About Graham

Graham Coreil-Allen (he/him) is a Baltimore-based public artist making places more inclusive and livable through public art, placemaking, and civic engagement. Coreil-Allen collaborates with neighbors to interpret and activate public space through placemaking projects for pedestrian safety and play. From traffic calming pavement art and participatory urban design to creative wayfinding and interactive sculptures, Coreil-Allen infuses public space with play… more
Sun Stomp
Solar and Storage Statistics
- Sun Stomp featured 527 feet of LED lighting.
- All 16 solar panels provided 4,640 Watts per sun hour or 23,200 Watts per day in April.
- The average home in Baltimore uses 7,546 kilowatts per year; the same amount of electricity produced by these 16 solar panels and stored by the battery bank.
- The 16 solar panels installed on a home would save $1,052 annually in electricity charges.During Light City the Sun Stomp solar panels will prevented 200 pounds of CO2 emissions from local electricity generation.
The Baltimore-based Sun Stomp Collective brings expertise in solar energy, interactive media, and participatory environments. Matthew Weaver has over a decade of experience in renewable energy engineering, including hydrogen and solar; and grassroots organizing around social justice and sustainability. Mark Brown is a video artist, DJ, curator, and AV expert at the Peabody Conservatory. His video work embraces the Internet as both gallery and medium, creating new works from the cracks, glitches, and fall-out of digital realities. Graham Coreil-Allen is a public artist and organizer making cities more inclusive and livable through public art, radical walking tours, and civic engagement.
Sun Stomp
http://grahamprojects.com/projects/sunstomp
April 14-21, 2018
Light City Baltimore, McKeldin Square, 101 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD
Scaffolding, bleachers, solar panels, solar hardware, projection screen, projector, LED neon, contact microphones, video processor
34’x24’x75’
Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Sun Stomp Light City 2018Sun Stomp was a solar powered light and interactive audio-visual environment that featured an interactive projection on one side and an array of sixteen 290 watt solar panels on the other. Participants were invited to stomp on the bleachers to trigger sun-inspired visuals and amplified sounds of the Sun. Sun Stomp April 14-21, 2018 Light City Baltimore, McKeldin Square, 101 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD Scaffolding, bleachers, solar panels, solar hardware, projection screen, projector, LED neon, contact microphones, video processor 34’x24’x75’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts Video by Graham Coreil-Allen
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Sun StompSun Stomp was a solar powered light and interactive audio-visual environment that featured an interactive projection on one side and an array of sixteen 290 watt solar panels on the other. Participants were invited to stomp on the bleachers to trigger sun-inspired visuals and amplified sounds of the Sun. Sun Stomp April 14-21, 2018 Light City Baltimore, McKeldin Square, 101 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD Scaffolding, bleachers, solar panels, solar hardware, projection screen, projector, LED neon, contact microphones, video processor 34’x24’x75’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Sun Stomp - bleacher interactionSun Stomp was a solar powered light and interactive audio-visual environment that featured an interactive projection on one side and an array of sixteen 290 watt solar panels on the other. Participants were invited to stomp on the bleachers to trigger sun-inspired visuals and amplified sounds of the Sun. Sun Stomp April 14-21, 2018 Light City Baltimore, McKeldin Square, 101 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD Scaffolding, bleachers, solar panels, solar hardware, projection screen, projector, LED neon, contact microphones, video processor 34’x24’x75’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Sun Stomp - LED neon matrixSun Stomp was a solar powered light and interactive audio-visual environment that featured an interactive projection on one side and an array of sixteen 290 watt solar panels on the other. Participants were invited to stomp on the bleachers to trigger sun-inspired visuals and amplified sounds of the Sun. Sun Stomp April 14-21, 2018 Light City Baltimore, McKeldin Square, 101 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD Scaffolding, bleachers, solar panels, solar hardware, projection screen, projector, LED neon, contact microphones, video processor 34’x24’x75’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Sun Stomp - LED neon solar panelsSun Stomp was a solar powered light and interactive audio-visual environment that featured an interactive projection on one side and an array of sixteen 290 watt solar panels on the other. Participants were invited to stomp on the bleachers to trigger sun-inspired visuals and amplified sounds of the Sun. Sun Stomp April 14-21, 2018 Light City Baltimore, McKeldin Square, 101 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD Scaffolding, bleachers, solar panels, solar hardware, projection screen, projector, LED neon, contact microphones, video processor 34’x24’x75’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Sun Stomp - solar panels daytimeSun Stomp was a solar powered light and interactive audio-visual environment that featured an interactive projection on one side and an array of sixteen 290 watt solar panels on the other. Participants were invited to stomp on the bleachers to trigger sun-inspired visuals and amplified sounds of the Sun. Sun Stomp April 14-21, 2018 Light City Baltimore, McKeldin Square, 101 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD Scaffolding, bleachers, solar panels, solar hardware, projection screen, projector, LED neon, contact microphones, video processor 34’x24’x75’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Sun Stomp - Power ShedSun Stomp was a solar powered light and interactive audio-visual environment that featured an interactive projection on one side and an array of sixteen 290 watt solar panels on the other. Participants were invited to stomp on the bleachers to trigger sun-inspired visuals and amplified sounds of the Sun. Sun Stomp April 14-21, 2018 Light City Baltimore, McKeldin Square, 101 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD Scaffolding, bleachers, solar panels, solar hardware, projection screen, projector, LED neon, contact microphones, video processor 34’x24’x75’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Sun