Comments

  1. Greg says

    Did he go to public parks to hide Art of Octopuses, or did he he hide Art of Octopuses in Public Parks?

    The difference could be important!

  2. craig says

    Love this kind of stuff. Public art installations, not necessarily endorsed by the gvmt. (Dunno if this was or not)

    “Illegal” public art installations, like a more artistic and less damaging form of graffiti, engaging the public etc. I’ve had some ideas like this in the works for a while now but they aren’t progressing too far.

    These kinds of things are starting up everywhere, sort of like an urban folk art.

  3. Greg says

    @ craig (#5)

    Sorry, I have to pop in and correct you here.
    Graffiti is a painting style/technique which is generally done on a rough medium using aerosol paints. It is not actually related to vandalism.

    People regularly equate vandalism and graffiti, but they are *not* the same. Much the same way that pointless tagging and the like is also not graffiti, and treating them as though they are alike just further demonizes a very interesting form of art. (Some graffiti is vandalism, some vandalism is graffiti, but they only overlap, they are not the same.)

    Sorry! This is a pet peeve of mine, and I thought I’d vent. :D

  4. Qwerty says

    I wonder if there is one in tiny Jackson Park which is two blocks from where I grew up in NE Minneapolis? Or perhaps Loring Park where us gays have our Gay Pride Festival every year? Hmmmm. So many parks; so little time or desire to look. If only there was a prize involved…

    For all you out of towners who want some free art, here is a link to the Minneapolis Park Board’s map of my home town’s parks. The green bits are the parks.

    http://www.minneapolisparks.org/forms/parks/parkMap.pdf

    Happy hunting to one and all.

  5. says

    Cthulhu must be proud.

    Art, octopus, and public participation, just overall a very very cool idea. I applaud the person who came up with it.

  6. says

    The article says,

    William says, “At 2 p.m. on Friday 17th, 2008 10 to 20 very obscure photographs will be updated on the website.

    I imagine that they meant to write 2009.

  7. says

    Never mind, that’s just me reading “Friday” as “February”!

    They’re cute! Way better than the cow-like “moose” statues Toronto put up a few years ago.