Dayton Daily News

Billboard project features paintings of 5 Ohio artists

-

Paintings by five central Ohio artists are giving new meaning to the term “street art” in Columbus: The sanctioned works fill some of the unrented billboards throughout the city.

The high-profile exposure is part of an inaugural public gallery called ArtPop Columbus, which takes its name from a North Carolina-based nonprofit seeking to promote the work of local artists in communitie­s throughout the country.

The Greater Columbus Arts Council and the Columbus arm of Lamar Advertisin­g, which manages the billboards, teamed to make the project happen. Lamar donated the billboard space, and GCAC contribute­d $5,000 to pay for vinyl replicas of the winning designs and provided each artist a stipend, said Jami Goldstein, vice president of marketing for GCAC.

Vinyl replicas of the five paintings — chosen from the 33 submitted by Franklin County-based artists through an open call — were recently installed and will be featured at various locations during the next year based on Lamar’s available board space.

Among them is “Love,” artist David Butler’s depiction of two African-American couples. The painting, inspired by Harlequin novel covers of the mid- to late 20th century, is displayed on a billboard on West Broad Street east of Hilliard Rome Road.

Butler, who is part of an collective known as Artfluenti­al, said his work has never received such high visibility.

“This is an opportunit­y for people to connect with an artist on a larger scale,” said Butler, 33, of the Far East Side. “I hope they look at it and see great work.”

Columbus is one of three cites — the others are Nashville, Tennessee, and Charleston, South Carolina — to join the ArtPop program this year, raising to 14 the number of cities now working with the organizati­on.

Wendy Hickey, who has been selling billboard ads since 1998, founded ArtPop (the “Pop” stands for “public outdoor project”) in 2014 in Charlotte, North Carolina.

The project has the dual goals of promoting artists on a large scale and also making artwork more accessible to the public.

“I thought, ‘I want to be their voice, and I want to be their launchpad to help them get known in their own backyard,’ “said Hickey, executive director of ArtPop. “Commuters are looking at this art and going, ‘I want to know more about that.’ “

Hickey conceived the idea in 2002 while working in Stroudsbur­g, Pennsylvan­ia — where, as a member of the board of the Pocono Arts Council, she helped showcase artwork on area billboards for artists who paid for the vinyl replica.

In the ensuing years, the concept spread to Michigan and Illinois before Hickey formally establishe­d the nonprofit program in 2015.

She routinely meets with arts councils to gauge their interest in funding an ArtPop venture.

 ?? ERIC ALBRECHT / THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Lamar Advertisin­g employees Jason Casto (top) and Greg Dean install a vinyl replica of a David Butler painting on a West Broad Street billboard.
ERIC ALBRECHT / THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH Lamar Advertisin­g employees Jason Casto (top) and Greg Dean install a vinyl replica of a David Butler painting on a West Broad Street billboard.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States