BE in NYC

Rescued Refuge: Turning Trash into a Commodity

More garbage as art from around the country

In Las Cruces, New Mexico, at a reststop along the east side of the highway, there is a roadrunner, 20 feet tall and 50 feet long. It is made entirely of garbage. The white stomach is made mostly from old tennis shoes. But vistors also note seeing steering wheels, children’s toys, and office fans incorporated into the sculpture. From what I can discover, on the other side of the country, no one knows who made the sculpture. It just appeared on the desert landscape one day, and has become a staple of Roadside America. 

Norcal Waste Systems,  a landfill outside of San Francisco, has a program where artists compete to live near the dump and have free reign over whatever they find inside. The rules are that they must be established artists, they must make their work entirely from trash from the landfill, and they must allow the group that runs the landfill to show their work for a certain period of time.  

The more I investigate garbage as art, the more I find it exists. And the motivations are so varied. To make people laugh. Because an artist is poor. As an environmental statement. As artist Robert Lederman said, “Garbage is the most abundant ‘natural’ resource.”

November 15, 2007 Posted by beinnyc | Litter as Art | | No Comments Yet

Q & A with street artist Jack Nesbitt

While Justin Gignac sells garbage for what it is, Jack Nesbitt is busy transforming it into something else. Nesbitt is an artist who uses litter found on city streets to create and display his work. Between protesting with artist right’s groups and preparing for his second gallery show, Nesbitt spoke with me about the motivation behind his unique medium and his intense connection to the streets of New York.

Brooke Edwards: How would you describe your paintings?

Jack Nesbitt: They are playful and abstract—a reference to Bauhaus, Paul Clay, Feininger, Kandinsky… And there’s always a story behind them. Or I will create a story to go with the paintings.

BE: Is there a philosophy behind your work?

JN: The philosophy of my work is that what people throw away is something that I use. What people think of as useless, I like to put some use to it through my imagination.

BE: Can you share some examples of items you’ve found on the streets and how you’ve turned them into art?

JN: I use a lot of cardboard that I find. And I’ll add white paint, or some spots of bright color. But I like the color of cardboard and a lot of times I’ll let the natural color show through.

Sometimes I find modular garbage, like the same wedges of Styrofoam, 5 or 6 pieces, light green, all the same shape. Recently, I used the wedges and put them down on the sidewalk and made an inverted staircase on the ground. And then I cut some cardboard and labeled the piece with a price. Of course it didn’t sell, but that’s okay, too.

BE: Can you talk a bit about how you find the items that you use? Do you go out looking for something particular?

JN: The way I work is that I don’t look for special things, I let the things find me. I just watch for something to catch my attention, something that can initiate my imagination and start the wheels turning. I take what I find. Sometimes they’re disparate objects that don’t fit together. But if you are able to put them together and play around, you might find a visual connection. It’s something very personal to you and you engage your spiritual inner life, taking whatever you find, to make something, to make a story, to tell a story and to share that with other people. The artwork is greater than the sum of its parts.

BE: Is there an environmental statement behind your use of litter to create art?

JN: I don’t consciously go out and think I’m going to save the world by picking up garbage and putting it together and selling it. That’s not my intent. The only conscious motivation I have is the intent to use what most people discount, most people don’t need, and to create something that stirs a little interest. That’s a use of garbage or found objects to initiate a dialogue. As far as I’m concerned, that’s what keeps us going as a people.

BE: Just how old are you, if I may ask?

JN: I’m 67. I’m too old to really be on the streets, but there’s a certain vitality that I get by being there.

BE: And you take your commitment to the streets one step further, in that you sell your work there.

JN: It’s free enterprise at its best. There are so many street artists that are inventing things that have never been seen before. The ideas are rampant out there. The fact that it’s just on the street and the fact that it’s made from garbage or what people throw away, it’s just as much a vehicle for expression. So much of what I consider art or what the public considers art is legitimized by putting it in the surrounding of a museum or gallery. But it doesn’t need the gallery to be called art or a creative act.

BE: Have you ever shown your work in a studio setting?

JN: I did a one-man show in Albany 15 years ago, before I moved to New York City. Right now I have a gallery and it might be that I am going to show my work. It is on 57th St., which is a pretty good location. I also have an agent for the first time. You have to pay the bills. But the streets are where my soul is.

November 10, 2007 Posted by beinnyc | Litter as Art | | 2 Comments

$1 million dollar trash

This week, a story emerged about a woman who found a painting by the garbage on the sidewalk. Turns out, four years later and after some investigation, the painting was stolen, wanted by the FBI, and may sell at a Sotheby’s auction for up to $1 million.

October 25, 2007 Posted by beinnyc | Litter as Art | | No Comments Yet

One man’s trash…

Justin Gignac is 27 years old. He is a college graduate, former MTV production assistant and has had a brief but successful stint as an advertising executive.

But this afternoon, Justin could be found wondering SoHo with a black trash bag in his gloved hand, picking up litter from the crowded streets. It’s become a familiar routine for the Connecticut native.

The common misconception is that he is simply a good Samaritan, helping to clean up the notoriously littered streets of the Big Apple. But his t-shirt, which reads “Thank you for littering,” gives him away.

The truth is that this is how Justin now makes his living: collecting little pieces of New York life, which he then seals in clear plastic boxes labeled “Garbage, New York City” and sells for $50 to $100 each. (Available on his website, www.nycgarbage.com)

Last week, Justin sold his thousandth box.

“I guess if no one littered, I’d be out of a job,” Justin said as he bent to pick up a copy of today’s Village Voice crumpled on the Bleeker Street sidewalk. “But I don’t think there’s any danger of that.”

Intrigued? Follow this link to see my video on Mr. Gignac.

September 14, 2007 Posted by beinnyc | Litter as Art | | 1 Comment