL MARKET POINT OF VIEW
I'm a food truck. I offer an alternative to sit-down dining. I push brick & mortars offering mediocre food to do better. I diversify the culinary offerings in a city. I help entrepreneurs who can grow into successful brick & mortar restaurants an entry into the market. I reveal what consumers want, where they want it, at the price they're willing to pay.