Keys to Beacon 2018: An Exploration Of The Outdoor Pianos That Played In Beacon

Photo Credits: Izdihar Dabashi

Photo Credits: Izdihar Dabashi

A boy crouches to play a tiny piano outside of Towne Crier. Photo Credit: Lisa Marie Martinez; Piano Artist: Miss Vickie

A boy crouches to play a tiny piano outside of Towne Crier.
Photo Credit: Lisa Marie Martinez; Piano Artist: Miss Vickie

Back before the peak fall foliage season of September, and before the first blizzard of the pre-winter season hit us, A Little Beacon Blog planned a big feature on the Keys to Beacon project from BeaconArts. This is the outdoor, interactive art installation, in which 11 pianos covered in some kind of artistic expression were placed at locations throughout the city.

We sent out an essayist to find and experience as many pianos as she could in real life. Please meet Izdihar Dabashi, a writer, poet and college student, and follow along on her discoveries, and read how the pianos touched her and those around her.

Keys To Beacon 2018 - An Exploration

by Izdihar Dabashi
All Photos by Izdihar Dabashi
Izdihar is studying Psychology. She is a writer, loves fiction novels and writing poetry. When she is not writing, she is reading a novel with a strong heroine and drinking tea in a faux fur coat.

Auburn leaves danced in the wind, wisps of hair and tangles of scarves flit about in the cool weather. Softly, Adele’s voice weaves into the moment creating an ambiance that is undoubtedly autumn in New York. As if singing “Hello” to myself isn’t dramatic enough, the universe seems to encourage my bout of melodrama, as evidenced by the several pianos adorning Main Street. I was tempted to ignore the peculiar sights and continue to sonder, but the tinkling sounds of the pianos rang through the air and lured me to their sights.

Piano at Bank Square at Polhill Park Photo Credit: Izdihar Dabashi

Piano at Bank Square at Polhill Park
Photo Credit: Izdihar Dabashi

Across the street from Bank Square at Polhill Park, a white-speckled black piano bathed in the autumn sun. Strikes of sheer gold paint the surface of the piano, balloon-like blobs of paint float amidst the spectacular design. A trio of city girls tinkered with the keys, flooding the afternoon light with airy chimes and tittering smiles. Leaves of maroon and honey weaved through the air pushing me forward to my next location, humming “Colors of the Wind” underneath my breath as the scenic fall weather emitted a Pocahontas-like movie moment from me.

Piano Artist: Donna Mickelson

I found myself outside of City Hall facing a grand piano. Blends of scarlet fade into citrus, bursting out smooth blues and shocks of violet; the sophisticated rainbow design contrasted beautifully against the sleek ebony body. I seated myself on the sturdy bench, stretched my dainty fingers, and summoned a tune so beautiful and strange all of Beacon peeked out from their windows, traffic stilled, even the birds turned their ambitious chirps into humble murmurs.

Kidding - it took about five minutes for my short stubby fingers to figure out how to gracefully lift the fall board. I could understand why BeaconArts placed this particular piano outside City Hall, because the glorious sight was enough to reinforce the visual legacy Beacon holds, an enticing city full of expression.

Piano at Beacon Historical Society on South Avenue Photo Credit: Izdihar Dabashi

Piano at Beacon Historical Society on South Avenue
Photo Credit: Izdihar Dabashi

Somehow, my suede camel boots clicked their wooden heels all the way to Beacon Historical Society. A tangerine piano with magenta circles brought me back to the days of Maggie and the Ferocious Beast , a popular children’s cartoon show. Childlike-wonder surrounded the theme of this piece and graced a smile on a little girl’s face. She happened to be the pianist of the hour, and a runaway from the birthday party hosted next door. Setting down her fairy wand and birthday party hat, she clambered to settle onto the orange bench. Her happiness was contagious and soon a small crowd formed, finding joy in her clumsy tune as she confidently bobbed her head. We should have exchanged autographs.

Making my way back to Main Street, immersing myself in the hustle and bustle of the weekend flow, I came across the next piano. Situated a few feet away from the Rick Price mural, a sky-blue piano covered in paintings of a garden and a chubby Garfield-like cat invited a young couple to playfully serenade one another. It was disgustingly cute, a scene straight out of a Rom-Com.

