Roadsworth

Bethany Gibson
Foreword by Scott Burnham
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Roadsworth

Bethany Gibson
Foreword by Scott Burnham
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Found in: Art & Photography, CONTEMPORARY

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Overview

CANADIANENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: Sep 09, 2011
  • Language: English
  • Publisher: GOOSE LANE EDITIONS
  • ISBN: 9780864926388
  • Dimensions: 7.07" W x 0.63" L x 8.54" H
Bethany Gibson has edited literary fiction for fifteen years. She is the fiction editor of Goose Lane Editions and the mother of three children. She has worked as an agent, as a freelance editor, and as the owner-operator of a manuscript assessment and publishing counsel service. Scott Burnham is a writer and creative director exploring creativity and innovation at the edges of urban culture and design. His work and entrepreneurial initiatives for organizations and cities around the world is focused on reprogramming our relationship with the city and creating new relationships with its shared objects and areas. He is the author of Finding the Truth in Systems: In Praise of Design Hacking, Urban Play, and The Urban Guide for Alternate Use..

A stark, primitive bicycle, looking suspiciously like the one the city used to designate a bike path; a giant zipper, pulling asphalt open on a busy commuter route; a giant's footprint, left behind after stomping through the sleeping city. By 2004, Roadsworth had pulled off close to 300 pieces of urban art on the streets of Montreal. Where would the nocturnal street artist strike next? Nowhere — or so it seemed. In the fall, he was charged with 51 counts of public mischief. Then the citizens of Montreal rallied their support. A year later he was let off with a slap on the wrist.

Since then, Roadsworth has continued to intervene in public spaces. He now travels the world, executing commissioned work for Cirque du Soleil and The Last O (cycled over in the Tour de France), and for cities, galleries, public institutions and arts festivals. In his brilliantly inventive art, Roadsworth takes the urban landscape and turns its constituent elements on their heads, both indicting our culture's excesses and celebrating what makes us human (lest we forget).

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