Street Light

by Ian Ingram | May 20, 2009
4126 reads | 4 Comments
Competition Finalist

This entry has been selected as a finalist in the
Art in Public: Expressing Youth Voices in Pittsburgh competition.

 

Project Street Address

424 Gold Way

Project City

Pittsburgh

Project Province/State

PA

Project Postal/Zip Code

15213

Project Country

United States

Name Your Project

Street Light

Describe Your Idea

 

What is your idea? What makes your project innovative? Why is it important?

We propose to build a street light. Every so often during the day and night the street light will rear up, open a mouth of sorts in the lamp bit and make exclamations into its city alleyway home. Sometimes it will whisper. The street light would be a 4 axis automaton with a motor to sway the neck, one to rear it, one to cock the lamp, and one that opens the lamp into two parts, breaking the beam in half, the resulting dark spot filled by the voices of youth. When inventing vocalizations for the light, youth would also design the accompanying gesture in software that models the form and capabilities of the street light, be it a secretive turning towards the wall before a whisper or a muddled shaking of the head before spitting out a few short poems.

The particular exclamations and whisperings would be invented and recorded by youth at after-school programs all around Pittsburgh, starting with our partner, the Carnegie Science Center's Mission Discovery program. Teen assistants will be hired to work directly on the sculpture, sowing the seeds for more robotics artists to emerge in Pittsburgh. Youth involvement in this project can continue year to year at very low cost, new voices and gestures given to the street light by fresh groups of young people, ensuring that the voices heard are those of present youth and not the youth of a decade earlier. In essence, we will provide the body of this street light and Pittsburgh youth the gestures and voice.

As individual artists (Gregory Witt and Ian Ingram), we have created large public kinetic sculptures in Pittsburgh (please see the image tab below for samples of these and other prior work). We see Pittsburgh as a hub of robotic art and are eager to see the city laced with robotic artworks, indoors and out. Gregory has worked with young people while a resident artist at the Children's Museum and Ian has worked with Pittsburgh teens as a pre-college art instructor, while working with the Children's Museum's Youth Alive program, and while the arts organizer for Robot 250.
For images and information about our prior work please visit http://www.gregorywitt.com/ and http://www.ingramclockworks.com.

What will be the impact of your idea?

We see this street light automaton as a contemporary equivalent of wonders like the old clocks in places like Bern that at a given hour play out stories with mechanical figures. People gather and wait for the clocks to come to life and watch in delight as they make their performances.

In a world filled with wonders, though, an oft overlooked object like a street light coming to life and becoming the mouth and body of the people who will be Pittsburgh’s future will be all the more wondrous. We imagine that people will come to be witness to its mutterings and that, for the young people whose voices and choreographies are broadcast by the light, this will be a tremendously exciting thing to see and be a part of.

Moreover, youth involvement in this project can continue year to year at very low cost, new voices and gestures given to the street light by fresh groups of young people, ensuring that the voices heard are those of present youth and not the youth of a decade earlier.

What will it take to launch your idea? How will you secure community support and youth participation?

We have spoken to several organizations that run youth after school programs about assisting us in creating the programming to lead youth invention and recording of gestures, exclamations, and whisperings. The Carnegie Science Center's after-school programs have already agreed to partner with us and others are optimistic they can do the same. We will also need the necessary permissions to place a street light in the eventual location but assume that choosing a final site for the work will be a collaborative process between us, the grant-givers, and the city. Our plan is to use the full $25,000 grant, roughly divided into $10,000 for materials and fabrication costs, $5000 to pay youth assistants at various stages of the project, and $5000 each to pay for our time designing, building, and installing the piece. For images and information about our prior work please see attached images and visit http://www.gregorywitt.com/ and http://www.ingramclockworks.com.

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We are looking for ideas from people who can make them happen. Tell us about yourself or your team.

We are two artists who make mechatronic and robotic sculptures. We both have realized large public kinetic sculptures in Pittsburgh, one of which, the “Green Roof Roller Coaster” by Gregory and Joey Hays, now sits upon the roof of the Children’s Museum’s entrance, beginning its second year of operation. We have the capabilities to build the mechanical, electrical, electronic, structural, software, sculptural, and gestural systems for “Street Light.”

We plan to work with partners to develop the youth programming for this project but Ian has already worked with Pittsburgh youth as a pre-college art instructor and while working with the Children’s Museum’s Youth Alive program and tangentially with other youth programs when he was the arts organizer for the arts and technology education and empowerment project, Robot 250.

We see Pittsburgh as a hub of robotic art, perhaps eventually the primary one, and are eager to see the city laced with robotic artworks, indoors and out.

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