More Cool Things in Pittsburgh

A good trip home to the steel city includes food, art, and shopping, and I managed a good mix this weekend.

Our first stop was the Society for Contemporary Craft nestled in the historic Strip District market where you can find delicious pierogies, any Italian cheese imaginable, and enough black and gold knickknacks for the next hundred Super Bowls. The craft exhibition on our radar was Beyond Shared Language: Contemporary Art and the Latin American Experience, which brought together the work of 14 artists (working in clay, glass, metal, wood, fiber, and mixed media) who share Latin American heritage. My mother had seen a write-up in the City Paper of a meat sculpture made out of fabric, and we just couldn’t stay away.

Bound (2007) is the handiwork of Tamara Kostianovsky, who writes that her aim is to “confront the viewer with the real and grotesque nature of violence, and offer a context for reflecting on the vulnerability of our physical existence, brutality, poverty, consumption and the voracious needs of the body.” And I thought we were just going to see a giant cloth steak.

On Sunday we headed to the I Made It Market where more than 70 artists sold everything from poster prints to necklaces made from old typewriter keys (get your own at junxtaposition.com). The Market takes place throughout the year at different spots, but this weekend the artists set up shop at the South Side Works, as part of the Exposed festival. Tons of booths featured some sort of recycled material–River Rats Designs for example, cleans up local rivers and turns the junk into jewelry and home accents.

And the Sardine Clothing Company, whose owners made the trip west from Manayunk, patches together strips of old T-shirts to create unique and eco-friendly skirts. The Market is all about things creative and keeping the earth happy. There’s already a branch in Los Angeles, and if the website isn’t lying to me, an in-the-works extension in Philly as well.

I’ll leave you with an image from a sidewalk art contest that unfolded near the Market, our favorite by far: Billy Mays, born in Pittsburgh’s McKees Rocks, immortalized in chalk. At least until it rains.

–Mara Miller

This entry was posted in Visual Arts. Bookmark the permalink. Both comments and trackbacks are currently closed.
  • Welcome to the Festival Blog!

    The Philadelphia Live Arts Festival is a curated festival of the world’s most cutting-edge, high-quality performing arts groups. The Philly Fringe is an unfiltered festival, where a platform is provided for new and established artists to present their work free of a selection process. The Festival Blog is your most comprehensive source for news on both in the months leading up to the festivals.

    Email story ideas to NickG@livearts-fringe.org.

  • Subscribe to the Festival Blog

  • Who We Are

    Festival Blog Manager:
    Nicholas Gilewicz

    Information Manager and Guide Editor:
    Josh McIlvain (Emeritus)

    Contributors:
    Lulu Krause
    Jason Magnes
    Jennifer Leah Peck
    Christina Snyder
    Logan Tiberi-Warner

    In-house Cheerleader:
    Molly Weingart

  • Categories