Piano at Key Food. Photo Credit: Izdihar Dabashi

Piano at Key Food.
Photo Credit: Izdihar Dabashi

Flickering flames mask the small black piano outside of Key Food. An adorable little boy dressed in black and red fit the aesthetic of the piano; the scene was too cute for me not to stop and take a photo of him.

Piano outside of Beacon Pantry. Photo Credit: Izdihar Dabashi

Piano outside of Beacon Pantry.
Photo Credit: Izdihar Dabashi

Outside of Beacon Pantry, a chalkboard piano waits for me to scribble my signature all over it. A bucket full of colorful chalk is screwed into the top of the piano, inviting people to temporarily leave their mark. I left my autograph then followed the scent of sharp cheese and fresh bread for a heavenly sandwich from Beacon Pantry.

Piano at Howland Cultural Center. Photo Credit: Izdihar Dabashi

Piano at Howland Cultural Center.
Photo Credit: Izdihar Dabashi

The piano next to the Howland Cultural Center is covered in sheet music and children’s handprints in an array of vivid colors. This piano seems to play on its own, simply needing the wind to tinker with the keys. Soft blue spikes decorate the surface of the bench hosting a young pianist. Her bright smile crinkled the corners of her cinnamon eyes, her joy as distinguishable as her vibrant magenta shirt. My inner babushka managed to resist pinching her cheeks.

Edging closer to Beacon Falls, an ivory piano blanketed with a crocheted burst of warm orange and yellow sits across from Loopy Mango, the chunky yarn store. I was in the middle of explaining to my parents how I wanted to take a photo of the piano when my mother whipped out her phone and took several photos of my father modeling. Le sigh.

Piano near Beacon Falls, along the Fishkill Creek. Piano created by the artist Lori Merhige. Photo Credit: Izdihar Dabashi

Piano near Beacon Falls, along the Fishkill Creek. Piano created by the artist Lori Merhige.
Photo Credit: Izdihar Dabashi

Crimson wings hide out under a cover of branches across from Beacon Falls. The massive red piano settled beneath the serenity of the clusters of trees attracted several city goers to an otherwise abandoned spot. I expected a magical dragon to appear and summon me to a quest, or perhaps the white rabbit from Alice in Wonderland to lure me to another dizzying sight of magic. I stumbled across a family of three celebrating their father’s birthday, and another cluster of friends creating tunes out of thin air.

Locations For All Of The Pianos

BeaconArts volunteers (including local artists and musicians) provoked conversation and inspired feelings of awe by placing 11 pianos around Beacon. This year's locations have been City Hall, Beacon Historical Society, Polhill Park, the pop-up park at Cross and Main streets, Key Food, Howland Library, 380 Main St., Howland Cultural Center, Fishkill Falls Park, Memorial Clock (across from Loopy Mango), & Hudson Valley Brewery.

To follow the fate of the pianos as they were moved around the city, and to see other performances and activities around the pianos, visit the Keys to Beacon website.

To learn how to support the project with a donation, or to donate a piano, see their support page.

Windows on Main Street (WOMS) Returns for its 13th Year, Starting August 11, 2018

woms2018 MAIN.jpeg

Artists and Businesses Merge to Make Main Street the Gallery

On Second Saturday, August 11, Beacon’s 1.5 mile long Main Street becomes a 24-hour, 7-day a week gallery space for the next month! Running through September 8, 2018, site-specific art installations are revealed in 26 Main Street storefront windows taking part in the public art exhibit, Windows on Main Street (WOMS). As you're walking around, do you notice that certain storefront windows are filled with something extra special?

“Artists are paired with local businesses, and together they create a site-specific work of art,” says WOMS 2018 director Diana Currie, who is also a participating artist with a window this year (you may remember her “yarn bombing” work of Beacon’s iconic Dummy Light in 2015, which triggered a public response to the yarn cozy knitted around the Dummy Light for days after the initial setup). Now in its 13th year, WOMS is a project of BeaconArts, the organization dedicated to organizing, promoting and nurturing the city’s multifaceted arts community.

windows_on_main_map_2018.png

“Windows on Main Street is a fantastic way for local artists - both newcomers and established - to really get more involved in our arts community, and in our community in general,” said Currie.

How to Find the Artists and Windows

A list of this year’s participants, locations, and artist statements can be found at www.windowsonmainstreet.com. Maps of the event are available around town at various locations, including Beacon’s Visitors Center, and participating businesses. You can read about each artist from the Windows on Main Street website when you click on their location. In fact, you should read about the installation "In Memory of Anthony Marra Jr." put on by his sister Catherine E. Marra at Mountain Tops.

