06/30/2009
AIGA at the Arts Festival

The Leonardo Blog

bagWe had a great time at the Utah Arts Festival this past weekend. It was great to see old friends of The Leo and meet new ones. If you happened to catch a performance from one of our partners, if you made a star box, or if you just perused the origami wall -- thanks for stopping by!

Visitor after visitor came into our space toting messenger bags with just the right hint of DIY flavor. On forays into the festival at large for food, fresh air and entertainment, I made it a point to track down the source of the bags -- the AIGA booth on Washington Square.

bagCheck out those bags! That shiny material is vinyl from local, reclaimed billboards. Refashioning the vinyl into messenger bags keeps the vinyl out of a landfill, uses up local "trash," provides a great chance to make something useable and hip, and gives visitors a wearable piece of art.

The color options included everything in the rainbow, but this one was my favorite:

Kudos to AIGA SLC for making the project happen. I hope to see these things around town for a long while.

 

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06/26/2009
AIGA’s vinyl bags to recycled Utah Arts Festival trash, the environment matters as much as the art

The Selective Echo

bag Editor’s Note: Day 8 coverage of the Utah Arts Festival continues with two features, one about some festival notes of interest concerning eco-friendly art and sustainability. The second posted above is about Samba Fogo, one of the festival’s most popular entertaining fixtures of recent years. Tomorrow’s coverage moves into various awards for artists, films, and literary activities including the winners of the Art Attack 5K.

DID YOU KNOW? Calculate your personal impact at the eARTh Team Booth to see how much carbon dioxide you produce each year and learn how you can reduce your carbon emissions.

No doubt, the environment and its sustainability are part and parcel of this year’s Utah Arts Festival. Among the newest workshops drawing a lot of attention, more than 120 in the first day and a half of its offering, is the making of handbags, satchels, wallets, and tote bags from reclaimed billboard and vinyl material.

The 175-member Salt Lake City chapter of the American Institute of Graphic Arts (AIGA) is offering the hour-long workshop – RE: DESIGN – four times a day, which has especially drawn a large number of children and teenagers. “It’s easy and no special or previous design experience is needed,” says Dallas Graham, AIGA board member. “Our members will help with tips about design, layout and color and we even provide the templates. At the end of the workshop, you can have a one-of-a-kind bag accessory.”

At $10, the workshop value provides a bundle of worthwhile hands-on activities that emphasize not only the good principles of smart design but also of the impact of an individual’s creative resourcefulness when it comes to producing a high-quality functional and aesthetically appealing item from recycled materials. Visitors also can purchase vinyl bags made by AIGA members at the organization’s booth near the festival stage.

And, local AIGA members have crafted carefully their mission to be as environmentally responsible as possible. First, they ensured all of the non-biodegradable billboard materials came from Utah after deciding not to exercise the option of getting it from China, according to Camille Thorpe, another AIGA board member.

Graham explains the material – enough for at least 250 bags – was donated and AIGA paid to clean it so it could be used. The billboard materials work well, he says, because AIGA professionals can demonstrate easily how portions of particular graphic elements such as large letters, tool lines, logos, and shapes can be used to create artistically appealing designs.

Workshops run each day at 1:30, 3, 5, and 7 p.m. For more information, see here.

On a larger scale, there are several environmentally friendly measures that have gained a solid foothold at the festival. Staff and volunteers are being especially vigilant about reducing the volume of waste that would end up at a landfill and ensuring that recyclable plastic, cardboard, aluminum, paper, and glass are being processed within the state, according to Jill Fletcher, who oversees the festival’s eARTh team.

“We’re even sending out the vegetable oil used at the food booths to a local business that converts it into bio-diesel,” she adds. The four-day event resulted last year in 11 tons of garbage with four tons being recycled, especially in glass and cardboard. Food waste also is composted. Another area that saw some savings was in eliminating the use of plastic bags in disposal bins which Fletcher estimates to be nearly $4,000.

“We’re trying to be as alert as possible in making a smaller environmental footprint,” she explains. For example, nearly 20 volunteers are stationed throughout the festival grounds just for the purpose of helping visitors decide which bins they should use for disposing their plates, cups, and paper.

Festival organizers also have established a VIB (very important bicyclist) entrance for visitors who can use the bike valet service and get a $3 discount on their festival admission. Last year, nearly 1,000 used the service and the numbers on the first two days of this year’s festival are keeping pace with the 2008 total. In fact, today will likely be the heaviest use of the bike valet lot. Last year, almost a third of the bicyclists who used the valet service came on Saturday during the festival.

 

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06/26/2009
Utah Arts Festival

Ashley Mackay

bagI volunteered at the AIGA booth tonight at the Utah Arts Festival. At the booth one could either buy a pre-made vinyl bag from recycled billboards around Utah OR make one themselves from a different no-sew pattern. I made one at the training meeting and they are pretty cool (when I was walking past the REI the other day I heard a 12 year old boy tell his friend it was the coolest bag he had ever seen. Yeah. The bags have those kind of credentials). So I recommend making one to any of you who might be on the fence about going to the festival.

After the huge rainstorm, I left the safety of the booth and wandered the festival. There was only one booth I cared about and I am IN LOVE. I almost never want to buy other artist's stuff. I've been working on trying to care about Art for Art's sake. I usually like things to be useful or personally meaningful. And maybe I'm just a sucker for this kind of stuff because there is typograpy on it but take a look at this:

 

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06/22/2009
Utah Arts Festival: Highlights of this year’s artists’ marketplace

Ben Fulton

The Salt Lake Tribune

As every battle-fatigued parent knows, teenagers are the hardest to impress. Even the surliest adolescent is likely to find something of interest here, however, with offerings ranging from a fashion design booth, graphic arts and recycling tips from local members of the American Institute of Graphic Arts (AIGA), to loads of hip hop culture, courtesy of a DJ booth hosted by UPROK. As per last year, “The Cube,” a stand-alone graffiti-art structure, will be revived, giving budding urban artists the chance to paint and tag ‘til their hearts’ content. If you plan on attending the festival over several days, this mutating work of art is the one to watch.


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