It’s always fun to find a bit of humour and whimsy on my travels. I saw this wheat-pasted poster along 124 Street. The fine print reads: “Won’t you take this job and mend this heart of mine?”
Back Words is an archive of Chelsea's Vue Weekly column, published 2010 through 2014 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
It’s always fun to find a bit of humour and whimsy on my travels. I saw this wheat-pasted poster along 124 Street. The fine print reads: “Won’t you take this job and mend this heart of mine?”
or did she ever leave?
Flanking 106 street north of Jasper Avenue, you'll find a handful of printed fabric panels featuring the poetry and art of Holly Newman that defy the classifications of art, graffiti or craft.
Her trademark attention to detail and impressive work of the hand adds visual interest and gives the passerby an opportunity to stop and engage with an artwork in a seemingly unexpected place. However, I have to wonder if the location Newman chose to display her work wasn't influenced by what could be considered Edmonton's unofficial Arts District made up of the Alberta Craft Council, ArtsHab, and Latitude 53.
According to Holly, her motivation is to "invite the viewer to reconsider the city landscape. Unique relationships are formed in the city. Natural elements can be elevated or ignored depending on the viewer's level of distraction and inclinations. Our changing relationship with nature has evolved so rapidly that at times it seems to have disappeared. Finding remnants of the personal within the city labyrinth is my motivation in constructing projects that challenge the role of the viewer within the city landscape."