Stomp - Power Shed interiorSun Stomp was a solar powered light and interactive audio-visual environment that featured an interactive projection on one side and an array of sixteen 290 watt solar panels on the other. Participants were invited to stomp on the bleachers to trigger sun-inspired visuals and amplified sounds of the Sun. Sun Stomp April 14-21, 2018 Light City Baltimore, McKeldin Square, 101 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD Scaffolding, bleachers, solar panels, solar hardware, projection screen, projector, LED neon, contact microphones, video processor 34’x24’x75’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Sun Stomp - opening night crowdSun Stomp was a solar powered light and interactive audio-visual environment that featured an interactive projection on one side and an array of sixteen 290 watt solar panels on the other. Participants were invited to stomp on the bleachers to trigger sun-inspired visuals and amplified sounds of the Sun. Sun Stomp April 14-21, 2018 Light City Baltimore, McKeldin Square, 101 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD Scaffolding, bleachers, solar panels, solar hardware, projection screen, projector, LED neon, contact microphones, video processor 34’x24’x75’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Sun Stomp - projectionSun Stomp was a solar powered light and interactive audio-visual environment that featured an interactive projection on one side and an array of sixteen 290 watt solar panels on the other. Participants were invited to stomp on the bleachers to trigger sun-inspired visuals and amplified sounds of the Sun. Sun Stomp April 14-21, 2018 Light City Baltimore, McKeldin Square, 101 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD Scaffolding, bleachers, solar panels, solar hardware, projection screen, projector, LED neon, contact microphones, video processor 34’x24’x75’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
Choose Your Own Adventure
Choose your own Adventure took inspiration from the natural paths taken by street-crossing pedestrians, the Jones Falls and train tracks below, and the joyful experiences of summer-inspired toys. Hundreds of thousands of festival goers interacted with the kinetic environment of over four hundred colorful, translucent beach balls and a line striping street mural covering over three thousand square feet. Numerous beach balls featured hand-painted instructions offering choices for adventures beyond. Adventures included “Write a Poem in the Dirt”, “Change your name for the summer,” and “Take the first train to the end of the line.” Through tactical urbanism and creative design, the installation previewed possibilities for completely transforming the Charles Street Bridge into a playful, poetic, and pedestrian environment.
Beach ball text hand-painted by Greg Gannon of Signs of Intelligent Life.
Choose Your Own Adventure
https://grahamprojects.com/projects/adventure-artscape/
July 20-22, 2018
Beach balls, line striping paint, tent structure, LED lights, poetry
12’x40’x100’
Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Choose Your Own AdventureMade in collaboration with Becky Borlan, Choose your own Adventure transformed Baltimore’s Charles Street Bridge into a colorful playscape of pedestrian pathways and hanging beach balls. The project was commissioned by Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts for the free 2018 Artscape festival. Spray chalk lines marked a site-based map converging under a forest of beach balls hanging from an open air structure. Choose Your Own Adventure July 20-22, 2018 Charles Street Bridge at Penn Station, Artscape, Baltimore, MD Beach balls, line striping paint, tent structure, LED lights, poetry 12’x40’x100’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Choose Your Own Adventure ArtscapeMade in collaboration with Becky Borlan, Choose your own Adventure transformed Baltimore’s Charles Street Bridge into a colorful playscape of pedestrian pathways and hanging beach balls. The project was commissioned by Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts for the free 2018 Artscape festival. Spray chalk lines marked a site-based map converging under a forest of beach balls hanging from an open air structure. Choose Your Own Adventure July 20-22, 2018 Charles Street Bridge at Penn Station, Artscape, Baltimore, MD Beach balls, line striping paint, tent structure, LED lights, poetry 12’x40’x100’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts Photo by Baltimore Aerials https://www.baltimoreaerialproductions.com/
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Choose Your Own AdventureMade in collaboration with Becky Borlan, Choose your own Adventure transformed Baltimore’s Charles Street Bridge into a colorful playscape of pedestrian pathways and hanging beach balls. The project was commissioned by Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts for the free 2018 Artscape festival. Spray chalk lines marked a site-based map converging under a forest of beach balls hanging from an open air structure. Choose Your Own Adventure July 20-22, 2018 Charles Street Bridge at Penn Station, Artscape, Baltimore, MD Beach balls, line striping paint, tent structure, LED lights, poetry 12’x40’x100’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts Photo by Baltimore Aerials https://www.baltimoreaerialproductions.com/
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Choose Your Own AdventureMade in collaboration with Becky Borlan, Choose your own Adventure transformed Baltimore’s Charles Street Bridge into a colorful playscape of pedestrian pathways and hanging beach balls. The project was commissioned by Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts for the free 2018 Artscape festival. Spray chalk lines marked a site-based map converging under a forest of beach balls hanging from an open air structure. Choose Your Own Adventure July 20-22, 2018 Charles Street Bridge at Penn Station, Artscape, Baltimore, MD Beach balls, line striping paint, tent structure, LED lights, poetry 12’x40’x100’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Choose Your Own AdventureMade in collaboration with Becky Borlan, Choose your own Adventure transformed Baltimore’s Charles Street Bridge into a colorful playscape of pedestrian pathways and hanging beach balls. The project was commissioned by Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts for the free 2018 Artscape festival. Spray chalk lines marked a site-based map converging under a forest of beach balls hanging from an open air structure. Choose Your Own Adventure July 20-22, 2018 Charles Street Bridge at Penn Station, Artscape, Baltimore, MD Beach balls, line