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Pomona Envisioning the Future

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Pomona Envisioning the Future a collaborate art project of September 2003 in Pomona, California. The project began with a series of discussions and lectures about globalization and the future. Seventy artists, trained by nine facilitators, created more than 800 works of art in digital media, photographs, sculptures, and paintings. Pomona Envisions the Future, a mural in Thomas Plaza in downtown Pomona's Arts District, resulted from the 2003 art project. Painted on the side of the Union Building, the mural depicts Pomona's past, present and future.

Contents

The project

The community-based project named Envisioning the Future (E.T.F) began with an idea by Cheryl Bookout, director of SCA Gallery of Pomona. She met with Judy Chicago in 2001 to discuss her goal to bring attention to Inland Valley arts, and revitalize downtown Pomona and its art colony. Executed by Chicago, Woodman, and Cal Poly Pomona, it was Chicago's largest project to that point, including artists from 47 communities within eight counties in California. The project was led by Bookout and Barbara Way, Dean of California State Polytechnic University, Pomona.

It began with panel discussions and lectures about "the impact of globalization and new technologies on art and the future", which occurred over two weeks in September 2003 at Western University of Health Sciences in Pomona. Speakers included British art historian Edward Lucie-Smith; Henry Hopkins, formerly of San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and former director of the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Hammer Museum; and other North American art historians, scholars, and artists. Other participants included Judy Baca and Gilbert Luján, muralists from Los Angeles, and artists Patrick Nagatani and Isis Rodriguez. It was then officially kicked off on September 22, 2003.

Woodman and Chicago trained nine facilitators from California's art communities who worked with 70 participants from Southern California to develop the concept for Pomona's future. More than 800 works of art were created over a three month period, including those made in digital media, sculpture, painting, installation and performing arts.

Susan Krieg was the painting facilitator. Some of the paintings include Martha Shaw's Joy of Cloning, and paintings that reflect Deane Swick's views about potential outcomes of conflict within the Middle East and Victoria Delgadillo's viewpoint about worker exploitation. The photography group's submissions included works by Bob Markovich and Nelson Trombley. Pamela Marsden composed "Electro-Acoustic Interactive Opera/Installation for Voices, Percussion and Electronics" for the performance, We Are All Sibyls. It is about Sibyl, "a woman endowed with the power of prophecy in Greek mythology and therefore a natural symbol for the challenges of imagining the future." A mural was designed by one team featuring the Goddess Pomona.

Works of art were shown first at Pitzer College's Nichols Gallery, with a webcast with Chicago. They were then displayed in galleries in Claremont and the Pomona Arts Colony, as well as on the Cal Poly Pomona campus in early 2004. The former gallery director at California State University, Dextra Frankel, directed the "sprawling exhibition design". In 1967, Frankel was curator of Chicago's first major exhibition.

The mural

The 140-by-42-foot (43 m × 13 m) mural depicts the past, present, and future of Pomona, featuring Goddess Pomona. It is located at Thomas Plaza in downtown Pomona's Arts District The mural was said to be designed by eight muralists, but the mural artists are identified as lead artist Kevin Stewart-Magee, Amy Runyen, Chris Toovey, Karen Keller, Cori Griffin-Ruiz, Sandra Gallegos, Rupert Hernandez, Lief Frederick, Lynne Kumra, Mary Kay Wilson, and Yolanda Londono. By design, the contributors included experienced artists and students. It was painted by 80 artists and participants.

In August 2013, it was featured in a group show, "Beautiful Pomona: Ode to a Mural," which was curated by Chara and Joshua Swodeck.

References

Pomona Envisioning the Future Wikipedia