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Artist Activist Covers Old Gas Station with Huge Quilt
Associated Press (via Happy News website) ^ | May 19, 2008 | William Kates

Posted on 05/19/2008 8:33:19 PM PDT by baa39

Jennifer Marsh was sick of paying high gas prices and bothered by the abandoned gas station that was an eyesore on the drive to her studio each day. So the aspiring artist and inspired activist came up with an idea — to cover the gas station with a colossal handmade blanket in a way that would bring greater attention to the world's dependency on oil.

''I really tried to find a good balance of art and politics. I don't want it to be just a political statement. And I don't want it to just be a sculpture,'' said the 27-year-old Marsh, who is finishing her master of fine arts degree at nearby Syracuse University.

''I wanted to startle people so they would stop and think about it (oil) ... and be inspired to make up their own opinions about the situation and how it has affected their community,'' she said.

With the help of professional and amateur artists from 15 countries and more than 2,500 grade-school students in 29 states, Marsh covered the 50-year-old former Citgo station — pumps, light stands, signs and all — with more than 3,000 fiber panels that are crocheted, knitted, quilted or stitched together.

The panels cover 5,000 square feet and come in every color, hue and texture. There are panels in burlap, leather, even silk. There are panels of solid color and others with patterns, prints or scenes. Some carry written messages: ''Give me oil or give me death.''

Some of the more imaginative panels are made with the labels from plastic beverage containers, plastic shopping bags and plastic six-pack carriers — all petroleum products.

A nearby kiosk explains the project — called WRAP, for World Reclamation Art Project.

Bulgarian artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude are among those who have received global attention with their outdoor public art. In 2005, the pair put up more than 7,500 door frames draped with orange fabric along 23 miles of footpaths in New York City's Central Park. The couple are planning next to drape seven miles of the Arkansas River in fabric.

Marsh, originally from Columbus, Ohio, got interested in using sculpture as social medium after a volunteer trip to Dharmasala, India, several years ago. To pursue her ideas for community-based art projects, Marsh founded the International Fiber Collaborative.

''This is much more meaningful than making objects in the studio with the door closed, and has so much more impact than any of my sculptures could have in a museum or gallery,'' Marsh said.

The project cost about $29,000, much of it her own money. There were also grants and contributions from individuals and businesses.

Marsh's plan was to cover a barn until she drove by the gas station one day in March 2007 and had an impulse. She tracked down the gas station owner and got permission to use his property. Then she went to the DeWitt Planning Board to get approval.

Richard Robb, DeWitt's commissioner of development and operation, said the planning board members at first thought Marsh's idea was humorous. Then they became skeptical. But as they talked with Marsh, they realized she had a well-conceived plan.

''Our board is not known for going for the offbeat like this, but they said, 'By all means,''' Robb said. ''We've been pleased about it. ... We've certainly heard a predominance of positive feedback, especially once people understand what it's for.''

The aging station, which closed four years ago, sits on a traffic island at a neighborhood crossroads, across the street from a dental office and shopping plaza, just down the road from the neatly trimmed, Syracuse University-owned Drumlins Country Club.

A steady stream of people stop to look at it, town officials said. Parents stop with their children. Local schools have brought classes to see the building. The blanket went on in mid-April and will stay on through mid-July.

Friends told Donna Lacey about the dressed-up gas station.

''It's a great project,'' said Lacey, a 45-year-old service coordinator for disable people, who stopped by on a recent sunny day. ''Aesthetically, it's wonderful. It's so colorful and vibrant. And what a cool way to make a statement.''

Amy Theel stopped by with her son Ethan, a second-grader at Ed Smith Elementary School in Syracuse, one of the schools that helped in the project. Ethan found his panel and pointed it out to his mother, who was impressed so many people from around the world had contributed.

''My teacher told us it's about creating a caring community,'' he said.

There are about 200,000 abandoned gas stations in the U.S., according to Marsh's web site. There are also bigger projects potentially out there as well — bridges, smokestacks, empty grocery stores.

Marsh is undecided what her next WRAP will be, but she knows it will be in Huntsville, where she will move in July for a one-year teaching position at the University of Alabama.


TOPICS: Arts/Photography; Business/Economy; Humor; Society
KEYWORDS: art; blanket; blankets; gas; oil; quilt; quilts
Photo Caption: (AP Photo/Kevin Rivoli): Artist Jennifer Marsh poses for a portrait in front of her work of art in Syracuse, N.Y., Thursday, May 15, 2008. Marsh took a fifty-year-old abandoned gas station and transformed it into an art exhibit, making a dramatic statement about the world's dependence on oil and the price we pay at the pump. The installation utilizes more than 3,400 colorful panels created by thousands of people from 15 countries and 29 states.
1 posted on 05/19/2008 8:33:19 PM PDT by baa39
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To: baa39
There are panels in burlap, leather, even silk.

Oh sure, just use dead animals and exploited silk worms. Utterly despicable!

