I have another Art Fest post to share, because it is really cool, and my artist-friend who helped with this created an AWESOME video, that makes it all look so purposeful and amazing. Which it was. Kids are FASCINATED with pouring paint, fyi--probably because it's ingrained into their actual souls that they are never, NEVER to pour house paint on anything or risk actual death. Unless being supervised (and video taped) at Art Fest, of course.
And in case your wondering, the wooden structure we are pouring paint upon was, in fact, the focus of my mental breakdown in the week leading up to the big event (link HERE). You know the one--where I went ape that Mike bought "good" wood for this project, to the tune of $30, when I was thinking he could ravage dumpsters to collect what we were needing. What he took away from this meltdown was that he needed to make ANOTHER wood structure, that was BIGGER. {Sigh.}
But also, what I LOVE about this project is that I proposed it to my friend Jeff, as sort of a way to interact with kids in an artsy sort of way. Which is FUNNY, because he is a photographer, and an artist, and a juggler, and an all-around entertainer, so WHY I had to stick my fingers into his creative space is unclear to me (and probably him). I was trying to be helpful, by masterminding an incredibly complicated plan, I suppose. And seeing as I had never actually coordinated Art Fest before, or even ATTENDED it--I had no REAL idea of what a goat rodeo it was. Honestly, I imagined it with white Christmas lights and paper lanterns and FABRIC BUNTINGS (my favorite!), and lots of volunteers, and all of it a very pretty kind of Carnival. For real.
In any case, Jeff was going to display his REAL talents, which at that point, did not include supervising children pouring paint. But 150 kids (and their parents) is a CRAP TON of people, fyi--and it just all became an exercise in survival, and pleasing the masses of children--which meant it became two-hours of constant paint pouring. It is incredibly cool to watch house paint flow and swirl together in real time, but it's even more incredible to see it edited on video, to music--through the eyes of someone with pretty amazing artistic capabilities. It might not have been a great showcase of his talents, but he certainly turned it into something incredibly cool and amazing.
As a side note, if you are ever planning a messy play day, or an Art Fest, or an art party--this is a GREAT project. So long as your husband can build you a simple-wooden-pedestal-looking-thingy (or you freak out and he produces FOUR of them), and you can round up some old house paint (call me, I have 40 cans)--the kids will have an amazing time pouring paint and watching how it moves. They don't get to do that kind of thing enough--WATCHING the art of simple movement--because we are always focused on an end product, and not necessarily the process (guilty, right here). The nice thing is that at the end of it all, this monster actually does make a pretty neat looking piece of art.
So. Check out the video, and be sure to take a look at the rest of the stuff Jeff does at Tall Hippo (link HERE). And that, folks, is my official Art Fest wrap-up!!!
















