Fort Smith to see Unexpected art

Local, international street artists to make mark downtown

Artist Alexis Diaz (top) works from a painter’s lift Saturday as artist and assistant Tenchi prepares to join him as they create a mural at College Avenue and East Center Street in Fayetteville.
Artist Alexis Diaz (top) works from a painter’s lift Saturday as artist and assistant Tenchi prepares to join him as they create a mural at College Avenue and East Center Street in Fayetteville.

FORT SMITH --Seven internationally known street artists who have left their creations this year in places such as Grudziadz, Poland; Bangkok; and Lismore, Australia, are converging this week to leave their marks on western Arkansas.

photo

NWA Democrat-Gazette

Artist and assistant Tenchi paints Saturday from atop a painter’s lift while working on a mural with fellow artist Alexis Diaz at College Avenue and Center Street in Fayetteville. The mural is a part of the Unexpected Mural Festival in Fort Smith, which moved part of its effort north to include Fayetteville. The work should be done in the next few days.

photo

NWA Democrat-Gazette

Artists Tenchi (left) and Alexis Diaz speak Saturday while working on a mural at College Avenue and Center Street in Fayetteville.

The artists, along with students from the University of Arkansas at Fort Smith and Northside and Southside high schools, will spend a week painting murals and fashioning sculptures in downtown Fort Smith in the second year of the Unexpected street art festival. Artists began their work Friday and will continue through next Sunday.

The name for the festival recognizes that it is unexpected to find such works of public art covering the walls of downtown Fort Smith buildings, according to 64.6 Downtown, the group that organized the festival to promote public art and downtown Fort Smith.

Adding to the 10 works completed during last year's inaugural festival, 10 more are planned this year.

The festival is an opportunity to attract people downtown, said Rodney Ghan with Ghan and Cooper Commercial Properties. Ghan, who is on the 64.6 Downtown board, said he invited artists to paint murals on three of his buildings last year, and one artist will paint on another one this year.

"It's a great shot in the arm for tourism for Fort Smith," he said.

Event director Claire Kolberg said Unexpected was created last year to last three to five years, depending on the reaction from the community, and to attract new artists and new audiences.

She said she hopes people will go downtown to watch the artists at work and that the artists enjoy interacting with the public.

During the week, the artists will work on various projects in and around downtown. The Northside and Southside high school students will paint a mural on one wall of Belle Starr Antiques at 21 N. Fourth St.

About 10 high school students supervised by six teachers will work on the mural, the design for which was chosen from ideas by students and teachers.

"We hope that the coming together of these two art programs to create artwork for the community will spark more collaboration between different departments in the Fort Smith community to aid in the revitalization of our unique downtown," Southside art teacher David King said.

In addition to the painted murals, one of the artists, Artur Bordalo of Portugal, known as Bordalo II, is expected to create a trash animal sculpture from scrap metal. It will go into a small vacant spot between two buildings in the 700 block of Garrison Avenue.

"It will be a great addition to the green space," Kolberg said.

An Irish artist known as Maser also is exhibiting a piece of his abstract sculpture this month at the University of Arkansas at Fort Smith's Windgate Art & Design building.

A two-man team from Los Angeles, David Leavitt and David Torres, collectively called Cyrcle, plan to create a video as they paint to encourage interaction between community and artists, Kolberg said.

One project began early with Puerto Rican artist Alexis Diaz painting a mural on a wall of the old Mountain Inn building at South College Avenue and East Center Street in Fayetteville.

As Diaz worked on the mural from a boom lift last week, nearby diners, passers-by and dog walkers stopped to watch with many taking pictures, Kolberg said.

Organizers of this year's event expect the same thing this week in Fort Smith. Kolberg said the festival is a way to create public accessibility to art.

"We want people to continue to look to Fort Smith as an innovator in public art," he said.

Others who will create art in Fort Smith this week are Dean Stockton of England, known as DFace; Faith47, a South African woman working out of Cape Town; Argentine artists Franco Fasoli and Francisco Diaz, known as Jaz and Pastel; Okuda San Miguel of Spain; and Guido van Helten of Brisbane, Australia.

State Desk on 09/04/2016

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