Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts

Thursday, July 31, 2014

Business News on Examiner.com Award-winning Boynton Beach art district banned from organizing art walks


Rolando Chang Barrero Counting Days


Boynton Beach is wedged between the two, arguably more popular and culturally relevant, cities of Lake Worth and Delray Beach.
For a long time Boynton Beach was the underdog being left out of the conversations that attract the often sought after business-heavy foot traffic that helps financially support communities. These are the types of conversations that wag the tongues of the various cultural attachés within the bourgeoisie of Southern Florida.
Enter Rolando Chang Barrero, prolific artist, community organizer, activist, and volunteer for local schools and PBC United Way, all within Boynton Beach. He's the visionary who's work transformed a formerly run-down industrial area of Boynton Beach into the darling art district of South Florida, housing and organizing many artists in it's own right.
Anyone who's anyone who pays attention to the South Florida artistic community is aware of this man and the Boynton Beach Art District(aka BBAD, it's affectionately known acronym).
Every major newspaper, cultural rag, and art periodical in the region has given Rolando and BBAD it's due with front page headlines, such as the New Times of Broward Palm Beach(link 12, & 3), the Sun Sentinel(link), Art Hive Magazine(link), Palm Beach Culture(link), WLRN of Miami(link), and the Palm Beach Post(link), to name just a few.
The articles listed here are recently published and represent only a fraction of a segment of the total amount of headlines Rolando and BBAD have received for all the action and events that have taken place there, to mention them all would require it's own Wikipedia page.
Given all this positive attention, and given the resulting people flocking to Boynton Beach, the City of Boynton Beach decided recently to ban the popular monthly art walks that take place at BBAD.
If BBAD is responsible for putting the art scene in Boynton Beach on the map, what type of public policy in place could possibly motivate the City of Boynton Beach to ban future art walks in the Boynton Beach Art District?
Interview with Rolando Chang Barrero
The examiner recently conducted an interview with Rolando where he provided his opinion and information regarding the ban. The following quotes and information within this section of this article are excerpts from that interview.
“When other small towns grow and see the need for a stop sign or light at an intersection they don't close down the whole road. The City has gone about this all wrong, and the community is not at all happy. This is more akin to extortion of small not for profits then actual safety concerns.”
Rolando continues on to say, “I love the City of Boynton Beach and it's community leaders, but it almost seems that the out of town staff is committed to retarding growth by creating road blocks for growth and development.”
The preoccupation to place a tax on the BBAD art walks have led to conflicting reasons for the ban on the popular events, suggesting that there's not a very informed, or even slightly coherent, reason within the City of Boynton Beach regarding the matter.
In his struggle, Rolando found that Tara Altman, of the Boynton Beach risk department, claimed there would be "no proceeds" for monthly event permits by the city, while, confusingly enough, the spokesperson for Boynton blames organizers for incorrect permits. To add to the storm of disorganization and poor management, the city manager claims it's due to growth and safety concerns.
As of now, there is no documented history of violence or disruptions at BBAD events. According to Rolando attendance during summer month's are less then 25% of the usual traffic. These are small local artistic events that entertain people while helping to provide a living for local fine artists within Boynton.
“We are hoping, as suggested by Commissioner McCray, that when the "process" is figured out, that BBAD is grandfathered into it. We can only pray that we are not affected by the historical usurious taxing that has alienated other events from continuing in Boynton.” said Rolando, who has a meeting with city officials on August 1st.
So what's the real answer for this controversial move by Boynton? Why can't the representatives in Boynton get it together enough to provide a unified front on this matter? Why would Boynton Beach want to extort money from an artistic community that has not only turned around an entire section of their town, but also given the city it's main source of artistic praise?
To any logical, thinking person, marginalizing and publicly oppressing your main source of press in the art world is a bad idea, but not in Boynton Beach.
Avenue of the Arts
In an interesting related twist, the City of Boynton Beach has big plans to focus it's public artistic content into a specific area of the city entitled the Avenue of the Arts.
The Avenue of the Arts is well done. It deserves credit because it's fantastic. The artists involved and the city have worked hard to accomplish this, but given the circumstances of how the city has attempted to shape it's own artistic culture, one could perceive the Avenue of the Arts as a place where art is allowed to exist only under direct supervision and approval by the city of Boynton Beach itself, forcing a system upon artists that designates approved art for the masses under government supervision.
That's not to say the Boynton Beach is only acting questionably and giving no credit to BBAD. They dedicate an entire half a sentence to BBAD in the public art section of the city website that goes as follows,
"BBAD, Boynton Beach Arts District
No further description is provided, there are no directions, and no account of the plethora of events that occurred at BBAD.
BBAD is also credited in a video released by Boynton in 2013, “Art in Public Places". The credit exists in the form of a single picture that illustrates a sliver of the art district for one second(located at approximately 3:48 minutes, with no audible acknowledgment of BBAD) wedged somewhere between a lengthy promotion for Avenue of the Arts and a description of rocks that are arranged in an artistic fashion within a nature preserve.
On the city of Boynton Beach Art in Public Places facebook page, the city also recentlycongratulated Rolando for winning best art exhibition in 2014, before promptly banning the popular art walks shortly thereafter.
One could interpret this congratulate-then-immediately-shutdown strategy as an ironic display of performance art, or maybe it's just poor internal organization within the Boynton Beach rising to the surface.
Whatever the seemingly perplexing answer to this controversial situation may be, and however the outcome unfolds, it's safe to assume that with friends like these, who needs enemies?







