Click on individual photos for official event page or use the corresponding numbered links below.
ThisĀ weekendās picks for Free & Cheap things to do in NYC (2/15 to 2/17) in art, music, theater, performance, dance, architecture and general fun.
Click on individual photos for official event page or use the corresponding numbered links below.
ThisĀ weekendās picks for Free & Cheap things to do in NYC (2/15 to 2/17) in art, music, theater, performance, dance, architecture and general fun.


Click to enlargeFor the fifth edition of Times Squareās annual Heartwalk installation, which conveniently coincides with Valentineās Day, Situ Studio has come up with an especially touching work. Using salvaged Hurricane Sandy debris from the numerous destroyed beach boardwalks, Situ created a heart-shaped āroom within the cityā. The weathered wooden planks lift in an elegant pattern to form an illuminated heart enclosure. I see it as a love letter to the local coastlines.Ā If youāre in NYC, you can visit the installation at Duffy Square through March 8th.


Click to enlargeSeems fitting to post about a love mural on Valentineās Day, no? The Baltimore Love Project began a few years ago when local artist Michael Owen developed a design of four hands spelling out the word love. Since then the image has been painted on several walls with a total of 20 scheduled across Baltimore City; the idea being a way of expressing love and connecting people and communities all around the urban center. The community seems to have lovingly embraced the project with an impressive level of enthusiasm including a couple taking their wedding photos in front of one of the murals.
You can see a time lapse video of one of the murals in progress below, and thereās a 5-minute documentary on the project over here.
via think.bigchief via notcot


Click to enlargeLondon-based Acrylicize is a boutique creative agency that combines art and design to create engaging interior experiences from one-off installations to entire interior graphics and large scale architectural features. Last spring Acrylicize (originally their work was exclusively made with acrylic) was approached by PokerStars (the world’s largest poker site) to create a custom installation for the reception area of one of their London offices. Acrylicize came up with the idea of using materials from the poker world and ultimately decided to use playing cards. Cutting and assembling a large quantity of cards around acrylic cubes, the team placed the cubes into a spiraling sphere resulting in Refraction: a refined piece of abstract art, as well as a nod to the world of Poker playing.
Check out more of Acrylicizeās fun work on their site, from a map sculpture made with Monopoly houses to type installations and much more.
via instant joy


Brooklyn-based artist/photographer Fred Cray (previously here) completed his latest set of zany self-portraits last Fall. These, he says, are loosely based on the notion of Mr. Potato Head. Some of the self-portraits from this series are currently being exhibited as part of Articulate, an eclectic new show that, in addition to Cray’s, includes work by Tina Barney, Alfred Leslie, Robert Cumming, Donald Sultan and more.
Articulate is on view through March 30th at Janet Borden, Inc, NYC.


Click to enlargeLooks like the ballet has developed an edge. For the inauguration of their NYCB Art Series, the New York City Ballet has commissioned the Brooklyn-based street artist duo Faile to create an installation for the special Art Series performances on February 1st and May 29th where each seat was/is available for $29 and each audience member takes home a limited edition work (seemingly in the form of a cube) made specifically for the event by the artists. Inspired by the old posters, playbills, and other past company-related ephemera that fits so well with their collage style work, Faile created a tower in the balletās main hall titled Les Ballets de Faile. Patrick McNeil and Patrick Miller who make up the artistic collaboration see their participation as bringing together the āglamour and grimeā of NYC under one roof.
There is limited availability left for the May 29th performance, but the installation is open to the public this week (2/10 to 2/17) for free. You can see the schedule here.
And hereās an interview with Faile on the project:
via wooster collective; video via animalny


Click to enlargeThe Spanish art collective Penique Productions was formed in 2007 with the first inflatable project in the University of Barcelona. The groupās projects consist of color inflatables that fill up spaces erected by others, giving them a new identity. By blanketing the architecture using plastic and blowing fans, the space is simplified emphasizing the shapes and textures, ultimately generating a different atmosphere within the same structure. These installations inhabit the spaces temporarily and so far have occurred throughout Europe as well as in Mexico and Brazil. The group cite Christo as a major inspiration as well as contemporary artists Rachel Whiteread, Kimihiko Okada, Doris Salcedo, Tomas Saraceno and Ernesto Neto among others. And Em will be excited to learn that they worked with Maison Martin Margiela for Paris Fashion Week.
You can see the installation of the blue inflatable at El Claustro in Queretaro, Mexico below:
via iRef
Click on individual photos for official event page or use the corresponding numbered links below.
ThisĀ weekendās picks for Free & Cheap things to do in NYC (2/8 to 2/10) in art, music, theater, film, performance, dance, architecture and general fun.
Check our previous Culture on the Cheap posts for ongoing events and check back over the weekend for possible updates. Enjoy!



