CALL FOR ARTISTS NOW OPEN! Due April 30th. Flint Public Art Project seeks artists/muralists to participate in a series of week-long mural festivals in Flint, Michigan. There will be a mini festival each month, from May through September.
CALL FOR ARTISTS NOW OPEN!
Cool City Art Auction
Click Here to Purchase Tickets!!!
FLY ART & FASHION POP UP
Greater Flint Arts Council 816 Saginaw St, Flint, MI 48502
FLY Art & Fashion Pop-Up happening December 7, 2019 from 6-9 at the GFAC
Free City Mural Festival – 2019
On October 12, 2019, Flint Public Art Project hosted our inaugural Free City Mural Festival. The festival took place along and around S. Saginaw St. focusing on the Southside of Flint.
Neighborhood Art Parade 2019: Personal Representation through Flags
Flint Public Art Project’s 2018 Neighborhood Art Parades partners with Light Up the City, a community policing initiative of the Michigan State Police, to create personal representation through flag to broadcast voices of healing and repair within the city of Flint.
Easter Art Hunt
Flint, Michigan
Flint Public Art Project (FPAP) is excited to announce the first ever Easter Art Hunt on April 21st, 2019. Ten wheat paste posters, designed by Cuban-Flint artist Agenor Martí Fernández, will be strategically placed throughout the City of Flint, in locations highlighting the the community’s effort to improve our city. The goal of the project […]
Totem Books Mural Contest
Totem Books, 620 W. Court St., Flint, MI
Flint Public Art Project will host a mural competition at Totem Books in Flint, Michigan in September of 2018. Three artists or artist teams will be selected as finalists from contest applicants by the staff at Totem Books. The public will then be able to vote for their favorite of the three finalists.
Neighborhood Art Parade + Light Up the City 2017
Each summer, Flint Public Art Project partners with community organizations to creatively transform under-appreciated sites into neighborhood attractions.
Free City 2017: Ecology + Technology
Chevy Commons at Stevenson St., Flint, Michigan
In August 2017, the fifth annual Free City festival will address themes of ecology and technology, inviting collaborations between artists, designers, scientists, ecologists, and engineers that explore environmental remediation, interactive installations, citizen science, organizing tools, wearable technology, DIY robotics, and other emerging fields at the intersection of art, ecology, and technology.
Free City 2016: Motion & Play
CHEVY COMMONS (STEVENSON ST. BETW. UNIVERSITY & KEARSLEY ST.), FLINT, MI
The 2016 Free City festival takes motion and play as its theme, inviting installations, sculptures, projections, and performances employing movement of objects and people through unexpected, unexplainable, and uncanny means.
Neighborhood Art Parade 2016
Since 2013, Flint Public Art Project and its neighborhood partners have produced a series of monthly Art Parades each summer. Catch us in six new locations on the last Thursday of every month starting April 28th through the end of September.
Music & Movies @ Spencer’s Art House
520 University Ave., Flint MI
October is Altered Realities month. Join us as we explore the altered realities we create in our minds and sometimes find ourselves thrown into unwillingly.
Inside Out: Hasselbring Park
Hasselbring Community Center, 1002 Home Ave. Flint, MI
The sixth and final public art parade of 2015 features portraits of kids from the Boys and Girls Club and seniors from the famous Hasselbring Hustlers dance group used to beautify vacant homes in the neighborhood around Hasselbring Park.
Woven: Ramona Park
August’s Flint Public Art Parade brings us to the winding streets around Ramona Park in historic Metawanene Hills neighborhood, featuring a large-scale fabric piece hanging from the eaves of Cook School created by Montana-native Amanda Browder in collaboration with area textile artists Ariel Sammone, Ash Arder, and Gregory Hatch, and alongside Metawanene Hills Neighborhood Association co-chairs Wendy Johnson and Bill Hammond.
Revolve: East Side Art Parade
Franklin St. between Dakota and Delaware
See Flint Public Art Project’s amazing new installation, the Fibonacci Flint spiral conceived by pioneering new media artist G.H. Hovagimyan, march with Nightfire Drumline to reclaim the streets with the Columbia Heights Neighborhood Association, then vibe out to the dope rhymes of Ethereal during this month’s East Side Art Parade.
Summer Volunteer Meeting + The Pruitt-Igoe Myth Screening
520 University Ave. Flint, MI
Come to the backyard of Spencer’s Art House on Friday, June 12 at 7 pm for a public meeting to coordinate summer projects and a screening of The Pruitt-Igoe Myth, a riveting documentary on the modernist St. Louis public housing complex designed by Minoru Yamasaki, demolished in 1972.
Art in the Parklet
Welch Avenue at Chevrolet Avenue, Flint
Art in the Parklet, a day of art, food, and growth at the intersection of Welch and Chevrolet, reimagined as one of the new gateways to the city.
Neighborhood Art Parade 2015
Hasselbring Park, 1002 Home Ave. Flint MI
Long-time Flint residents remember social clubs that used to bring neighbors and performers together for walks on the Northside. Neighborhood Art Parade revives this tradition, creating a fun, ceremonial experience to increase public safety and community cohesion.
Free City 2015: Being Here
FRIDAY: Spring Grove (2nd St. at Ann Arbor St.); SATURDAY: Chevy Commons (Stevenson St. between University Ave. and Kearsley St.)
Free City 2015: Being Here invites work that calls to mind the presence of the individual in a specific time and place, exploring the effects of new media and technology on experience.
Nadia Alamah
Stone Street Residency welcomes local artist and writer Nadia Alamah to Carriage Town for a fall/ winter residency with Flint Public Art Project.