Joe Pagac

Joe Pagac (/ˈpk/ PAY-jək; born January 13, 1981) is an Arizona based performance artist, muralist and fine artist.[1] He is best known for his large scale and rotating murals, which are often created live during public events. A graduate of the University of Arizona's art program, Joe Pagac traveled extensively worldwide honing his craft before becoming a fixture to the downtown Tucson arts scene. Almost as well known for his philanthropy as well as his artistic talents, Joe Pagac also is involved with many local organizations, including the Tucson Stray Canine Saviors and the Arizona Homeless Project - Breaking the Cycle.

Biography

Pagac studied art at both the University of Arizona[2] and in Italy.[3]

Rotating Concert Murals

Pagac is best known for his large scale rotating concert murals which he paints live during public events.[4] Using house paint, paint rollers and large brushes, Pagac paints finished works that are as large as 60 feet wide and 14 feet tall in as little as 8 hours.[5] The murals generally advertise upcoming shows for touring bands but the artwork is designed by Pagac. The rotating murals have depicted a wide range of musical artists including, The Avett Brothers, Sonic Youth, George Thorogood and Cypress Hill. Because the murals advertise bands and are in highly visible locations, bands[6] and graffiti artists[3] began using some of the rotating murals to voice their concern over SB1070 after the law was passed in 2010. Pagac won Best Mural of 2010 awards in both Tucson[7] and Phoenix.[8]

Controversy

Pagac's promotional murals have come under fire for crossing the line between art advertising and in July 2010 the city of Tucson cited multiple revolving murals with sign code violations,stating that despite the artistic nature of the murals they promoted commercial products.[5] A mural promoting the band The New Pornographers also stirred controversy over what is and is not appropriate to depict in public art when an offended mother filed a formal complaint and demanded the mural be removed due to the word "pornographers".[5]

References

  1. Matas, Kimberly (May 15, 2010), "Tucson Artist Sees The Big Picture", Arizona Daily Star, Tucson
  2. Carrión, Luis (May 27, 2010), "Joe Pagac: Artist For Hire", Arizona Public Media, Arizona
  3. 1 2 Lawton, Claire (September 30, 2010), "Tag, You're Art: Local Street Artists Are Tagging Over Murals and Calling It Art", Phoenix New Times, Phoenix
  4. Tulipan, Micheal (January 31, 2010), "Reviving Phoenix Through Art", The New York Times, New York
  5. 1 2 3 Woodberry, Jazmine (September 13, 2010), "White out: City censors artist's creativity", Arizona Daily Wildcat, Tucson
  6. Chambeau, Ro (May 22, 2010), "Rialto Theater: Activism on your dime?", Gila Courier, Tucson
  7. Willhite, Greg; Smith, Nick (October 15, 2010), "Best Mural Joe Pagac's Rialto Theatre and Bookmans murals", Tucson Weekly, Tucson
  8. Laudig, Michele; Leatherman, Benjamin; Robert, Pela (September 30, 2010), "Best Rotating Murals - 2010 Eye Lounge", New Times, Phoenix, p. 45
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