The Windows on Main headquarters and “Tiny Windows” exhibit is located at Oak Vino Wine Bar, 389 Main St. Oak Vino and Windows on Main Street will host an opening celebration on August 11, starting at 6 pm. In addition to the “Tiny Windows" exhibit, there will be a live drawing/auction by artist Donna Mikkelsen, a DJ, and complimentary food. Windows on Main Street shirts and totes will also be available for purchase to benefit the project.

Funding Provided By...

This monthlong public art event is a project of BeaconArts, a nonprofit organization whose mission is to foster and encourage the advancement of the City of Beacon as a center for arts and culture. This means that Windows on Main is supported by BeaconArts' membership income, in addition to any fundraisers and sponsorships that the WOMS team organizes. BeaconArts' Ex-Officio and past president Kelly Ellenwood further explains: "It also means that BeaconArts will always support the event - both financially, and with deeper volunteer commitment."

Windows on Main Street 2018 was also made possible with funds from the Decentralization Program, a re-grant program of the New York State Council on the Arts (with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature) and administered by Arts Mid-Hudson. Sponsorships are also possible for businesses who want to directly sponsor the event. A Little Beacon Blog is a proud media sponsor!

Look for These Windows

Tag us in photos you see, and use the hashtag #WOMS2018 to light up Instagram with the art and add to that hashtag collection. Here's what we have found so far, courtesy of Instagrammers:

Window: The Chocolate Studio, 494 Main Street Artist: Jan Dolan Photo Credit: Windows on Main

Window: The Chocolate Studio, 494 Main Street Artist: Jan Dolan Photo Credit: Windows on Main

Window: Big Mouth Coffee Roasters, 387 Main Street Artist: Sarah J. Berman Photo Credit: Windows on Main

Window: Vegetalien, 504 Main Street Artist: Kat Stoutenborough Photo Credit: Kat Stoutenborough

Window: Vegetalien, 504 Main Street Artist: Kat Stoutenborough Photo Credit: Kat Stoutenborough

Window: Meyer's Olde Dutch (MOD), 184 Main Street Artist: Erica Hauser Photo Credit: Windows on Main

Window: Meyer's Olde Dutch (MOD), 184 Main Street Artist: Erica Hauser Photo Credit: Windows on Main

Window: NFP (New Form Perspective), 504 Main Street Artist: Kristen J. Macauley Photo Credit: Windows on Main

Window: NFP (New Form Perspective), 504 Main Street Artist: Kristen J. Macauley Photo Credit: Windows on Main

Window: Oak Vino, 389 Main Street Artist: Donna Mikkelsen Photo Credit: BeaconArts

Window: Oak Vino, 389 Main Street Artist: Donna Mikkelsen Photo Credit: BeaconArts

Window: Ella's Bellas, 418 Main Street Artist: Judith Kepner Rose Photo Credit: Judith Kepner Rose Sculpture

Window: Ella's Bellas, 418 Main Street Artist: Judith Kepner Rose Photo Credit: Judith Kepner Rose Sculpture

Window: Artifact, 17 East Main Street (on way to Dogwood) Artist: Heather Delaney Photo Credit: Artifact Beacon

Windows On Main Street 2018 Seeking Submissions For Artists and Sponsors - Deadline June 1st

wom_2018_ad.jpg

Are you planning to take part in this year's Windows On Main Street here in Beacon? Get your submission ready, because the deadline to sign up as an artist or sponsr is Friday, June 1, 2018. The opening party will be held Saturday, August 11, 2018 at Oak Vino Wine Bar at 389 Main St.

A Little Beacon Blog is a proud sponsor of this event, and we look forward to seeing how it will turn out, and what kind of conversations it will start. Remember yarnbombing?

And the 2018 Theme Is...

There is no theme this year! Artists are encouraged to make this year's installation truly their own, with organizers' encouragement to share the best representation of the artist's work. Says Diana Currie, organizer of WOMS, "Our hope is that the freedom of having no theme this year will push participants to create some exceptional work."

Sponsorship packages  are open now and range from $25 to $250, which includes online and print advertisement options. Businesses who are interested in making their storefront windows available for the exhibition can email windowsonmainstreet@gmail.com. Participating artists can apply here. Artists must install their work at the partner business between Monday, August 6, and Friday, August 10.

