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Sunday, October 30, 2011

Cortlandt Street

It is only fitting that Cortlandt Street, the street where I live, should be the starting point of my hunt for yard art in the Heights.

I have lived on Cortlandt Street for almost three years now.  My first apartment complex on Cortlandt was small, less than 20 units, centered around an ivy-covered courtyard.  The residents decorated the courtyard with stone cherubs, a magenta garden orb, and even a small stone gargoyle.  For me, that courtyard encapsulates what the "yard art ethos" is all about: the urge to personalize one's outdoor spaces, to make a house (or an apartment) a home.

Cortlandt Street is fertile ground for a wide variety of yard art, from contemporary metal sculptures to devotional statues to whimsical collections of found objects:

The Blessed Virgin greets visitors to this home, on the 1500 block

St. Joseph the Worker, at All Saints Catholic church on the corner of 10th and Cortlandt.


A disco ball glitters at dusk, on the 1800 block
Glass bottles of all sizes are recycled as sculpture, on the 1800 block

Pinwheels, potted plants, and an owl wearing sunglasses brighten up this yard just north of 20th Street.

One of my favorite front-yard embellishments on Cortlandt, on the 1600 block




The dog owners are also the proud owners of a penguin who accepts the mail!

Bright red ribbons of metal are frozen in festive form, on the 1300 block
This sculpture, on the 700 block, reminds me of an oversized sundial that has been rotated and unhinged.
On the 800 block, a sphere composed of interlocking metal rings

Another blue-cloaked Mother of God, on the 1400 block
This pink flamingo has taken up residence near the Virgin Mary, above.

An iron cactcus, live cactus plant, and what appears to be a venus fly trap
create a playful homage to the Southwest, on the 1500 block.

Have you seen any of these artworks during your strolls or bicycle rides through the Heights?  Which one of these pieces is your favorite, and why?

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Point of Departure: Inconic Yard Art in Houston

I admit, it's probably weird to begin a blog about the Heights with a bunch of photos from not-the-Heights. The Heights may boast a particularly concentrated collection of yard art, but it's certainly not the only neighborhood in Houston to find these hidden gems.  Consider these familiar Houston icons:

Just south of the University of Houston, on an otherwise ordinary residential street, sits The Orange Show.
Conceived and constructed over decades from salvaged materials by one man, The Orange Show was dedicated to sharing with the world the many virtues of the orange.  Today, it is the name sake of the non-profit Orange Show Center for Visionary Art.

The Orange Show Center also cares for the famous Beer Can House, the singular vision of a man who loved to drink beer and had a talent for metal-working.

And then there's the brightly painted home of Cleveland Turner in Houston's Third Ward, which is decorated with a changing array of found objects.

Turner is known as "The Flower Man" for his participation in another of Houston's folk art pastimes - the Art Car Parade.  Turner parades on a bicycle adorned with festive fake flowers.

Many thanks to my dear friend and accomplished curator Sofia, who took many of the photos shared in this post, and who inspires me to make art appreciation an everyday event.

Inaugural Post!

Welcome, neighbors!

This blog is dedicated to celebrating one of the many charms of the Houston Heights: the proliferation of yard art.  From plastic flamingos to full-scale sculptural installations, the Heights boasts a unique culture of publicly sharing private artwork.  This blog aspires to catalog the yard art of the Heights, street by street, and along the way to create a community gathering space for residents to share their stories and their treasures.