Sunday, November 24, 2013

A Week of Thanks and Giving

#iTOMB November 2013. Photo: Siddharth Choksi
In this week of thanks and giving we thank Mary and Karen and Kathleen for their kind donations and do encourage all to order an #iThinkOutsideMyBox print for the holidays. With cold weather here, your online support will see us through the winter.  Thank you all for giving. Also, please see our Press Release below and forward to interested parties you may know.





Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Contribute $100 - Choose Your Free Print

Romi 09.30.12
From now,  until forever, take a print of your choosing from our gallery series (below) for contributions to #iThinkOutsideMyBox of $100 or more - or choose any print from the site for contributions over $100 (please include $10 for shipping and handling).

Each print will come original size, 3"X3" on archival acid-free paper - hand trimmed to eliminate background textures - then shadow mounted and signed with artist notes and dates. Ready to frame.

To order, simply choose your donation method, tax deductible (Fractured Atlas),  or standard (PayPal), then email me with your print title and mailing information. Voi La! Your contributions are always greatly appreciated and we're happy to send a print to commemorate your help. Thank you all:)


Wednesday, November 6, 2013

#iTOMB: Love > $, but $ > *#^!

They say it is better to give than to receive, but anyone with their head screwed on reasonably straight might question that. Of course you'd rather get things. Good things. And on that front I feel proud of what the #iThinkOutsideMyBox project has been able to give emotionally - to New York, to America, to the world - and yes, to me personally so that we all get something out of the exercise - if maybe only, just a moment of peace

Thanks to Thiag (Brazil) 11.23.12
In the last year the #iThinkOutsideMyBox project has gone from a one-man activist vehicle to a global community art mandate supporting freedom of expression, an American First Amendment right, but more probably a worldwide human right. And our effort has not gone unnoticed. Recently we've been recognized by the Smithsonian's Cooper/Hewitt National Museum of Design, for socially responsible design, The National Gallery of Art, as photographic subject matter and Fractured Atlas for artistic and social merit. And as our profile has grown, so have our needs.

Skyrocketing from 500 individual paintings in the fall of 2012 to over 7000 today, we are inundated by public art and unable to process in a Bloombergian way. Translation? If we had Michael Bloomberg's money and artistic support that would be nice - but we don't. So we rely on your help, from paintbrush to wallet - to help support the world's largest collection of publicly painted art - made in NYC.

HOW TO DONATE

Donate now!

Fractured Atlas is our Fiscal Sponsor. They make your donation to #iThinkOutsideMyBox tax deductible. Example: Let's say you wanted to donate your old iPhone4 ($200) to us (which we really need)? You would receive a tax deduction of $200, and that could be a real number depending on your tax rate. (Email me if you can donate a phone) And monetary donations are deductible as well. Just click the Fractured Atlas logo above or on the left sidebar of the site and your $ contribution is tax deductible.



PayPal is the next best way to donate. It's not tax-deductible for you, but it's still good karma in our bank and appreciated the same as tax-dodger money:) PayPal donations help us buy paint, food and transport with our PayPal debit card so we see the benefits immediately, whereas, Fractured Atlas takes up to 90 days for us to see. Click above to donate through PayPal.

SO, HOW MUCH DO WE NEED? 



Short term, $1000. That will get us to the end of the year. And it's a number we need to see before launching a full KickStarter campaign. This number needs to be a ray of support that we can leverage to launch a push for year-long support from a larger community - the artistic grant community (We are currently applying to the National Endowment for the Arts, MacArthur, Soros, Guggenheim and other programmes). But currently, our expenses are now at a grand, aside from our operating income. They include, replacement iPhone ($200), computer upgrades ($300), Internet and phone access monthly ($100), storage ($60 monthly) Metro monthly ($125) and so on - so we need your help to fill these needs. 

THANK YOU

Please know that your donation goes to support a greater public need, the need for all people to freely express themselves in a public forum - something we didn't see until the response to the project became overwhelming. I thank you all deeply for your continuing support and hope to advance the #iThinkOutsideMyBox initiative in the years to come :)


DEC: Photo- Steve Rosen 09.13.13











Thursday, October 31, 2013

Happy Halloween:)

Handpainted masque 10.31.13

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Whatever Lola Wants, Lola Gets:)

#iTOMB Photo: Steve Pyke - Lola Rae 03.16.2011
Meet Lola Rae. Because whatever Lola wants, Lola gets. She and her dad, Steve Pyke, came by a few weeks ago and she did a painting while Steve and I chatted. Steve's an accomplished photographer and has shot celebrities, politicians and a world of life with his 2 1/4 camera for the New Yorker and other clients worldwide. Click here for his site.