Visit www.windowsonmainstreet.com or email windowsonmainstreet@gmail.com if you have questions or would like more information.

Ob...sessed With Beacon Open Studios - Which Studios We Are Visiting

Two of my favorite weekends in Beacon are

Beacon Open Studios,

and the

City Wide Yard Sale.

This is an opportunity to explore all of Beacon to find interesting things you have never seen before - and probably never will again. Beacon Open Studios has opened today through Sunday, May 21-22, 2016, so get your walking shoes on because you have a lot of exploring to do. If you're looking for a place to park all day, we made this

Free Public Parking Lot Guide

for you, with pictures and addresses of all of Beacon's free lots.

Beacon Open Studios is the reason why you're seeing the big red dot everywhere - from people's yards to galleries or storefronts. Artists of all kinds - painting, jewelry, sculpture, mixed media - open their homes or takeover a space to let you meet them and view their work. To find these studios, pick up a brochure from most any shop or restaurant in town, or the studio's headquarters,

2 Way Brewing Company

down on Beekman Street on the way to or from the Beacon train station.

Anna Bergin

is my current obsession. Pictured here in layers of color, Anna has popped up in a

PopUp Shop

this past winter with chocolate baker 5 Hens, which was a perfect match because Anna's paintings look like cupcake frosting that you could eat. The texture of the paint she mixes herself is thick and chalky - like sugar frosting. Painted with oil and ash in shades of pastel, these paintings are captivating. Hold on a minute - "Ash?" you ask? Yes, Anna mixes the paint with actual ash from her fireplace. Says Anna: "

I take the ash from my fireplace during winter and campfires during summer months. It's part of what I think is neat about it using what we burn." See her work now at 2 Way Brewing Company and Spire Studios. And be sure to

be on our newsletter

in case she pops up in another PopUp Shop.

https://www.facebook.com/annaberginart

Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

Beth Weintraub, a printmaker, has eye-catching artwork on display. This piece on the left currently hangs in 2 Way Brewing Company right now as part of the Beacon Open Studios exhibit, and at Spire Studios.

Photo Credit: Katie Hellmuth Martin

There is usually at least one hands-on art event for the kids, and this year, one of them includes an

opportunity to play with clay

from Beacon Craft Workshop, another regular in our

Kids Classes Guide.

Find it on Saturday in the upstairs classroom at the Howland Cultural Center, 477 Main St, Beacon, NY.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BFjnhSLLsDD/?tagged=beaconopenstudios

Photo Credit:

Beacon Craft Workshop

This beautiful

wood scrap sale from Wickham

down at the very end of Main Street by The Hop is a not-to-be-missed sale. If you are a collector of wood to make anything - shelves, tables, surfaces of any kind - this is one wood workshop you need to stop into.

Photo Credit:

Wickham

Working in the studio, artist Joe Radoccia

gives you a taste

of what it's like to walk into one of these live-action studios.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BCa7DfpHOjR/?tagged=beaconopenstudios

Photo Credit:

Neg Kalfou

Breathtaking. David Swoop will be at 22 High Street. One can only look forward what else he has on display.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BFkbc2NqdmW/?tagged=beaconopenstudios

Photo Credit:

Beacon Open Studios

For all you romantics out there,

Anna West captures the moment.

She will also be at Spire Studios at 45 Beekman Street in Studio 2.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BFoah1iKdtU/?tagged=beaconopenstudios

Photo Credit:

Beacon Open Studios

And for the jewelry collectors in the house, there are several in-home or jewelry studios open this weekend, a rare occasion indeed. This work space from

laiannaferruggia.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BFcRFmpq0GB/?tagged=beaconopenstudios

Photo Credit:

laiannaferruggia

Tag #beaconopenstudios in Instagram while you are  out and about so that we can see what you see!

Starting in May: Beacon Open Studios and Constellation Boat and Walking Tours to Bannerman Castle 2016


Behind most great artistic projects in Beacon, you'll find BeaconArts. Founded over a decade ago to serve as a promotion engine for galleries, and later businesses of varying kinds, BeaconArts is connected to just about everything happening in Beacon, specifically two big events opening this month: Beacon Open Studios (BeaconArts is a Fiscal Sponsor) and Constellation (BeaconArts is a Community Partner).