2 posted on 05/19/2008 8:38:39 PM PDT by AlaskaErik (I served and protected my country for 31 years. Democrats spent that time trying to destroy it.)
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To: baa39

I drove by this (former) gas station yesterday.

It’s near the Syracuse University athletic department’s practice field facility.

It’s a station that, as long as I’ve lived here (I lived within three miles of that station since I was in sixth grade, more than 40 years ago, until I left home in the late ‘70’s) didn’t do very much business. I never filled my car there once. I think it’s because the owner didn’t try very hard; his gas was always more expensive than seemed reasonable, and he had no convenience store and his garage always looked disheveled and uninviting. I rarely, if ever, saw a car parked there.

My recollection is that it went out of business sometime after I left home, probably during the ‘80’s.

The station was vacant and unused for years after I returned, in December 1988 (just after the Lockerbie tragedy, which killed more than 20 Syracuse undergraduates, along with hundreds of other innocents).

Now it’s covered with this enormous quilt. It gets rained on. You can’t see a single bit of the building underneath. The sections of the quilt bear odd patterns and incoherent fragmentary worded messages.

It usually seems to have one or two gawkers hanging around, sometimes with cameras.


3 posted on 05/19/2008 8:50:06 PM PDT by Steely Tom (Steely's First Law of the Main Stream Media: if it doesn't advance the agenda, it's not news.)
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To: baa39
...the 50-year-old former Citgo station...

Citgo?

4 posted on 05/19/2008 8:51:42 PM PDT by rabscuttle385 (During the Middle Ages, rats spread bubonic plague. Today, Rats spread the socialist plague.)
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To: Steely Tom; Quix

Thanks for the personal account.


5 posted on 05/19/2008 8:53:12 PM PDT by Joya (Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, Savior, have mercy on me, a sinner!)
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To: baa39
''My teacher told us it's about creating a caring community,'' he said.

Sounds more like it was about creating a big freakin' eyesore.

6 posted on 05/19/2008 8:55:01 PM PDT by SIDENET (Hubba Hubba...)
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To: Steely Tom
Oh, if anyone cares, it's Google Earth latitude and longitude are as follows:

43 deg. 01' 21.61" N
76 deg. 06' 39.01" W

7 posted on 05/19/2008 8:58:07 PM PDT by Steely Tom (Steely's First Law of the Main Stream Media: if it doesn't advance the agenda, it's not news.)
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To: baa39

Oh yeah, that really improved things. /s

http://tinyurl.com/5gojlj

http://blog.syracuse.com/video/2008/04/international_fiber_collaborat.html


8 posted on 05/19/2008 9:04:25 PM PDT by kcvl
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To: kcvl

Holy crap. I would “accidentally” set that on fire to keep others from having to suffer its horrible visage.


9 posted on 05/19/2008 9:18:30 PM PDT by TheZMan (Bitter backwoods east Texan Christian gun clinger with the AC at 72 degrees.)
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To: kcvl

I have to think the empty building looked better than this new “display.”


10 posted on 05/19/2008 11:02:49 PM PDT by Cedar
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To: TheZMan

This woman is no doubt of the same political mindset as those who complain endlessly about the plight of the homeless, etc. So she puts all those blankets on a gas station instead of handing them out to people who might be able to use them. Unbelievable, how few of them can walk what they talk.


11 posted on 05/19/2008 11:57:26 PM PDT by Mjaye (Some folks close their mouth only long enough to change feet)
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To: baa39
So the aspiring artist and inspired activist...

I stopped reading right there.

12 posted on 05/20/2008 12:05:59 AM PDT by Looking4Truth (Leave it to some liberal dork to screw things up for the rest of us.)
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To: baa39

What a complete waste of time energy and fabric. She has created an eyesore and shown herself to be a moron. I would be so angry if I had to pass that every day. BTW I am an artist and I have made quilts too, real quilts the kind that go on your bed.


13 posted on 05/20/2008 12:13:49 AM PDT by Ditter
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To: Steely Tom

Somebody needs to hack those coordinates into a Predator. ;-)


14 posted on 05/20/2008 12:43:16 AM PDT by Rastus
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To: baa39

>>>>Marsh, who is finishing her master of fine arts degree at nearby Syracuse University.<<<<<

She wins the prize for “Best Way to Waste $20,000”


15 posted on 05/20/2008 6:40:39 AM PDT by envisio (If you ain't laughin yet... you ain't seen me naked. 8^O)
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To: kcvl

Couple days of rain, followed by some hot weather.
Should be quite the super fund site for toxic mold


16 posted on 05/21/2008 2:33:02 AM PDT by Nailbiter
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To: envisio

That’s a lot of money to spend to become a pizza delivery person.


17 posted on 05/21/2008 7:07:42 PM PDT by weegee (We cant keep our homes on 72 at all times & just expect that other countries are going to say OK -BO)
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