striping paint, tent structure, LED lights, poetry 12’x40’x100’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Choose Your Own AdventureMade in collaboration with Becky Borlan, Choose your own Adventure transformed Baltimore’s Charles Street Bridge into a colorful playscape of pedestrian pathways and hanging beach balls. The project was commissioned by Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts for the free 2018 Artscape festival. Spray chalk lines marked a site-based map converging under a forest of beach balls hanging from an open air structure. Choose Your Own Adventure July 20-22, 2018 Charles Street Bridge at Penn Station, Artscape, Baltimore, MD Beach balls, line striping paint, tent structure, LED lights, poetry 12’x40’x100’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Choose Your Own AdventureMade in collaboration with Becky Borlan, Choose your own Adventure transformed Baltimore’s Charles Street Bridge into a colorful playscape of pedestrian pathways and hanging beach balls. The project was commissioned by Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts for the free 2018 Artscape festival. Spray chalk lines marked a site-based map converging under a forest of beach balls hanging from an open air structure. Choose Your Own Adventure July 20-22, 2018 Charles Street Bridge at Penn Station, Artscape, Baltimore, MD Beach balls, line striping paint, tent structure, LED lights, poetry 12’x40’x100’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts Hand lettering by Greg Gannon https://www.signsofintelligentlife.net/
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Choose Your Own AdventureMade in collaboration with Becky Borlan, Choose your own Adventure transformed Baltimore’s Charles Street Bridge into a colorful playscape of pedestrian pathways and hanging beach balls. The project was commissioned by Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts for the free 2018 Artscape festival. Spray chalk lines marked a site-based map converging under a forest of beach balls hanging from an open air structure. Choose Your Own Adventure July 20-22, 2018 Charles Street Bridge at Penn Station, Artscape, Baltimore, MD Beach balls, line striping paint, tent structure, LED lights, poetry 12’x40’x100’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Choose Your Own AdventureMade in collaboration with Becky Borlan, Choose your own Adventure transformed Baltimore’s Charles Street Bridge into a colorful playscape of pedestrian pathways and hanging beach balls. The project was commissioned by Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts for the free 2018 Artscape festival. Spray chalk lines marked a site-based map converging under a forest of beach balls hanging from an open air structure. Choose Your Own Adventure July 20-22, 2018 Charles Street Bridge at Penn Station, Artscape, Baltimore, MD Beach balls, line striping paint, tent structure, LED lights, poetry 12’x40’x100’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
Festival Projects: SunStomp, Dancing Forest, & Choose Your Own Adventure
Sun Stomp
http://grahamprojects.com/projects/sunstomp
April 14-21, 2018
Light City Baltimore, McKeldin Square, 101 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD
Scaffolding, bleachers, solar panels, solar hardware, projection screen, projector, LED neon, contact microphones, video processor
34’x24’x75’
Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
Premiering at the 2018 Light City Baltimore festival, Sun Stomp was a solar powered light and interactive audio-visual environment that for eight nights activated McKeldin Square. The monumental scaffolding sculpture featured an interactive projection on one side and an array of sixteen 290 watt solar panels on the other. Electrical energy collected during the day and was stored as chemical energy in a battery bank which provided electricity to a colorful array of LED neon lights illuminating the structure after dark. Participants were invited to stomp on the bleacher footboards to trigger sun-inspired visuals and amplified sounds of the Sun sourced from NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory. Passersby were also invited to peer into the custom built “Power Shed” to learn about the solar technology and AV controls energizing the project. Foot-stomping powers combined, participants visually and experientially conjured the awesome and beautiful power of the sun.
Solar and Storage Statistics
- Sun Stomp featured 527 feet of LED lighting.
- All 16 solar panels provided 4,640 Watts per sun hour or 23,200 Watts per day in April.
- The average home in Baltimore uses 7,546 kilowatts per year; the same amount of electricity produced by these 16 solar panels and stored by the battery bank.
- The 16 solar panels installed on a home would save $1,052 annually in electricity charges.During Light City the Sun Stomp solar panels will prevented 200 pounds of CO2 emissions from local electricity generation.
About the Sun Stomp Collective
The Baltimore-based Sun Stomp Collective brings expertise in solar energy, interactive media, and participatory environments. Matthew Weaver has over a decade of experience in renewable energy engineering, including hydrogen and solar; and grassroots organizing around social justice and sustainability. Mark Brown is a video artist, DJ, curator, and AV expert at the Peabody Conservatory. His video work embraces the Internet as both gallery and medium, creating new works from the cracks, glitches, and fall-out of digital realities. Graham Coreil-Allen is a public artist and organizer making cities more inclusive and livable through public art, radical walking tours, and civic engagement.
Dancing Forest
https://grahamprojects.com/projects/dancingforest/
July 21-23, 2017
Artscape
Charles Street Bridge, Baltimore, MD
Submersion printed nylon, blowers, felt, LED lights, grass, website
20’ x 45’ x 200’
Project partners: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts, Station North Tool Library
Anchoring the 2017 Artscape Charles Street Trail July 21-23, Dancing Forest was a kinetic environment of inflatable trees emblazoned with trail markers identifying Baltimore’s many classic places, features, and customs. Participants were encouraged to walk among and explore the the animated trees as they undulated in the sky. Up close, one found an array of urban trail symbols, such as benches, snowballs, bikers, and buildings. Internal LED illumination of the sculptures allowed nighttime exploration. Combining spectacular movement with urban wayfinding symbols, Dancing Forest created an exciting, playful environment inspiring participants to continue exploring Baltimore’s many intriguing places.