As BeaconArts is one of our Sponsor Spotlight partners here at A Little Beacon Blog, we take pleasure in highlighting two great happenings a month for them, and this month, the focus is on two major Things To Do that you can start planning for now: the city-wide Beacon Open Studios, and Constellation's boat and walking tours launching to Pollepel Island to see the stars making up a constellation installed on Bannerman Castle.

http://melissamcgillconstellation.com/visit/

Starting May 7, Running Through October 2016!

Melissa McGill’s land art project CONSTELLATION continues to light up every night at sunset and launches its second season of sunset boat tours. See the installation up close, tour the Bannerman Castle ruins on Pollepel Island, and watch the project come alive while on the Hudson River aboard the Estuary Steward. Tours begin May 7 and run through October 2016, departing from Beacon, NY, steps away from Dia:Beacon. Need some food? Stop into Homespun's location at Dia. Individual and group reservations are now available online. More information about the project, schedules and tickets, including artist-led tours and programs, can be found here.



http://www.beaconopenstudios.org/2016-artists.html

Beacon Open Studios Happens May 21-22, 2016!

Beacon Open Studios is a weekend-long event where the artists of Beacon, NY, open their studios to the public. Studios will be open all over Beacon to visit and a free catalog with map will be available to guide you around town.  Looking for free parking lots? We have a Guide for that that includes all pictures of locations of free public parking! For some artists, this is one of the only times you can not only see their works IRL (in real life), but visitors can go inside of their studios! Not all artists show from their workspaces, however; some partner with local restaurants and shops.

Here is a random sampling of artists you can find, of which there are over 50! Catalogs will be available throughout town for you to pick up and plot your artist hop! You will definitely want to have A Little Beacon Blog's Restaurant Guide open on your phone for ideas on where to fuel up.

http://www.beaconopenstudios.org/kat-stoutenborough.html
Kat Stoutenborough
50 Liberty Street

Caiming Cheung
5 Beekman Street


The Ground Radio Project
Kube-211 Fishkill Ave.
Room 202 C
(the old Beacon high school)

Margaux Lange
19 Lincoln Avenue
Glen Sneyd
50 Liberty Street

BeaconArts is a sponsor of A Little Beacon Blog, and this article was created for them as part of our Sponsor Spotlight program. It is with the support of businesses like this, that A Little Beacon Blog can bring you coverage of local happenings and events. Thank you for supporting businesses who support us! If you would like to become a Community Partner, please click here for more information.

The "Welcome to Beacon" Sign - Who Are The Artists Behind The Letter Blocks?

The letter blocks at the top of the train station are the first hint that major creativity and involvement await visitors and prospective new residents when they exit the train to head up to the town of Beacon. Where did these letter blocks come from? Who designed and built them? Was it a city commissioned project? Those have often been my questions since I moved to Beacon in 2010, and it’s time we found out. Art awareness is especially high during the spring and summer months with projects like Beacon Open Studios, Windows on Main, and Beacon3D, so we wanted to explore the origins during this high-art season.

Like most notable projects that just appear around Beacon, the “Welcome to Beacon” sign was not a city-funded art installation. However, it has roots in city leader George Mansfield and others. To find out the origins of the “Welcome to Beacon” sign, we first went to BeaconArts for a clue. Kelly Ellenwood, Vice President of the BeaconArts Community Association, referred us to Kalene Rivers, co-founder of Open Space, an exhibition space created to explore passions for art, culture and design. Kalene and her partner Daniel Weise had a history of organizing and curating public art in Beacon like Electric Windows.

Open Space was approached years a go by city councilman George Mansfield when he was running for his first term, after he had placed a large campaign sign in the very spot that the letter blocks are currently installed today. The owner of the property gave George permission to place his sign there. According to Kalene, “After the election, George had the idea to continue to utilize the space for art. Partly inspired by a ‘You Are Beautiful’ project, we decided that an eclectic ‘Welcome to Beacon’ sign would be wonderful in this location. George and I invited fifteen artists to create the first round of letters back in 2010.”

If you have been familiar with Beacon since then, you will know that in 2014, the “Welcome to Beacon” sign got a total refresh with new designs for each letter. Personally, the blocks inspired the first design for A Little Beacon Blog’s original logo (has since had its own redesign), so I was especially interested in the new design and who the creators were behind each look.