On Steve and Lola's first visit Steve left a package of photographs, which luckily, had his name and address on them. By end of day, having not been picked up, I decided to deliver them to their house on Hudson Street. Arriving and ringing the bell, Steve was surprised. He hadn't even realised he was missing his photographs - but might have later:)

Since then Steve and Lola have been back twice, with Lola always taking the lead and dragging daddy to the painting studio in the park. And in the last year, she's not our only return painter. There are many, and many who come back to find their work in the smallest Chelsea gallery in New York.

Thank you Lola and Steve. You gotta love what I do when you have patrons like this:)

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You can find my professional credentials here on LinkedIn. To show your support for our efforts with #iTOMB, you can write the High Line here, addressed to the Curator, Chief Operating Officer, Executive Director or Founders.


Friday, October 11, 2013

#iTOMB: Moving Forward - Now Tax Deductible

Our fiscal sponsor
Today we were honored by the Fractured Atlas board of directors for accepting us for fiscal sponsorship. This means that the #iThinkOutsideMyBox project is on to a new phase in becoming a registered 501(c)3 non-profit corporation. Aside from being who we have been for the last year, it's our first major step. This means that now all contributions to our effort, if made online, are now tax deductible.

And donations of property are also deductible, like iPhones, computer equipment and even vehicles (I'd personally like a vintage Aston Martin) - although we are greatly in need of an updated iPhone (4/4s/5). Please email and ask me for details.

#iThinkOutsideMyBox is an open mind project promoting freedom of expression, creative problem solving and socially responsible design. We operate through the #iTOMB public painting project. sm@rt cart production and associated corporate/school/foundation programs that facilitate creativity. That means, we have fun, we get stuff done (GSD) and try to make a positive difference.

With the winter months approaching, your donation means more than ever so please consider whatever is appropriate for you. $5, $10, $25, $50 or larger, we haven't seen a dollar that didn't help - and now, those dollars are tax deductible (and we get 93 cents for every one:) 

Thank you all as we move forward in this pretty amazing journey:)





Sunday, October 6, 2013

What's the Difference Between a Public Program and a Commercial Promotion?


That looks like The Public!
On the High Line this week, we had a perfect example. At 22nd street you had the I Think Outside My Box project, a public program, as we have been for over one year,  and at the 16th St. overpass you had Amazon and a massive Kindle promotion that overpowered the natural beauty of the park like a giant alien ship had just missed it's convention landing at the Javit's Center.

And as you might imagine, Amazon was wildly well funded, commercially slick and esthetically overpowering. - it even plowed over the musicians, crammed into their government mandated spot, who could have been part of the mood of the park and the promotion - but were sadly not.

Yet, we (#iTOMB) , in our own simple public way, were not funded at all, decidedly non-commercial and fit into the groove of the park seamlessly. And people reacted appropriately. The Amazon scene was like a suburban shopping mall and we were, well, we.

Wow! Is that Jeff Bezos' daughter? No, just one of us:)
The essential difference between Amazon's commercial promotion, executed admittedly by the High Line for the donation money, and our public program of first amendment expression project, not executed for profit, but for the public good was in the public reaction. A marked difference.

Whilst Amazon offered free coffee and a test drive of their product, we offered none of the above, yet encouraged everyone to engage, involve and express themselves, in paint - without selling them anything - or maybe just selling them, themselves:)

After only a few minutes of people painting a woman walked up to me and handed me $20.  "Thank you", she said, "For the experiences you are creating". 

In her middle age, and having watched from the benches nearby, she continued, "I don't have children, but I have watched what you do, and I am inspired by the experiences you create." "Don't you see the experiences you are creating?". she asked me. I blushed a bit. Maybe I don't.


But I can guarantee you, and the High Line the same, that Amazon was not in the business of creating experiences. They were in the business of selling Kindles. And the High Line was not in the business of creating experiences either. They were in the business of fundraising. And that's where promotion and public programs collide - but they don't have to.

The Amazon promotion was like a giant alien craft had just landed in a placid city park. It clashed with its surroundings by placing space age-like "viewing pods" for reading instead of using the natural beauty of trees and even birds (we have birds at 22nd St.) to invigorate one's experience and only gave away free coffee (from another commercial sponsor) as a comeuppance for their occupation of an otherwise beautiful public space. I recalled all the people I saw reading in Jardin du Luxembourg in Paris a few years ago and wished for a recreation of that experience, or something similarly park-like.

At the High Line park, they have an entire department dedicated to Public Programs, Education and Community Engagement and the Amazon promotion was conspicuously labeled at as a "Public Event". But what it really was, was a simple promotion - made to get you to buy something. Not to aid the public at all.  And that sort of sucks - because with proper direction, both Amazon and the High Line could have helped each other and created an experience that was not just commercial, but emotionally engaging.

But they didn't.

