Sensational artistic interpretations
of Route 66 "The Mother Road" a world past and present
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[June 09, 2016]
LINCOLN
- Logan County Arts celebrated Route 66 with their latest themed art
show opening at the Lincoln Art Institute Thursday evening, “Get
Your Kicks on Route 66.” What was once a highway that connected
Illinois to California and was used every day for commerce and
travel by an American public in love with travel and the automobile
has now become a world class tourist destination.
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Route 66 began in the late 1920’s and knitted together
communities from Chicago through the southwest and on to the Pacific
Ocean. The age of the interstates made this old road obsolete and
much of it was cast aside. The Mother Road as it began to be known
has now begun a second life as the best way to see the United States
just as it was during the heyday of this highway. Instead of
bypassing towns large and small as do the interstates, Route 66
passed through these pieces of America. Now, the highway has become
a must travel route for visitors to America from all over the world.
The artists of Logan County Arts had much to say about the highway.
Photography, paintings, and sculpture were in abundance during the
show. Poet Vern Phillips spoke about his own personal experience
with Route 66. His poem “The Road No Longer Traveled” evoked road
trips his family used to take each summer. “I grew up three houses
from Route 66. I could lie in my bedroom at night and hear the
trucks leave the Tropics Restaurant and grind through their gears as
they sped up on their way to Chicago,” he said. “It was a different
time and I wanted to try to recapture that in my poetry. We used to
leave each summer on a three week family road trip on Route 66 and
never lock the doors at our house,” he added.
Moses Pinkerton, owner of the Lincoln Art Institute, wants to travel
the road to the Santa Monica pier one day taking in the whole of
America west of Illinois. His public art installation on Sangamon
Street in Lincoln “Cow in Corn” pays tribute to the old road.
Pinkerton also created a piece of sculpture for the show with arrows
and distances to world class art museums around the world with
Lincoln serving as the center.
One unique art work actually includes a piece of pavement from Route
66. Bev Noble created a compilation of media for her work “Still Get
My Kicks.” The border of her construction is a highway map of
Illinois surrounding the asphalt.
Several artists chose to showcase Logan County in their art work
including the piece of the old highway that passes through Atlanta.
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Geoff Ladd from “Illinois Route 66 Scenic Byway” stopped by to
support the Lincoln Art Institute and its Route 66 theme. The
organization placed on loan one of their Route 66 signs in the
manner of the original shield signs that graced U.S. Route 66. Ladd said, “Logan County Arts and the Lincoln
Art Institute have already made a significant contribution to
Route 66 and to Logan County and Lincoln with the ‘Cow in Corn’
sculpture. We are happy to be here to support this latest
gathering of art to showcase Route 66.”
Ladd is also in the forefront of the restoration of The Mill in
Lincoln, a historic structure that served as a popular
restaurant from Route 66 days.
One of the works in the show by artist and photographer Kira
Jackson was taken at The Mill.
The Route 66 art show will be on display during the day on
Saturday from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. as an added attraction to the
“Up in Smoke” event on the square in downtown Lincoln.
The Lincoln Art Institute is located across from the Logan
County Courthouse between the Post Office and Farm Bureau at 112
S. McLean Street, Lincoln.
The show will be available for viewing for the rest of June.
Contact Moses Pinkerton at 217-651-8355 for information.
[Curtis Fox]
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