Kalene, with the ongoing permission of the property owner, again asked fifteen new artists to participate. Says Kalene, “Heidi Harrison and Chris Janks graciously volunteered to assist in the production, and the second round of letters were completed in November of 2014. George Mansfield and Patrick Freeman come down to the site on a cold morning and carefully installed the new sign. We had an unveiling on November 15th and it has proudly welcomed people to Beacon ever since.“

We have the names of each artist behind a letter in a spread below. If you follow the #BeaconNY community on Instagram, you may have gotten to know the styles of a few artists, and you have probably guessed which artist did what letter. Before you read the names, see if you can guess which artist did which block! Otherwise, satisfy your curiosity right here!

Jessica Wickham
Emily Sylvester
Kalene Rivers
Andrea Moreau
Ed Benavente
Dharman Abdu
Rick Rogers




Theresa Gooby
Carla Goldberg



Dylan Assael
Fabhaus
Katrina Zezza
Jon Reichert
Joe Pimentel
Chris Janks



Yarnbombing: A History That Came To Beacon And Connects It To The Wall Street Bull And Other Yarnbombed Landmarks

The original yarnbomb by Diana Currie on the
Dummy Light before it was mysteriously removed.
Over the weekend in Beacon, people were ravenously refreshing their Facebook feeds to see where "the yarnbomber" was going to strike next. A "yarnstorm" had formed after an art installation by Diana Currie that was part of Windows on Main Street 2015 (#WOMS2015) had been taken down, inspiring local knitters to band together to take to the streets at night to put more yarn up throughout the city. If you were in line to get coffee at a cafe or to support a local bake sale, people were discussing where they had been lucky enough to spot a yarnbomb before it was taken down. Diana's installation, a gray and blue yarn cozie for Beacon's famous Dummy Light, which is on the endangered species list as far as tech things go, was one of over 30 art installations created for the 11th annual Windows On Main Street exhibition. The theme this year was "Industrial/Metal", and the artists went to work creating their expressions in various windows throughout Beacon.

The Wall Street Bull got covered in carefully stitched yarn in 2010 by artist Agata Oleksiak aka Olek.
But Why Would Anyone Knit A Dummy Light?
Yarnbombing is a thing, but if you have never seen it before, it can be shocking. Yarnbombing has its own Wikipedia page which credits various people with starting the movement in Houston back in 2005, although it could be the 1990s. The first time it came on my radar was when I lived in New York in 2010 and read an article in the New York Times which covered the history of yarnbombing right after the Wall Street Bull got blanketed in a camouflage pattern of fuchsia, purple, black and teal by the artist Agata Oleksiak aka Olek.  When A Little Beacon Blog announced we were a media sponsor of Windows on Main 2015, we titled the post "#WOMS2015 Has Blogbombed A Little Beacon Blog" because a website can't be wrapped in actual yarn, but it can be wrapped in pictures. We would love to get yarnbombed though!

Yarnbomb on Dummy Light disappears after 48hrs.
Artists rush to react, first with a sign from Keith Decent,
then with replacement knitted pieces.
So What Happened?
The knitted piece got mysteriously taken down within 48 hours. I am speculating here to say that not everyone knows about yarnstorming or yarnbombing, and when one or a few people saw the knitted cozie on the Dummy Light, they felt uncomfortable about a landmark being graffitied in yarn, and took it down.

The removal of the yarnbomb set off a hailstorm in Facebook, both on people's personal feeds, and in various groups dedicated to things or passions in Beacon. The trouble with combining Facebook and passions is that the public forum became a very "loud" yet silent place of opinions and name-calling that one might never actually say out loud directly to another person.

Whoa - Sounds Dramatic - What Happened Next?
Conversations happened quickly and in many different threads. One man who is credited with igniting the negative talk, later rescinded his comment after learning that yarnbombing is a form of well-received artistic expression. He later gave suggestions that the yarnbombers consider knitting an American flag. Instead, fly-by-night yarnbombers decorated Beacon with cozy wraps or adornments. 
Artistic expression can incite emotions, and emotions were running wild. Name calling started, someone called everyone "artsy tartsy," and that's when the tote bags and iPhone covers got made.

The Conversation Took To The Streets
Knitting brigades formed and the yarnstorm grew. Signs, made by another artist, Keith Decent, accompanied new yarnbombs which brought the art installation to a new level. Dialogue was happening between the artist, the community who took up arms  - I mean yarn - and folks who were working through their own understanding of art.