The I Think Outside My Box Project is not a commercial enterprise at all. In fact, it's a perfectly rotten business model. But it makes people happy. It creates and enables simple life experiences. And that's a huge difference from all the advertising work I've done in the past - but the two need not be mutually exclusive. To begin to fit corporate goals into social ideals, the first thing to be done is to throw out metrics like ROI (Return on Investment) and focus more on GNH (Gross National Happiness). Because when people love your brand - and in this case, both Amazon and the High Line as brands - money will be no object. People will be happy to pay for pleasurable experiences much more than for hard plastic products.

Lanny Harrison collage (Gallatin/NYU Faculty Art Show)

Later in my day, a woman came up to me and remarked how horrible the Amazon thing had been. "Blatant commercialisation of an otherwise placid public space" , she said. And then she painted for us. (above featured work sent by email later with comment "I love what you are doing").

A good friend of mine thinks I'm crazy.

"What? Are you trying to get the establishment to buy into your whacko socialist artistic idea and actually endorse you, along with all those commercial boys?", she asked.

"Yeah", I responded.

Aside from his vanity purchase of The Washington Post, Jeff Bezos is not in the business of public service.


You can find my professional credentials here on LinkedIn. To show your support for our efforts with #iTOMB, you can write the High Line here, addressed to the Curator, Chief Operating Officer or Founders.



Thursday, September 26, 2013

Introducing the sm@rt cart - a better urban utility vehicle!



The sm@rt cart is an urban utility vehicle made from repurposed materials. Designed in Harlem, New York City, the sm@rt handles shopping, laundry and utility tasks much more efficiently and sturdily than standard carts. Using completely repurposed materials - shopping cart baskets married to baby stroller frames - the sm@rt carries hundreds of pounds effortlessly and fits store aisles, elevators and subways with ease.




Originally designed to carry the iThinkOutsideMyBox project and manufactured in Harlem, USA, the sm@rt also helps by not only repurposing discarded materials and providing work to those who need it, but by providing a superior service vehicle to you - creating a win/win for all.

sm@rt carts are all custom made and can be configured to any requirements.

Example: If you are a photographer needing a custom carrying solution for street work, work panels, drawers, Mac video viewing portal, etc, we can manufacture to your specs. For street sales, service (plumbing, electrical, etc.) sm@art carts travel in streets, subways, trains and trucks with ease.

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#iThinkOutsideMyBox operates as a non-profit providing a creative think tank, public arts programmes and supporting the under-employed through sm@rt carts. Your donations keep us doing well. Thank you:)

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Let us know how we can design a solution for your future:) See our Etsy shop for all designs.


Saturday, September 21, 2013

#iTOMB: The Magic Of...



And that's how it goes. For all the people who have never seen our setup, or who don't know that all their thinking outside their relative boxes comes from, well, a box. Here's how it works.

The entire structure you see in the end is a result of the dimensions in which my panels come pre-cut, then cut again and the size in which they need to fit for travel. "Form follows function", as Mies van der Rohe said.

There's a lot of magic in this box.


#iTOMB Photo: Steven Rosen 09.14.13





Tuesday, September 17, 2013

#iTOMB - "It's so New York"

#iTOMB Jan (Australia) 09.06.13

As comments go, we hear a lot. And a lot the same, or similar. For the life of the I Think Outside My Box project, the most common is, "Thank you. Thank you for doing what you are doing" - as if I have uncovered some insatiable thirst for people to simply unhinge, take a break, be free, say what they want - and leave in peace. And just by painting. In a beautiful park. Who knew?

Frankly, this blows me away. Are we such a repressed society that we are now not accustomed to expressing ourselves, either through speech or art or song or - uh, maybe sex? - that a small bit of painting becomes respite in such their cruel world?

One day I found a $100 bill tucked in an obscure place in the exhibit with the note, "Thank you" written on it. Even when I'm not paying attention, or just generally managing the crowd, people slip me tens and twenties and say the same - they thank me.

And for what? I'm nothing in their lives. I'm just some guy on the street (ok, an elevated street)  - and no, I'm not getting rich off this. In too many financial ways, I am poorer for it.

But I can't deny the reality that, in the execution of this community endeavor, I never have a bad day.

Never. And never does it seem, that anyone else does either. And if I were looking for financial reward, I'm smart enough to know that getting your paintbox out and hitting the streets, probably isn't the formula that's going to shoot me over the top of the New York socio/cultural/career,  make-an-f-load-of-money scene anyway. But that isn't the point. So what is?

"Thank you. Thank you for doing what you are doing"

"It's so New York"


"What a great idea"


"How Charles and Rae Eames"


"Did anybody ever tell you, you look like David Bowie?"


"Wow, I needed that - that's the most peace I've had all week"


"I've never seen anything like this in the world"



That's the point. It's so New York.