No. 27 - A Nod To Ed Ruscha

Artist Name(s) Maser
Artwork title No. 27 - A Nod To Ed Ruscha
Context/Background Draw Out is an urban regeneration initiative that uses graffiti art to reinvent urban space. Draw Out was developed by Catherine O’Halloran, a Senior Youth Worker at the Northside Family Resource Centre in Ballynanty. The project evolved from Limerick’s Make a Move Festival. “With many derelict and vacant sites in our urban centre it is easy for us to become desensitised to our surroundings”, Catherine says. “The Draw Out Project is attempting to visually reinvigorate these sites. Framed in the right way we aim to get to a point where urban art speaks and appeals to everyone and impacts on our urban landscape”. The initiative works in partnership with Limerick City Council to select derelict sites within prime locations across the city. The initiative aims to build on the ‘naturally innovative spirit of the artist’ by re-imagining the urban environment, and ‘creating pathways for art, artist and audience to fully actualize their potential’ within the urban landscape, ‘creating a synergy between community, artist and environment’. Maser’s installation is part of the Draw Out: Urban Exhibitionists project for Limerick City of Culture 2014, which offered up long-term derelict sites to urban art.
Description

Maser’s artwork took a drab, run-down inner-city petrol station, and re-invigorated the building, forecourt, shutters, petrol pumps and vehicles with vivid colours and pop-art patterns. The urban art project took five 14-hour days, and almost 300 litres of paint to complete, as everything had to be given a coat of white paint and two coats of colour. The finished artwork, which is lit at night, can only be viewed from the pavement, as viewers are not permitted to enter the forecourt. Maser entitled the installation ‘No.27, A nod to Ed Ruscha’ after an artist who published a collection of photographs entitled ‘Twenty-six Gasoline Stations’ in 1963. The transformation is intended to surprise people, “to lead them to question their relationships with familiar objects" and to consider how "people are disassociated from the space around them”. Maser stated “I’m using paint as a tool to express what’s going on in my head, but I’m also aware there is an audience. I want to encourage that audience, especially the young and the disheartened."

Mediation

Alan Owens ‘Limerick urban art project a ‘gift to the city’ that aims to inspire’, Limerick Leader, 20th December 2013

Alan Jaques ‘ A Blast of Colour for City of Culture’, Limerick Post, January 16th 2014

http://www.limerickpost.ie/2014/01/16/a-blast-of-colour-for-city-of-culture/

Kaitlyn Schaeffer ‘Maser Converts a Derelict Ireland Petrol Station Into an Homage to Ed Ruscha’, Complex (New York) Jan 11, 2014

http://www.complex.com/art-design/2014/01/maser-ireland-gas-station

‘Maser "No.27 - A Nod To Ed Ruscha" New Street Installation - Limerick City, Ireland’ Monday, January 06, 2014

http://www.streetartnews.net/2014/01/maser-no27-nod-to-ed-ruscha-new-street.html

Biographies

Maser is a Dublin-based graffiti artist who has been painting for over ten years in the Irish/international graffiti scene, in such places as New York, Copenhagen, London, Holland, Belgium, Spain and Sweden. He began studying fine art and continued on to graduate with distinction in a BA in Design Communication (graphic design). He was later awarded membership of the International Society of Typographic Designers, MISTD. Within the last 2 years Maser has focused more on his painting/street art and has high ambitions to promote the positive aspects of the graffiti culture to the Irish society. Maser is a member of the TDA Klann and FOES Crew. The TDA Klann is Ireland's premier graffiti crew, widely known for their unique and innovative style of writing. They have been running Ireland's only outdoor graffiti festival since 1993 and fronting a movement of emerging talent.

Maser’s collaboration with singer Damien Dempsey is outlined here:

http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/art/features/words-to-the-wise-the-graffiti-artist-cheering-up-dublin-2142742.html

Commission Type Local Authority,Regeneration Agency
Commissioner Name Limerick City Council
Commissioning process Invitation
Artform Visual Arts
Funded By Limerick City Council
Location Disused Petrol station, Parnell Street
County Limeri
Town Limerick
Website limerickcityofculture.ie/content/draw-out-urban-exhibitionists
Content contributor(s) Web Editor
Associated professionals / Specialists involved

Catherine O’Halloran, senior youth worker, the Northside family resource centre, Ballynanty.

Paul Foley, Senior Executive Officer Environment Department, Limerick City Council

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Nazareth Housing Association provides independent living houses for individuals and couples who are 65 and over and on the Sligo County Council housing list.  Nazareth Village is comprised of 48 houses in a garden setting.  The Village was financed as a public-private partnership between Nazareth Housing Association and Sligo County Council with funding from the Department of Environment, Community and Local Government.  

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