Choose Your Own Adventure
https://grahamprojects.com/projects/adventure-artscape/
A collaboration Graham Coreil-Allen and Becky Borlan
July 20-22, 2018
Charles Street Bridge at Penn Station, Artscape, Baltimore, MD
Beach balls, line striping paint, tent structure, LED lights, poetry
12’x40’x100’
Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
Choose your own Adventure transformed Baltimore’s Charles Street Bridge into a colorful playscape of pedestrian pathways and hanging beach balls. The project was commissioned by Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts for the free 2018 Artscape festival. Spray chalk lines marked a site-based map converging under a forest of beach balls hanging from an open air structure. The streetscape-enhancing project was a collaboration between Baltimore-based public artists Becky Borlan and Graham Coreil-Allen.
Choose your own Adventure took inspiration from the natural paths taken by street-crossing pedestrians, the Jones Falls and train tracks below, and the joyful experiences of summer-inspired toys. Hundreds of thousands of festival goers interacted with the kinetic environment of over four hundred colorful, translucent beach balls and a line striping street mural covering over three thousand square feet. Numerous beach balls featured hand-painted instructions offering choices for adventures beyond. Adventures included “Write a Poem in the Dirt”, “Change your name for the summer,” and “Take the first train to the end of the line.” Through tactical urbanism and creative design, the installation previewed possibilities for completely transforming the Charles Street Bridge into a playful, poetic, and pedestrian environment.
Beach ball text hand-painted by Greg Gannon of Signs of Intelligent Life.
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Sun Stomp Light City 2018
Sun Stomp was a solar powered light and interactive audio-visual environment that featured an interactive projection on one side and an array of sixteen 290 watt solar panels on the other. Participants were invited to stomp on the bleachers to trigger sun
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Sun StompSun Stomp was a solar powered light and interactive audio-visual environment that featured an interactive projection on one side and an array of sixteen 290 watt solar panels on the other. Participants were invited to stomp on the bleachers to trigger sun-inspired visuals and amplified sounds of the Sun. Sun Stomp April 14-21, 2018 Light City Baltimore, McKeldin Square, 101 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD Scaffolding, bleachers, solar panels, solar hardware, projection screen, projector, LED neon, contact microphones, video processor 34’x24’x75’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Sun Stomp - bleacher interactionSun Stomp was a solar powered light and interactive audio-visual environment that featured an interactive projection on one side and an array of sixteen 290 watt solar panels on the other. Participants were invited to stomp on the bleachers to trigger sun-inspired visuals and amplified sounds of the Sun. Sun Stomp April 14-21, 2018 Light City Baltimore, McKeldin Square, 101 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD Scaffolding, bleachers, solar panels, solar hardware, projection screen, projector, LED neon, contact microphones, video processor 34’x24’x75’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Sun Stomp - LED neon matrixSun Stomp was a solar powered light and interactive audio-visual environment that featured an interactive projection on one side and an array of sixteen 290 watt solar panels on the other. Participants were invited to stomp on the bleachers to trigger sun-inspired visuals and amplified sounds of the Sun. Sun Stomp April 14-21, 2018 Light City Baltimore, McKeldin Square, 101 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD Scaffolding, bleachers, solar panels, solar hardware, projection screen, projector, LED neon, contact microphones, video processor 34’x24’x75’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Dancing ForestAnchoring the 2017 Artscape Charles Street Trail July 21-23, Dancing Forest was a kinetic environment of inflatable trees emblazoned with trail markers identifying Baltimore’s many classic places, features, and customs. Participants were encouraged to walk among and explore the the animated trees as they undulated in the sky. Up close, one found an array of urban trail symbols, such as benches, snowballs, bikers, and buildings. Internal LED illumination of the sculptures allowed nighttime exploration. Combining spectacular movement with urban wayfinding symbols, Dancing Forest created an exciting, playful environment inspiring participants to continue exploring Baltimore’s many intriguing places. Dancing Forest July 21-23, 2017 Artscape Charles Street Bridge, Baltimore, MD Submersion printed nylon, blowers, felt, LED lights, grass, website 20’ x 45’ x 200’ Project partners: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts, Station North Tool Library
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Dancing ForestAnchoring the 2017 Artscape Charles Street Trail July 21-23, Dancing Forest was a kinetic environment of inflatable trees emblazoned with trail markers identifying Baltimore’s many classic places, features, and customs. Participants were encouraged to walk among and explore the the animated trees as they undulated in the sky. Up close, one found an array of urban trail symbols, such as benches, snowballs, bikers, and buildings. Internal LED illumination of the sculptures allowed nighttime exploration. Combining spectacular movement with urban wayfinding symbols, Dancing Forest created an exciting, playful environment inspiring participants to continue exploring Baltimore’s many intriguing places. Dancing Forest July 21-23, 2017 Artscape Charles Street Bridge, Baltimore, MD Submersion printed nylon, blowers, felt, LED lights, grass, website 20’ x 45’ x 200’ Project partners: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts, Station North Tool Library
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Dancing Forest - detailAnchoring the 2017 Artscape Charles Street Trail July 21-23, Dancing Forest was a kinetic environment of inflatable trees emblazoned with trail markers identifying Baltimore’s many classic places, features, and customs. Participants were encouraged to walk among and explore the the animated trees as they undulated in the sky. Up close, one found an array of urban trail symbols, such as benches, snowballs, bikers, and buildings. Internal LED illumination of the sculptures allowed nighttime exploration. Combining spectacular movement with urban wayfinding symbols, Dancing Forest created an exciting, playful environment inspiring participants to continue exploring Baltimore’s many intriguing places. Dancing Forest July 21-23, 2017 Artscape Charles Street Bridge, Baltimore, MD Submersion printed nylon, blowers, felt, LED lights, grass, website 20’ x 45’ x 200’ Project partners: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts, Station North Tool Library
