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Open Studio
Artwork by Andy Duong at 16 Powerhouse.
MIDTOWN ASSOCIATION INITIATIVE BEAUTIFIES EVERYDAY OBJECTS
You probably walk by utility boxes every day without noticing. But if that utility box is splattered with vivid colors and a woman’s piercing stare, her head crowned in wildfl owers, you might stop and stare.
Beautifying everyday objects to bring art into public spaces is the goal of Midtown Association’s Art in Unexpected Places initiative. Launched in 2016, the program has covered 21 trash receptacles, 13
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By Jessica Laskey Open Studio
utility boxes and six dumpsters across Midtown.
Baime Michaels and colleagues envisioned the project as a way to spruce up Midtown’s alleyways. They started with a dumpster behind 16 Powerhouse, a Bay Miri development at 16th and P streets.
Duong was designing marketing materials for restaurants, bars and nightclubs at the time, so when building owner (and longtime friend) Miri came to him with the project, it was a perfect fi t. Duong wanted to create something fun and “Instagrammable” that paid homage to Sacramento’s natural beauty.
“It’s a dichotomy of trash and refuse being notoriously ugly and making that more beautiful, so I went with watercolors,” he says.
Duong’s two designs—one watercolor nature scene and a rendering of bike chains and hearts— were a hit, and led to similar projects for him at other Miri developments, including The Hardin at 7th and K streets.
Following the success of the dumpster wraps, Midtown Association turned to another mundane object: utility boxes. In 2021, the association approached artist Brandon Gastinell about wrapping electric utility boxes at Winn Park. The digital pop artist had recently completed a large-scale vinyl wrap mural at 16th and J streets for Wide Open Walls, so he was familiar with the process and jumped at the chance.
Artwork by Melissa Uroff at Fremont Park.
“It doesn’t happen often for digital artists to have a permanent spot for their art—that’s usually reserved for painters,” says Gastinell, whose work incorporates collage and images of pop icons, including Sacramento favorite Bill Murray. “Street art and art in the public space will never go away no matter how far along tech goes. Public art is still important.”
No doubt Melissa Uroff agrees. She was one of the fi rst artists to participate in a local wrap project in 2015. When Midtown Association asked if she’d be interested in wrapping electrical pedestals in Fremont Park, she was excited to have a platform to celebrate female artists.
“I thought about how many times I’d go to that park with my creative mom crew (friends she made prepandemic who were pregnant around the same time) to plan out our next moves,” says the North City Farms resident. “All the women on the boxes are moms who work in creative fi elds and know how hard it is to be a mom and an artist. I think it’s so fun to think about their kids going down the slide and saying, ‘That’s my mom!’”
In February, the Midtown Association completed Love is in Our Roots, a series of sidewalk utility box wraps in Lavender Heights showcasing local produce painted by artist Jodie Miller. There are plans for more projects, and Baime Michaels is toying with the idea of wrapping every dumpster across Midtown. Time—and funding—will tell.
“We hope there’s a time people fi nd themselves wandering through Midtown and see a huge mural or art on a trashcan in a park and get excited about it,” Baime Michaels
Artwork by Jodie Miller in Lavender Heights.
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says. “These forgotten spaces can be a canvas for art that represents Midtown’s vibrancy.”
For more information, visit exploremidtown.org. Check out the artists on Instagram @andylikedthis, @brandongastinell, @jodiecreates and @melissauroff.
Jessica Laskey can be reached at jessrlaskey@gmail.com. Previous profi les can be found and shared at InsideSacramento.com. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @ insidesacramento. n