Lanesboro Arts and Commonweal Theatre Company invite community members of all ages to participate in the creation process of a large-scale Theatre District Mural to be installed on the south wall of the building at 204 Parkway Ave. N. in downtown Lanesboro. Community paint sessions are taking place on Wednesday, October 16 and Friday, October 18 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., as well as on Thursday, October 17 from 9 a.m. to noon. Individuals or groups interested in participating are welcome to drop in during those times or contact Kara Maloney of Lanesboro Arts or Stela Burdt of Commonweal Theatre to schedule a shift to help paint the mural.
The mural’s design will be painted onto parachute cloth, a canvas-like material, inside the building at 115 Parkway Ave. N. in Lanesboro October 16-18. Then, from October 19-23, the painted cloth will be installed at its final location adjacent to the St. Mane Theatre and Commonweal Theatre in a manner similar to applying wallpaper. Lanesboro is a unique rural community, in that it is home to two active theatres on its main street. Designed by artist Erik Pearson, with community input and ideas from a May 2019 brainstorming meeting, the Theatre District Mural celebrates the performing arts and highlights both theatres, but also honors and reflects the Lanesboro community’s rich heritage and traditions.
“Community is public art’s raw material,” shares Lanesboro Arts Co-Director Adam Wiltgen. “We are thrilled to be partnering with an artist like Erik Pearson who has experience bringing a community’s vision and ideas to life through an engaging design and painting process.”
During the brainstorming meeting, community stakeholders drew pictures of ideas for the mural, as well as wrote key aspects that they wanted represented in the design. Common themes were that people wanted the history of Lanesboro represented honoring nature, agriculture, townspeople, cultural and generational diversity, and more. Participants voiced opinions for the design to be bright, welcoming, inspiring, and colorful. The design Pearson created includes both fictional and real people from Lanesboro based off research and historical photos.
“A supportive community is what makes theatre and the arts possible. It is very fitting that Pearson’s design focuses on the audience and that the creation process is open and accessible to all,” says Hal Cropp, Executive Director of Commonweal Theatre.
Lanesboro Arts and Commonweal Theatre’s goals for the mural are to encourage walkability to the north side of Parkway Avenue, create a sense of community pride and strengthen collaborative efforts to beautify the community. The Theatre District Mural will be the seventh community-engaged, public art project in Lanesboro, following the 2001/2011 Bronze Medallion Tour, 2005 Commonweal Construction Wall Mural, 2014 Lanesboro Library Mural, 2014 Haiku Poetry Parking Lot, 2017 “Colors of Bluff Country” Mural on the back of the St. Mane Theatre, and the 2017 mosaic mural on the side of Pedal Pushers Cafe.
Pearson believes public art is more accessible to all – including those who perhaps wouldn’t go to a gallery or theater. Pearson shares his excitement, “When art is everywhere, it changes the meaning and feeling of the downtown area and makes people explore more.”
In 2001, as the first Artist in Residence at Lanesboro Arts, Erik Pearson taught a community drawing class, gave art presentations in the Lanesboro Schools and worked on a series of paintings. Pearson was invited back to Lanesboro in 2005 to create a 56’ long, 12’ high mural — his first — on a safety wall surrounding the construction area of the Commonweal Theatre. Currently, Pearson works full-time as an established artist in Saint Paul, Minn.
Lanesboro Arts and Commonweal Theatre are supported in this project through a “Paint the Town” grant from the Southern Minnesota Initiative Foundation in partnership with Ace Hardware, who will supply 29 gallons of paint for the mural.
For more information visit www.lanesboroarts.org, call (507) 467-2446 or email kara@lanesboroarts.org. The community painting sessions are handicapped accessible and are located at 115 Parkway Avenue North, formerly Lulu’s Funhouse, in downtown Lanesboro.
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