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Choose Your Own AdventureMade in collaboration with Becky Borlan, Choose your own Adventure transformed Baltimore’s Charles Street Bridge into a colorful playscape of pedestrian pathways and hanging beach balls. The project was commissioned by Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts for the free 2018 Artscape festival. Spray chalk lines marked a site-based map converging under a forest of beach balls hanging from an open air structure. Choose Your Own Adventure July 20-22, 2018 Charles Street Bridge at Penn Station, Artscape, Baltimore, MD Beach balls, line striping paint, tent structure, LED lights, poetry 12’x40’x100’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
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Choose Your Own AdventureMade in collaboration with Becky Borlan, Choose your own Adventure transformed Baltimore’s Charles Street Bridge into a colorful playscape of pedestrian pathways and hanging beach balls. The project was commissioned by Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts for the free 2018 Artscape festival. Spray chalk lines marked a site-based map converging under a forest of beach balls hanging from an open air structure. Choose Your Own Adventure July 20-22, 2018 Charles Street Bridge at Penn Station, Artscape, Baltimore, MD Beach balls, line striping paint, tent structure, LED lights, poetry 12’x40’x100’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts Photo by Baltimore Aerials https://www.baltimoreaerialproductions.com/
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Choose Your Own AdventureMade in collaboration with Becky Borlan, Choose your own Adventure transformed Baltimore’s Charles Street Bridge into a colorful playscape of pedestrian pathways and hanging beach balls. The project was commissioned by Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts for the free 2018 Artscape festival. Spray chalk lines marked a site-based map converging under a forest of beach balls hanging from an open air structure. Choose Your Own Adventure July 20-22, 2018 Charles Street Bridge at Penn Station, Artscape, Baltimore, MD Beach balls, line striping paint, tent structure, LED lights, poetry 12’x40’x100’ Project partner: Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts
Hopscotch Crosswalk Colossus
North Side: The Shoe
The Towering Businessperson skips east approaching downtown skyscrapers.
East Side: The Bird Track
The Superbird Champion hops south heading to Camden Yards and The Raven’s Walk.
South Side: The Boot
Wobbling west The Worker passes through a former garment district built by labor.
West Side: The Footprint
The Hippie Artist bounces north with abandon towards lofty digs in the Bromo Tower Arts & Entertainment District.
Hopscotch Crosswalk Colossus
https://grahamprojects.com/projects/hopscotch-crosswalk-colossus/
December 4, 2013
Eutaw and Lombard Streets
Baltimore, MD
Permanent crosswalks installation
Baltimore Office of Promotion and the Arts-
Hopscotch Crosswalk Colossus - overhead view
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Hopscotch Crosswalk Colossus - business man jumping shoe prints
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Hopscotch Crosswalk Colossus - man jumping
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Hopscotch Crosswalk Colossus - foot prints
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Hopscotch Crosswalk Colossus - shoe prints
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Hopscotch Crosswalk Colossus - people crossing
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Hopscotch Crosswalk Colossus - boot prints
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Hopscotch Crosswalk Colossus - boot prints from above
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Hopscotch Crosswalk Colossus - bird tracks
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Hopscotch Crosswalk Colossus - bird tracks detail
Participatory Mapping
Manifesting Civic Dreams: Baltimore
https://grahamprojects.com/projects/manifesting-civic-dreams-baltimore
Printed vinyl banner, laser cut cardboard, spray paint, markers, Play Doh
12’ x 15’’ x 1’
February 8, 2024
Project partner: Johns Hopkins University SNF Agora Institute
Reginald F. Lewis Museum, 830 E Pratt St, Baltimore, MD 21202
For the Johns Hopkins University SNF Agora Institute’s annual Elijah E. Cummings Democracy and Freedom Festival, artists Graham Coreil-Allen and Rosy Sunshine Galván created Manifesting Civic Dreams: Baltimore, a large, interactive floor map for participants to reflect on their personal and collective challenges, neighborhood treasures, and visionary possibilities of Baltimore City. The installation featured a colorful, 12’ x 15’ printed floor map to which residents added their own stories, neighborhood assets, challenges, and ideas by writing and drawing on custom laser cut pop-up cardboard signs and then placing them on the map.
Crafting the Corridor
https://grahamprojects.com/projects/crafting-the-corridor/
October 6, 2018
El Paso Museum of Art, El Paso, TX
Color vinyl banner, laser cut pop-up signs, play doh, tape, markers
10’x20’
Project partners: Planning & Inspections Department of the City of El Paso, Offices of El Paso City Council Representatives Peter Svarzbein and Cissy Lizarraga
Through the Crafting the Corridor community tour and interactive mapping workshop, El Paso residents, business owners, planners, and elected officials shared personal perspectives and identified local assets, challenges, and ideas for strengthening their neighborhoods along the city’s new streetcar routes. Locals participated in an interactive hop-on/hop-off bus tour that took them along the North and South streetcar loops. At each stop speakers shared points of interest and perspectives on current issues, local history, and opportunities for preservation and growth. Participants returned to the El Paso Museum of Art for a facilitated discussion and creative mapping session led by public artist Graham Coreil-Allen and El Paso 1st District council representative and artist Peter Svarzbein. Residents used laser cut cardboard signs, colorful tape, and play doh to write, illustrate, and sculpt their neighborhood assets, challenges, and new ideas for building on the city’s streetcar revival. They placed their handmade signs and sculptures on corresponding locations within an immersive, colorful 10’ x 20’ vinyl floor map. El Paso city planners documented participants’ numerous contributions as input for the El Paso Streetcar Corridor Plan.
