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About The Blog

The Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts and Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis have joined together to create the Contemporary-Pulitzer blog which, for the first time, combines the perspectives of two separate institutions with differing missions within the same blog.


Offering alternating posts each day from the Pulitzer and Contemporary, the blog provides a candid look at the behind-the-scenes workings of both arts organizations.

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Latest Posts from the Pulitzer

Transformation Project Walk: A Video Recap

http://www.vimeo.com/12059966

On May 15, the Pulitzer celebrated the culmination of Transformation with an art walk that showcased the work of each program. In the video above, visitors, participants and organizers talk about the different programs and locations for the Transformation Project Walk.

The Transformation Project Walk sites will be on view until June 5, as the Pulitzer staff prepares for a final Urban Alchemy event. Perhaps after that, we’ll have time to process the assorted layers of the T-series and all that happened during the Walk. As a Pulitzer camerawoman (we use a Flip), I try to focus on perspectives and moments that expose some of the big picture of events, some of which don’t always make it into footage. As I followed the site map on May 15, I saw a range of reactions. Here are a couple of times that stood out to me:

1. While riding the shuttle from Bruno David Gallery to Hyde Park, I met two people who came to the event to see what was happening in the North St. Louis neighborhood. One was a man, who rehabbed in Hyde Park in the 1980s. He had more stories than could fit into the ride, including the tale of how his house burned down. The other visitor was a woman who grew up in Hyde Park during the 1950s and went to Holy Trinity Catholic School. It was the first time she had seen her childhood home in years.

2. At the Woolworth Building, I saw James, an Urban Renewal participant, shake hands and talk with strangers about his chair, as if he regularly hosted a gallery. After an interaction with one man, James looked as if the breath was taken out of him. I asked him how he was, and he said he was moved by all the visitors’ compliments and that perhaps he’ll continue refurbishing chairs, since people liked his chair so much.

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Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts 3716 Washington Boulevard
St. Louis, MO 63108
http://www.pulitzerarts.org
Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis 3750 Washington Boulevard
St. Louis, MO 63108
http://www.contemporarystl.org
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