Window Art Project on Fayetteville Street

Storefront Art Project
In conjunction with the opening of Fayetteville Street the storefront art project was designed to bring color, design and life to the windows of Downtown Raleigh and give Fayetteville Street a celebratory look and feel.
Special Thanks to the City of Raleigh Arts Commission and
Coordinating Commissioner Jesse Cannon
In conjunction with the opening of Fayetteville Street the storefront art project was designed to bring color, design and life to the windows of Downtown Raleigh and give Fayetteville Street a celebratory look and feel.
Special Thanks to the City of Raleigh Arts Commission and
Coordinating Commissioner Jesse Cannon
Title: “What’s Afoot in Raleigh?”
Artist: Charlene Bowling
Location: 227 Fayetteville Street
Artist: Charlene Bowling
Location: 227 Fayetteville Street
Description: A multi-media, multi-dimensional scene of a lively walk through Raleigh architecture and landmarks.
Comment: A walk through Raleigh remains an authentic adventure through layers of history, government, commerce and culture. As in art, there are mysteries and questions unanswered—Who came here before? Who left their mark? What will Raleigh become?
Title: “Looking through a Glass Darkly”
Artist: Kay Hutchison
Artist: Kay Hutchison
The theme of the window is voyeurism. The artist’s concept plays with the idea that most of the time people are not allowed to look through other people’s windows. Yet, the Fayetteville Street window project is designed to encourage people to look and linger at the store windows.
Title: “Beyond the Capital: Raleigh’s Industrial Landscape”
Artist: Sarah Powers
Location: 217 Fayetteville Street
Artist: Sarah Powers
Location: 217 Fayetteville Street
In this leafy city, on a street designated for promenade, commerce and celebration, the artist presents evidence of Raleigh’s industrial landscape. Images of Raleigh Bonded Warehouse, power plants and lines, concrete facilities and abandoned factories are included on a series of Plexiglas® panels.
Title: “Heck-Andrews House”
Artist: Anna Podris
Location: 239 Fayetteville Street
Artist: Anna Podris
Location: 239 Fayetteville Street
This is an oil painting of the Heck-Andrews house located on Blount Street. It is a celebration of all of Raleigh’s historic architectural treasures. The house’s details and flourishes beg to be translated in paint, by itself a work of art. Revitalized historic buildings make Raleigh’s downtown a unique and colorful place. This painting is a testament to Raleigh’s commitment to preservation.
Title: “Enjoying the View and Parade of the Chicks”
Artist: Keith Norval
Location: 234 Fayetteville Street
Artist: Keith Norval
Location: 234 Fayetteville Street
These paintings celebrate the opening of Fayetteville Street as the main street in Raleigh. The larger painting features Reginald T. Rat, Snail, Rumple the Turtle, Piggy Pig and Bug out on the new street enjoying the vista view of the Capitol Building.
The other piece depicts three red chicks on a parade down the street. The canvas is divided into three shapes in the background to represent store fronts.
Title: “Scenes of Raleigh”
Artist: Larry Dean
Location: 201 Fayetteville Street
Artist: Larry Dean
Location: 201 Fayetteville Street
The artist says: “These paintings reflect the beauty and the energy of my favorite places downtown. As a lifelong North Carolina resident and a Raleighite since my teens, I paint landscapes and cityscapes, primarily of Raleigh. All my work is done with acrylics. My art has a modern and color impressionistic feel.”
Title: “Vanity Slipper 1942”
Artist: Philip Lopez
Location: 114 Fayetteville Street
Artist: Philip Lopez
Location: 114 Fayetteville Street
Oil on panel 115 x 82
Title: “Reinvention: An Exploration in Time, Place and Culture”
Artist: Leigh Ashley Newsome
Location: 333 Fayetteville Street
Artist: Leigh Ashley Newsome
Location: 333 Fayetteville Street
The concept for this design was to illustrate the important influence that style and fashion have had on downtown Raleigh throughout its history. The project is a mixture of fiber art and fashion design. The clothing on the mannequins was designed by the artist and aims to illustrate how downtown Raleigh was at the turn of the century, is today in a businesslike setting, and will be more artful in the future. The hanging gowns in the background represent a map of downtown, especially focusing on the Fayetteville Street area.
Title: “Self Portrait”
Artist: Andrew Creswell
Artist: Andrew Creswell
This portrait of a teenager enjoying leisure time won first place in a Visual Arts Exchange competition among high school students.
Title: “International Festival Posters”
Artist: Bob Rankin
Location: 121 Fayetteville Street
Artist: Bob Rankin
Location: 121 Fayetteville Street
These colorful posters were designed for the International Festival by Bob Rankin, a Raleigh artist. The International Festival, an annual event, has been celebrating the ethnic diversity of this area since 1996.
Title: “Raleigh, The City of Oaks”
Artist: Scott Nurkin
Artist: Scott Nurkin
The artist has given us a full length portrayal of Sir Walter Raleigh surrounded by oak leaves on a 6 ft. by 40 ft. canvas, which hangs above.
Title: “untitled”
Artist: Katie Covington
Artist: Katie Covington
In the windows to the right, Katie Covington, a Raleigh native and NCSU College of Design graduate, explores the relationship between humans and the things we produce and ultimately leave behind, weaving together drawing, painting, metals and found objects.
Title: “Portal”
Artist: Virginia Gibbons
Artist: Virginia Gibbons
Coil-built porcelain
Fused glass
Title: “Dream Boat”
Artist: Virginia Gibbons
Artist: Virginia Gibbons
Hand-built stoneware
Glass
Title: “Belly of the Beast”
Artist: Virginia Gibbons
Artist: Virginia Gibbons
Hand-built stoneware and porcelain
Title: “untitled”
Artist: Will Warden
Artist: Will Warden
Will is a student at Lacy Elementary School and may be a future artist of note. One of his drawings is now in an exhibit of children’s art at the Phillips Collection in Washington D.C., along with childhood drawings by Pablo Picasso and Paul Klee.
Title: “Waiting to Love”
Title: “Extraordinary Felines”
Title: “Extraordinary Felines”
Wake County SPCA Adoption Center.