Saturday, December 10, 2011

GRAB at The District!


 Marcus Borges aka "GRAB," begins 
Mural Project at The District! 
Boynton Beach Art District just got a bit more hip!

The artist know as "GRAB" began a project yesterday! 
He'll be joined by fellow artists and friends today and Sunday.
Marcus and his crew will continue working on a sixty foot Mural on the wall facing the 

Located at
422 West Industrial Ave.
Boynton Beach, FL 33426

during the ART Garage Sale on December 11, 2011

Related Article: "La Madrina" Mural

The Before Pictures 



Grab gets ready to tackle the job!




Grab begins to prime his canvas!




Michael Herb, photographer,  begins to document the process as 
Patty Madden, who commissioned Grab watches! 


        




Alone again, Grab continues to work into the night!






Friday, October 28, 2011

Business Forum: New Gallery to Open on 11.11.11


Business Profile - 

ActivistArtistA Gallery


Sun Sentinel Business Forum
Posted by Staff Writer on October 21, 2011 9:16 AM 

A flourishing neighborhood of artists is quietly located within the city of Boynton Beach.
Most residents are not privy to the existence of the Neighborhood Arts District and its newest member, the ActivistArtistA Gallery, 422 W. Industrial Ave.
Owner and artist Rolando Barrero is having fun with the opening date, launching his gallery at 6 p.m. Nov. 11 or 11-11-11. The art of Kim Fay and Robert Catapano has been selected by Barrero to be shown for the grand opening.
“Kim has a particular vision,” he said. “She has traveled quite a bit and some pieces are more personal to her.”
Catapano does multimedia art but both use the abstract technique and vivid colors, Barrero said.
“Also, the departure from one artist to the other is so amazing; they are the same genre, but both very different,” he said.
The Arts District was established in 1986 by Richard Beau Lieu, who also has his gallery and studio located there.
Other artists have followed suit over the years.
But Barrero is no dilettante in the art field.
“I came from Chicago, where I went to school at the Art Institute,” he said. “Chicago has a lot of areas where little enclave of artists reside.”
New York and a gallery on Lincoln Road in Miami are other stops where “Roly,” as his friends call him, made his mark, including changing the usual way galleries have art openings by stripping them down to just the art and its fans.
“We take away the booze, take away the furniture and have a casual environment,” he said. “It is a family outing place where an intellectual can mingle with a beach bum.”
Barrero has been making art since he was 16, giving him three decades to hone his craft.
As for the name ActivistArtistA Gallery, he said it is just something he has been using since he was young.
“I was originally doing a lot of activist art for a number of different political groups during the AIDS crisis,” he said.
Debby Coles-Dobay, the city’s public art administrator, said the Arts District already has seven artists and more moving in.
“It was an industrial area before and wasn’t kept up real well with a lot of crime,” she said. “Rick and others cleaned it up and put art on the street. Crime lowered because of this.”
She said “Roly” brings a new energy to the area, having a following not just from Boynton Beach but also from all of South Florida.
“His art is more edgy,” Coles-Dobay said. “Now we are getting a great mix of different types of art in this district.”
For information about the ActivistArtistA Gallery, call 786-521-1199.
Posted by Staff Writer on October 21, 2011 9:16 AM