Local reporter Brian Cronin (also a contributor to A Little Beacon Blog) was on the case, filing a special weekend report about the yarn bomber as events unfolded. Normally yarnbombing is a peaceful, colorful, comforting expression to the object on which it covers. The greatest part about its name is that people who do it are so harmless, that they get to call themselves "knitting ninjas" in books like "Knit the City: A Whodunnknit Set in London" by Deadly Knitshade, which is a graffiti knitting collective founded by Lauren O'Farrell from London, who pushed the yarnbombing movement from simple 'cozies' to the innovation of the 'stitched story'. The stitched story in Beacon became a live action page turner. Here are a few of the developments, as told through Facebook screenshots:
The reaction to name calling in Facebook.



Another attempt at wrapping the Dummy Light.
This time camouflaged as yellow street paint.
But it was still spotted and removed.



I felt lucky when I spotted this wrap, which lasted a few days.
Other artists who were inspired by the Dummy Light showed support.
This Dummy Light necklace from Caiming Cung Jewelry was wrapped in knitted yarn.


The Strangest Part Of All...
Diana has another installation up at Dogwood. It is two curtains with half a heart on each. When the curtains are still, the heart is formed. When the wind blows, the heart splits. I had seen Diana at the Dogwood prior to Windows on Main opening, and she very subtly told me that her art was up on the Dogwood exterior, and that it was a giant statement to the brouhaha that happens in Facebook groups. She did not want to make a big deal of the meaning, as it could launch a series of ironic dialogue. We discussed this phenomena of unfiltered commenting happening all over the country in many different kinds of groups, not just local ones.

The fact that 45 crochet squares of gray and teal that took 15 hours to make is the piece that started this interactive conversation is surprising. Yet for Windows on Main, a project that happens with the support of BeaconArts, the crocheted installation is a success. Not only did it start a dialogue, which is what art installations aim to do, but the dialogue became a running commentary of comments, of knitters going out into the night to put up more wraps and signs, of people getting joy out of spotting the yarnbombs and signs, of people removing those yarnbombs, and of memorabilia being created. I even put up a blanket! I don't knit, so I called it "yarning" and wrapped a pink and white blanket around the Dummy Light. It was only there for 12hrs, however.

In Other Beacon Trivia...
Diana's installation on the Dummy Light is across the street from 1 East Main, a former electric blanket factory and the location of the street art event put on by Electric Windows in 2010, where street artists painted canvases live while the public watches and eats from nearby restaurants. Those paintings are still in the windows as of 2015.

For a link to a lot of photos in the Windows on Main exhibit to see the amazing pieces of work by all of the artists, visit Windows on Main's Facebook page. There are also pamphlet maps all over the city to show you which artist is in which shop or location.

Watch Olek install her knitted blanket in 2010 on the Wall Street Bull at night. Truly fascinating!

Back To Our Regularly Scheduled Programming
Now that it all seems to have lifted (or been lifted - no pun intended!), we can all get back to our regular weekends of drinking beer on the back porch, grilling hot dogs, roasting fresh corn, and having pie from the Beacon Pie Company. And if you think you are missing a weekend festival, you probably are, so best to check A Little Beacon Blog's Annual Events Calendar of things happening in and around Beacon, NY.

Windows on Main: 2015! #WOMS2015 Has Blog-Bombed A Little Beacon Blog (Sponsor)



It is time! Windows On Main is popping up in storefronts all over Beacon, and when they aren't yarn-bombing lamp posts, they have blog-bombed A Little Beacon Blog, where we are serving as an Official Media Sponsor! Expect to see plenty of art here at the blog and in our Instagram and Twitter feeds.

Diana Currie's yarn-bombing in-progress

For the past eleven summers, Windows on Main Street invites local artists to create art installations designed around the locations they occupy. This yearly exhibition stimulates interaction between artists, businesses, and the community, and can certainly be credited towards helping shape Beacon, the way that many public art events have built up Beacon that are connected to the fiscal sponsor, BeaconArts.
Diane Landro's artwork in-progress

THEME
This year, for #WOMS2015's 11th annual exhibition, the contributing artists will be creating their window displays based around the theme of Industrial/Metal. Maps are available throughout the city, and art is on display from the far East end of Main Street to the far West end of Main Street from August 8 - September 12.

