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LaVilla Braid Press Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Allison Graff, Art in Public Places Program Manager, 358-3600

Ritz Theatre & LaVilla Museum To Be Braided With Art

Jacksonville, Fla. – Public artist Susan Cooper will install three separate works collectively named, LaVilla Braid, at the Ritz Theatre & LaVilla Museum, at 829 North Davis Street, as part of Jacksonville’s Art in Public Places Program. The Colorado-based artist will install the pieces from June 25- July 2, 2007.

LaVilla Braid will be dedicated on Saturday, September 8 at 6pm. Cooper will lead a nighttime tour showcasing the complete installation at 7pm. A free workshop describing the public art process will also be held on September 8 from 1-3pm. The workshop is for artists as well as those interested in learning more about public art.

LaVilla Braid is Cooper’s visual interpretation of LaVilla’s history and culture in a multi-media art installation. The work is composed of three separate “braids” named for their locations at the site: the pedestrian braid, the motorist braid, and the community braid. Eight colorful, aluminum, wall-mounted sculptures, are the “pedestrian braids”. They represent film, art, the St. John’s River, and will flank the entrance at the northwest corner of the facility.

The motorist braid, a sculpture made from woven, colored LED light tubes, will wrap around the southwest corner of the building. The community braid, an installation of crisscrossed lights, will be projected onto the top level of the building, displaying a braided pattern of lights viewable from a considerable distance.

Cooper writes, “My work is strongly site specific ranging from murals to freestanding sculpture.” The artist has installed public works throughout Colorado, including the Regional Transportation District, City and County Building, Denver Public Library, and the Kaiser Permanente Rocky Creek Building in Lafayette, Colorado. Steel, concrete, wood, oil and acrylic paints, ceramics, glass, and light are some of the materials Cooper uses in her work. Regardless of location or materials, Cooper creates work to enhance the community and to, “stimulate the mind, attract the eye, and uplift life in Jacksonville.”

Susan Cooper integrates history and culture in her work. For example, her piece entitled “Recollection” is a 100-foot-long wall sculpture representing the Polish synagogues destroyed during World War II. For LaVilla Braid, Cooper was inspired by MaVynee Betsch, better known as the “Beach Lady,” who worked for over 30 years to preserve American Beach, the community founded by her great-grandfather, A.L. Lewis. Like Betsch’s complex braided hairstyle, Cooper weaves metal, color, and light to reflect the Beach Lady’s intertwining of history, culture, and philosophy. To learn more about Susan Cooper’s work, visit www.susancooperart.com.

Jacksonville’s Art in Public Places Program (APPP) uses designated funds from city construction and renovation projects to purchase works of public art to display in the community. The Cultural Council of Greater Jacksonville administers the APPP on behalf of the City of Jacksonville. Currently, the Art in Public Places Committee is developing the Tillie K. Fowler Memorial, which will be located on the Riverwalk at the end of Jackson Street. For more information, contact Allison Graff at 904.358.3600.

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