BMA Visioning Home Mapping Workshop
https://grahamprojects.com/projects/bma-visioning-home-mapping/
September 23, 2017
Baltimore Museum of Art
10 Art Museum Drive, Baltimore, MD 21218
gaff tape, laser cut cardboard, spray paint, play doh, markers
24' x 24' x 12”
Project partner: Baltimore Museum of Art
Visioning Home was a day-long workshop at the Baltimore Museum of Art that invited participants to challenge the entrenched narratives about Baltimore neighborhoods and envision possible futures. As part of the Imagining Home exhibit series, forty residents from across the city gathered for this meaningful day to learn about civically engaged art, find inspiration in the museum’s collection, and take part in a series of facilitated conversations and artmaking activities designed to spark creative thinking about changes and opportunities in Baltimore. El Paso artist and city councilperson Peter Svarzbein presented on how his fictitious advertising campaign to revive a defunct trolley raised $97 million in funding to re-establish strong cultural and economic bonds between El Paso, Texas and Juarez, Mexico communities. Group discussions were captured throughout the day by visualizations drawn onto the studio's walls by graphic recorder Lucinda Levine. The day of engagement culminated in an interactive mapping installation and activity created and led by public artist Graham Coreil-Allen. Participants used laser cut cardboard signs to write and illustrate their neighborhood assets, challenges, and new ideas. They placed these signs on corresponding locations within an immersive, 22’ x 24’ floor map made of brightly colored tape. Residents highlighted and sensitively discussed a range of issues such as the school-to-prison pipeline, food deserts, and industrial pollution; and proposed new ideas such as job-creating urban farms, universal tuition, and completing Baltimore’s mass transit rail network.
FutureSite Mapping Baltimore
http://grahamprojects.com/projects/futuresite-baltimore/
The Necessity of Tomorrow(s): Mark Bradford—Making a Path
Saturday, November 11, 2017, 12pm-3:30pm
Presented by the Baltimore Museum of Art at Union Baptist Church, Baltimore, MD
Partners: The Baltimore Museum of Art, Union Baptist Church
How do you make a path to power where none exists? How do you assess a community's needs and create access for a community to self-determine?
Presented by the Baltimore Museum of Art at Union Baptist Church, FutureSite Baltimore invited participants to challenge the entrenched narratives about our city and envision possible futures by sharing their neighborhood assets, concerns, and ideas. This interactive mapping activity was presented as part of the The Necessity of Tomorrow(s) lecture series featuring luminary artist Mark Bradford in conversation with BMA Director Christopher Bedford. Bradford’s talk explored how the artist grapples with “making a path,” and other key questions in his artistic practice and community-based work. Afterwards, attendees were invited to contribute to the FutureSite Baltimore map by writing on laser cut signs and creating play doh sculptures representing their inspired visions for the future of Baltimore City. Contributions to the map were collected by the museum to inform forthcoming programming.
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Manifesting Civic Dreams: Baltimore
For the Johns Hopkins University SNF Agora Institute’s annual Elijah E. Cummings Democracy and Freedom Festival, artists Graham Coreil-Allen and Rosy Sunshine Galván created Manifesting Civic Dreams: Baltimore, a large, interactive floor map for participants to reflect on their personal and collective challenges, neighborhood treasures, and visionary possibilities of Baltimore City. The installation featured a colorful, 12’ x 15’ printed floor map to which residents added their own stories, neighborhood assets, challenges, and ideas by writing and drawing on custom laser cut pop-up cardboard signs and then placing them on the map.
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Manifesting Civic Dreams: Baltimore
For the Johns Hopkins University SNF Agora Institute’s annual Elijah E. Cummings Democracy and Freedom Festival, artists Graham Coreil-Allen and Rosy Sunshine Galván created Manifesting Civic Dreams: Baltimore, a large, interactive floor map for participants to reflect on their personal and collective challenges, neighborhood treasures, and visionary possibilities of Baltimore City. The installation featured a colorful, 12’ x 15’ printed floor map to which residents added their own stories, neighborhood assets, challenges, and ideas by writing and drawing on custom laser cut pop-up cardboard signs and then placing them on the map.
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Manifesting Civic Dreams: Baltimore
For the Johns Hopkins University SNF Agora Institute’s annual Elijah E. Cummings Democracy and Freedom Festival, artists Graham Coreil-Allen and Rosy Sunshine Galván created Manifesting Civic Dreams: Baltimore, a large, interactive floor map for participants to reflect on their personal and collective challenges, neighborhood treasures, and visionary possibilities of Baltimore City. The installation featured a colorful, 12’ x 15’ printed floor map to which residents added their own stories, neighborhood assets, challenges, and ideas by writing and drawing on custom laser cut pop-up cardboard signs and then placing them on the map.
