Sunday, April 20, 2008

Celebration and Auction - 6 June, 6:30 - 9:00PM Sponsored by the Gabelli School of Business, Roger Williams University, Bristol, RI



The 02863Project will close out this year's events with a celebration and auction at Roger Williams University, Friday, 6 June 2008, from 6:30 to 9:00 PM. The auction features sixteen pairs of Timberland first quality boots, each uniquely hand painted by an ALRI artist. Images of those boots and a description follow. Each artist and their boots are profiles - there are two pages so click to go to the next page.

The funds raised will go to the 02863Project Scholarship Fund to support Central Falls High School Art Students who pursue higher education. The fund has already raised over $6000, so we hope many people will come and bid at the auction.

The celebration and auction will be held in the courtyard of the architecture building. This allows us to use the jumbotron to view the videos and slide shows that document this project.

Looking forward to seeing you there. As it says on the invitation card, enjoy a light supper, bring your enthusiasm, and bid high and often.

We are the world...


Priscilla Malone (whose collaboration with Dan Butterworth is below) was inspired by the multicultural mix of the great class at Central Falls. With students from the Dominican Republic, Brazil, Costa Rica, the Pacific Rim, and the good ol' USA as well as other places, it seemed fitting to celebrate all of us.

Froggy Slipped from the Tropical Pools


Jane Gavin must have sensed the students from Puerto Rico missed their coqui's - the symbol of the new Puerto Rico where its rich and unique tropical flora and fauna are leading to a new world. These bright creatures, with the allegory of the one missing from the pond, make a pair of boots as different from each other as they are unique together.

Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme



There is something about paisley that has always reminded me a patchouli - a synesthetic experience that give a lightness to my step, and youthfulness to my spirit. These paisley's, however, are not your mild swirls from a tire, but little balls of fire, spinning wildly across the boots. They'll light up your life!

I Gotta Crush on Picasso


Carole Stone, who discovered the project after the events at the school had ended, but was inspired by the project to support that arts and challenged to transform boots in a unique way, has offered her take on Picasso, one of her favorite artists. Ladies to the left, gentlemen to the right of me and we can all dance!

Getting Wild in Central Falls..


Evelyn Rhodes confronted with a pair of size 12 Timberland boots, asks, how to make them smaller, maybe even disappear? Use what the animals use and try camouflage. Like Ellsworth Kelly, who found inspiration in camouflage to disguise and hide tanks in World War II, Evelyn takes the patterns of animal hides to transform her boots. There are few people with sharper eyes for the natural world and Evelyn has captured the patterns of tigers, leopards, and giraffe in these boots.

Miles - Kinda Blue


Felicia Touhey approached her boots as a printmaker - taking in large part cues from her experience with the monotype process and her work as building collages. This pair of boots reminds me of Miles Davis - the cool blues of Kinda Blue playing off the yellows in Sketches of Spain. The motifs, repetition, a flow of line have echoes of decorative arts of the Mediterranean.

"All you need is love..."



Bob Boyajian is the grand master of the group. Originally from the Providence area, he had worked in New York long before the digital revolution overtook the production of advertising. Working as a creative director and artist for J Walter Thompson advertising, he design, produced and created the artwork for many newspaper advertisements for the great stores in New York. Echoes of his style, with their grand flourishes can still be seen in the contemporary advertising for Saks. Bob developed a special connection with many of the students through his grace and authentic desire to help them achieve their dreams. When you see the documentary videos and slide shows, you will see the mutual respect between a master of his art and his students.

A Bright and Magical New World




Johanna McKenzie painted this pair of boots. Originally part of a test pair, she came back to a blank boot at the end of the project to make a pair and her partner did the same. Using her distinctive eye for detail, she created a pair of boots with native American birds and the flora and berries that attract them.

True Romance or the Seduction of Mimi?



This is a pair of test boots completed by two different artists, Dan Butterworth and Priscilla Malone. At the project's start, each artist was given one boot of a pair, and paints, and asked to experiment with the paint and medium to develop a feel for the tools. Dan and Priscilla collaborated to create a pair, each interpreting the same theme. Now is it really a true romance, or has the mischievous right foot got the sinister foot to heel?

Tyger, tyger burning bright...



Bill Heydt, a noted watercolorist HATED the paints - they are gluey and thick, unlike the quick flow of watercolor that characterize his portraits and street scenes. WIth his talents he was able to work through the medium and create a tiger hiding in a jungle. After seeing students use the boots as sculptural objects and not just a canvas, he added the bristles to form whiskers, and the jokester that he is, has the tail of the tiger flicking at the heel. In addition to the jungle scene, the laces are also colored, to help them hide the tyger in the jungle.