Ryan Samuelson work in progress


PARTY!
Windows on Main 2015 kicks off on August's Second Saturday with a party from 7pm-9pm at Quinn's located at 330 Main Street. A "Small Works Show," an exhibition by the artists of WOMS2015, will be on display at BAU: Beacon Artist Union, 506 Main St. from August 8 – September 12 with a formal reception held on Saturday August 15 from 6pm-8pm. A Closing Party for Windows On Main at large will be held on Saturday, September 12, 7pm-9pm at Dogwood, 47 East Main St.

WOMS 2015 Coasters- Spot them at all the local watering holes

ARTISTS
Beacon Free Media  ::  Dream in Plastic

Ed Benavente   ::  The Carriage Works Building

Erica Blair  ::   Fabhaus

Jennifer Sarah Blakeslee  ::   Beacon Bread Company

Riana Casas  ::   Max's On Main

Diana Currie  ::   Dogwood

Diana Currie   ::  The Dummy Light

Jared Deal  ::   Blackbird Attic

Lena DeLeo  ::   Mountain Tops

Daisy Farrell   ::  Gilded Twig

Marcy B. Freedman  ::  Lauren & Riley

Joseph Gasparino   ::  Drink More Good

Theresa Gooby  ::   Barb's Butchery

Ethan Harrison & Chris Janks  ::  Peoples Bicycle

Erica Hauser  ::  Utensil

Laurie Hogan  ::  Bank Square Coffeehouse

Micheal Kriegh  :: Quinn's

Diane Landro  :: Tito Santana Taqueria

Stephen Lewis & Yali Lewis  ::  Beacon Instituye For Rivers & Estuaries

Kristen Macauley   ::  After Eden Gallery

Teresa Marra   ::  American Gypsy Vintage

Vickie Raabin  ::   Miss Vickie's Music

Brianna Rascoe   ::  Nella Bellas Boutique

Marlene Ratliff   ::  Sacred Journey

Ryan Samuelson  ::  Terra Luminarium Gallery

Chris Sanders  ::  The Beacon Bagel

Teresa Schmittroth  :: Artisan Wine Shop

Amanda Spinosa & Cory Spraker  ::  Audioccult

Kat Stoutenborough  ::  RiverWinds Gallery

Team WOMS  ::   The Hop

Coulter D. Young III  ::  LocoMotive CrossFit

Coulter D. Young IV  ::  Raddish

Keely Sheehan display from WOMSX
Teresa Marra display from WOMSX
Tess Elliot in front of her winning display at Peoples Bicycle last year. 

SPONSORS
We are happy to have WOMS2015 blog-bombing A Little Beacon Blog as their media sponsor!
See behind-the-scenes photos of a yarn-bombing in the works, and other artwork in progress on the WOMS2015 instagram account. The big reveal takes place during August's Second Saturday and will run through September 12th.

Team WOMS: Teresa Marra & Diana Currie
The event is organized by Teresa Marra and Diana Currie. WOMS2015 is presented by Rhinebeck Bank and sponsored by The Roundhouse, Beacon Free Media, Beacon Independent Film Festival, A Little Beacon Blog, Kimberly Coccagnia Photography, LocoMotive CrossFit, Utensil, Oak Vino Wine Bar, Spire Studios, River Therapeutic Massage, Gilded Twig, Rogue Social, Quinn’s, BAU: Beacon Artist Union, Dogwood, Art In Context, Kelly Ellenwood, Ryan Pinnetti, Barbara Caprara, and Barbara Fisher.

BEACONARTS
BeaconArts, formed in 2002, is a nonprofit membership organization whose mission is to foster and encourage the advancement of the City of Beacon as an arts and cultural center. Members include artists, galleries, specialty shops, restaurants, services, and supporters of the arts. Projects and events include Beacon Second Saturday, Art Along the Hudson, Beacon Open Studios, Windows on Main Street, Beacon Riverfest, Beacon Independent Film Festival, and Beacon 3D. The BeaconArts website and free, weekly email newsletter promote these events and those from members. BeaconArts distributes a quarterly Beacon Guide that shows all member galleries, shops, restaurants and more. The Guide is free and available at Dia:Beacon, the Beacon Visitor’s Center, locations along Beacon’s Main Street, and throughout the Hudson Valley.