Click to enlargeHave you ever wanted to ski in and out of an art exhibit? Well, hereās your big chance. On view now until it begins to melt (approximately mid-April) next to the Icehotel in Sweden is photographer/sculptor Anna Ćhlund and lighting designer John Pettersonās light and photography exhibit titled A Warm Story about a Cold Place. Located in its own snow and ice building, the ephemeral exhibition captures the ever-shifting and momentary Arctic light and life of the frozen hotel. The light cycle in the exhibit runs 15 minutes and photographs are positioned within both circular cutouts in the walls and big free-standing ice blocks. Very cool in all meanings of the word.
There is also a companion book of the same name.
via mocoloco and anna ƶhlund


Click to enlargeAdeela Suleman lives and works in Karachi, Pakistan. Her work reflects the dynamics of social life in contemporary Pakistani culture. Suleman works with found objects such as cooking utensils, drain covers, shower heads, water pipe chains, nails, bolts and more converting these everyday objects into dramatic sculptures and humorous helmets. Her more recent work of wall installations (seen here) mimic more the detailed ornamental designs of silver platters.
via scope


Click to enlargeI saw Lara Favarettoās exhibit Just Knocked Out at PS1 last summer and was recently reminded of it while going through a car wash. I enjoyed the whole show of her seemingly fun installations with their underlying theme of decay and obsolescence, but the piece that gave me a little thrill was one made of car wash brushes that alternated between spinning and stopping.
The reuse of the car wash brushes is evident in all the related sculptures/installations that she has exhibited around the world. Other works that stood out include confetti-blowing fans and 60 compressed air tanks that switched on and off at different moments, blowing out their attached party favors.
You can see more of Lara Favarettoās work here.


Click to enlargeSouth African conceptual artist Ed Young enjoys challenging the art world and its methodologies working in various mediums ranging from sculpture and painted type murals to videos and more. And his work does not go unnoticed. Last year at the Jo’burg Art Fair, Young created an exact-to-scale silicone replica of his naked self at two-thirds his actual size, titled My Gallerist Made Me Do It, fascinating most of the 8,500 attendees of the fair. His piece titled Arch (short for Archbishop Desmond Tutu) swings from a working chandelier in the conference room of the IDASA headquarters, and apparently brought huge smiles to the Archbishop himself upon setting eyes on it.
Youngās murals are equally provocative in their bold type. Unknowingly, we ourselves came across one of Young’s murals a few years back in Miami…that’s Em in the bottom right photo!
Young doesnāt say a heck of a lot about his work when interviewed as you can see in the video below.
via SMAC


Click to enlargeItās hard to wrap your head around the idea of creating beautiful objects from deadly infectious diseases, but thatās just what UK-based artist Luke Jerram does. His series of Glass Microbiology sculptures are glass-blown renderings of diseases that include HIV, Malaria, and E-Coli, to name only a few. Imagine what a conversation starter one of these would make as a paperweight on your desk, though at $10,000 you might prefer to keep it a little less exposed.
Jerramās glass pieces have recently been acquired by the Metropolitan Museum for their permanent collection as well as being currently on view at the National Centre for Craft and Design in the U.K. through April 13, 2013.


Click to enlargeBarry Rosenthal is a New York City based photographer. His Found in Nature series is created using plastic objects, garbage, waste and detritus found on beaches polluting our water and land including parking lots. Rosenthal organizes these pieces making for some graphically interesting photos.
via featureshoot


Click to enlargeThis installation caught my eye. La Chaleur de Lāamour & la BeautĆ© des Paroles (The warmth of love & the beauty of words) was created by Jad Melki, assistant professor of journalism and media studies at the American University of Beirut as well as visiting Faculty at Johns Hopkins University in Washington, DC. Melkiās piece represents presence in absence. Using an exposed mattress and warmly lighting it to make it glow, Melki converted its inner springs into words and sentences extracted from letters written by his mother when she was in Sierra Leon in 1974 to his father at the American Univeristy of Beirut. His father read the letters nightly, finding warmth and comfort in them and, in turn, feeling his wifeās presence in her absence. Nice.
via anonymousd


Click to enlargeLast September the Spanish art collective Luzinterruptus (previously here and here) was invited to Caracas, Venezuela to participate in their urban arts festival Por en Medio de la Calle (In the Middle of the Street) which celebrates the importance of public space. Luzinterruptus stuck with one of their recurring themes: water. It is common for the streets of Caracas to flood in the rain, so in the hopes of having viewers stop and admire the element, they created a Portable River (Rio Portatil) filling 2000 transparent bags with water and made into ephemeral aquariums with toy fish and plants, highlighted with lights. At the end of the night, visitors could take the illuminated ecosystems home with them.


Click to enlargeFor his senior project, Dutch designer and typographer Sam van Doorn designed Styn. a deconstructed pinball machine reconstructed as a design tool. The idea behind the installation is that by creating new tools one is able to break free from standards in design. By playing the machine the balls create an unpredictable pattern, and the better the player the better the print. Somehow, the grid used relates to the signs of the alphabet, tying it into typography but, in all honesty, I couldn’t figure out what that means exactly. In any case, the concept is pretty unique and fun.
via etapes


Click to enlargeFrench-born artist Aude Moreau lives and works in Montreal. Her installation pieceĀ titled Sugar Carpet (Tapis de sucre) is made with two tons of refined white sugar spread out evenly across the floor in a carpet-like manner embellished with Persian rug motifs in activated charcoal and food coloring. Moreau plays with the idea of ‘refined’ both in the production of the sugar and its selection process, as well as describing a sophistication that the carpet represents.
The Sugar Carpet is presently on view at the Smack Mellon gallery in Brooklyn through February 24th.