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El Paso Crafting the Corridor participationThrough the Crafting the Corridor community tour and interactive mapping workshop, El Paso residents, business owners, planners, and elected officials shared personal perspectives and identified local assets, challenges, and ideas for strengthening their neighborhoods along the city’s new streetcar routes. City planners documented participants’ numerous contributions as input for the El Paso Streetcar Corridor Plan. Crafting the Corridor October 6, 2018 El Paso Museum of Art, El Paso, TX Color vinyl banner, laser cut pop-up signs, play doh, tape, markers 10’x20’ Project partners: Planning & Inspections Department of the City of El Paso, Offices of El Paso City Council Representatives Peter Svarzbein and Cissy Lizarraga
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El Paso Crafting the Corridor gatheringThrough the Crafting the Corridor community tour and interactive mapping workshop, El Paso residents, business owners, planners, and elected officials shared personal perspectives and identified local assets, challenges, and ideas for strengthening their neighborhoods along the city’s new streetcar routes. City planners documented participants’ numerous contributions as input for the El Paso Streetcar Corridor Plan. Crafting the Corridor October 6, 2018 El Paso Museum of Art, El Paso, TX Color vinyl banner, laser cut pop-up signs, play doh, tape, markers 10’x20’ Project partners: Planning & Inspections Department of the City of El Paso, Offices of El Paso City Council Representatives Peter Svarzbein and Cissy Lizarraga
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El Paso Crafting the Corridor signsThrough the Crafting the Corridor community tour and interactive mapping workshop, El Paso residents, business owners, planners, and elected officials shared personal perspectives and identified local assets, challenges, and ideas for strengthening their neighborhoods along the city’s new streetcar routes. City planners documented participants’ numerous contributions as input for the El Paso Streetcar Corridor Plan. Crafting the Corridor October 6, 2018 El Paso Museum of Art, El Paso, TX Color vinyl banner, laser cut pop-up signs, play doh, tape, markers 10’x20’ Project partners: Planning & Inspections Department of the City of El Paso, Offices of El Paso City Council Representatives Peter Svarzbein and Cissy Lizarraga
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Visioning Home Mapping - afterVisioning Home was a day-long workshop at the Baltimore Museum of Art that invited participants to challenge the entrenched narratives about Baltimore neighborhoods and envision possible futures. As part of the Imagining Home exhibit series, forty residents from across the city gathered for this meaningful day to learn about civically engaged art, find inspiration in the museum’s collection, and take part in a series of facilitated conversations and artmaking activities designed to spark creative thinking about changes and opportunities in Baltimore. The day of engagement culminated in an interactive mapping installation and activity created and led by public artist Graham Coreil-Allen. Participants used laser cut cardboard signs to write and illustrate their neighborhood assets, challenges, and new ideas. They placed these signs on corresponding locations within an immersive, 22’ x 24’ floor map made of brightly colored tape. Residents highlighted and sensitively discussed a range of issues such as the school-to-prison pipeline, food deserts, and industrial pollution; and proposed new ideas such as job-creating urban farms, universal tuition, and completing Baltimore’s mass transit rail network.
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Visioning Home Mapping - participants laying tapeVisioning Home was a day-long workshop at the Baltimore Museum of Art that invited participants to challenge the entrenched narratives about Baltimore neighborhoods and envision possible futures. As part of the Imagining Home exhibit series, forty residents from across the city gathered for this meaningful day to learn about civically engaged art, find inspiration in the museum’s collection, and take part in a series of facilitated conversations and artmaking activities designed to spark creative thinking about changes and opportunities in Baltimore. The day of engagement culminated in an interactive mapping installation and activity created and led by public artist Graham Coreil-Allen. Participants used laser cut cardboard signs to write and illustrate their neighborhood assets, challenges, and new ideas. They placed these signs on corresponding locations within an immersive, 22’ x 24’ floor map made of brightly colored tape. Residents highlighted and sensitively discussed a range of issues such as the school-to-prison pipeline, food deserts, and industrial pollution; and proposed new ideas such as job-creating urban farms, universal tuition, and completing Baltimore’s mass transit rail network.
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FutureSite Baltimore - youth adding signPresented by the Baltimore Museum of Art at Union Baptist Church, FutureSite Baltimore invited participants to challenge the entrenched narratives about our city and envision possible futures by sharing their neighborhood assets, concerns, and ideas. This interactive mapping activity was presented as part of the The Necessity of Tomorrow(s) lecture series featuring luminary artist Mark Bradford in conversation with BMA Director Christopher Bedford. Bradford’s talk explored how the artist grapples with “making a path,” and other key questions in his artistic practice and community-based work. Afterwards, attendees were invited to contribute to the FutureSite Baltimore map by writing on laser cut signs and creating play doh sculptures representing their inspired visions for the future of Baltimore City. Contributions to the map were collected by the museum to inform forthcoming programming. FutureSite Mapping Baltimore at the The Necessity of Tomorrow(s): Mark Bradford—Making a Path Saturday, November 11, 2017, 12pm-3:30pm Presented by the Baltimore Museum of Art at Union Baptist Church, Baltimore, MD Partners: The Baltimore Museum of Art, Union Baptist Church
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FutureSite Baltimore - Map with signsPresented by the Baltimore Museum of Art at Union Baptist Church, FutureSite Baltimore invited participants to challenge the entrenched narratives about our city and envision possible futures by sharing their neighborhood assets, concerns, and ideas. This interactive mapping activity was presented as part of the The Necessity of Tomorrow(s) lecture series featuring luminary artist Mark Bradford in conversation with BMA Director Christopher Bedford. Bradford’s talk explored how the artist grapples with “making a path,” and other key questions in his artistic practice and community-based work. Afterwards, attendees were invited to contribute to the FutureSite Baltimore map by writing on laser cut signs and creating play doh sculptures representing their inspired visions for the future of Baltimore City. Contributions to the map were collected by the museum to inform forthcoming programming. FutureSite Mapping Baltimore at the The Necessity of Tomorrow(s): Mark Bradford—Making a Path Saturday, November 11, 2017, 12pm-3:30pm Presented by the Baltimore Museum of Art at Union Baptist Church, Baltimore, MD Partners: The Baltimore Museum of Art, Union Baptist Church
Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding
The Big Jump logo was designed by Danielle Parnes on behalf of Bikemore, with icon input from Coreil-Allen. Coreil-Allen then adapted the logo to serve as pathway signage and wayfinding. The signage features icons representing different active uses, including walking, wheelchair riding, bicycling dog walking, and skateboarding. The vinyl cut signs show motorists and passersby the uses of the Big Jump pathway. To provide wayfinding for people not in cars we also made and sprayed large scale street stencils highlighting pathway primary uses - walking, wheelchair riding, and bicycling. In addition, we stenciled colorful footprint trails that visually lead residents from surrounding blocks to safe access points for the Big Jump Baltimore pathway and Druid Hill Park.
Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding
https://grahamprojects.com/projects/big-jump-wayfinding/
Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street, Baltimore, MD
Aerosol traffic paint, cut vinyl
Dimensions vary
Project partners: Bikemore, Baltimore City DOT
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Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding - cut vinyl brandingThe Big Jump is a temporary path accessible by foot, bike, and mobility devices along Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street in Baltimore, Maryland that counteracts decades of highway expansion that effectively cut off the surrounding working class African American neighborhoods from the park. As a local resident and public artist, Graham Coreil-Allen collaborated with Bikemore, Baltimore City Department of Transportation, and neighbors on creating identification signage and directional stencils along the Big Jump pathway. Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding August 2018 Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street, Baltimore, MD Aerosol traffic paint, cut vinyl Dimensions vary Project partners: Bikemore, Baltimore City DOT
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Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding - bicyclistThe Big Jump is a temporary path accessible by foot, bike, and mobility devices along Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street in Baltimore, Maryland that counteracts decades of highway expansion that effectively cut off the surrounding working class African American neighborhoods from the park. As a local resident and public artist, Graham Coreil-Allen collaborated with Bikemore, Baltimore City Department of Transportation, and neighbors on creating identification signage and directional stencils along the Big Jump pathway. Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding August 2018 Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street, Baltimore, MD Aerosol traffic paint, cut vinyl Dimensions vary Project partners: Bikemore, Baltimore City DOT
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Big Jump Baltimore father and son bicyclists, photo by Brian O'DohertyThe Big Jump is a temporary path accessible by foot, bike, and mobility devices along Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street in Baltimore, Maryland that counteracts decades of highway expansion that effectively cut off the surrounding working class African American neighborhoods from the park. As a local resident and public artist, Graham Coreil-Allen collaborated with Bikemore, Baltimore City Department of Transportation, and neighbors on creating identification signage and directional stencils along the Big Jump pathway. Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding August 2018 Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street, Baltimore, MD Aerosol traffic paint, cut vinyl Dimensions vary Project partners: Bikemore, Baltimore City DOT Photo by Brian O'Doherty: https://www.odohertyphoto.com/
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Big Jump BaltimoreThe Big Jump is a temporary path accessible by foot, bike, and mobility devices along Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street in Baltimore, Maryland that counteracts decades of highway expansion that effectively cut off the surrounding working class African American neighborhoods from the park. As a local resident and public artist, Graham Coreil-Allen collaborated with Bikemore, Baltimore City Department of Transportation, and neighbors on creating identification signage and directional stencils along the Big Jump pathway. Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding August 2018 Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street, Baltimore, MD Aerosol traffic paint, cut vinyl Dimensions vary Project partners: Bikemore, Baltimore City DOT
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Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding - stencilThe Big Jump is a temporary path accessible by foot, bike, and mobility devices along Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street in Baltimore, Maryland that counteracts decades of highway expansion that effectively cut off the surrounding working class African American neighborhoods from the park. As a local resident and public artist, Graham Coreil-Allen collaborated with Bikemore, Baltimore City Department of Transportation, and neighbors on creating identification signage and directional stencils along the Big Jump pathway. Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding August 2018 Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street, Baltimore, MD Aerosol traffic paint, cut vinyl Dimensions vary Project partners: Bikemore, Baltimore City DOT
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Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding - neighborhood directionThe Big Jump is a temporary path accessible by foot, bike, and mobility devices along Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street in Baltimore, Maryland that counteracts decades of highway expansion that effectively cut off the surrounding working class African American neighborhoods from the park. As a local resident and public artist, Graham Coreil-Allen collaborated with Bikemore, Baltimore City Department of Transportation, and neighbors on creating identification signage and directional stencils along the Big Jump pathway. Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding August 2018 Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street, Baltimore, MD Aerosol traffic paint, cut vinyl Dimensions vary Project partners: Bikemore, Baltimore City DOT
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Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding - shared use stencilsThe Big Jump is a temporary path accessible by foot, bike, and mobility devices along Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street in Baltimore, Maryland that counteracts decades of highway expansion that effectively cut off the surrounding working class African American neighborhoods from the park. As a local resident and public artist, Graham Coreil-Allen collaborated with Bikemore, Baltimore City Department of Transportation, and neighbors on creating identification signage and directional stencils along the Big Jump pathway. Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding August 2018 Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street, Baltimore, MD Aerosol traffic paint, cut vinyl Dimensions vary Project partners: Bikemore, Baltimore City DOT
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Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding - cut vinyl brandingThe Big Jump is a temporary path accessible by foot, bike, and mobility devices along Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street in Baltimore, Maryland that counteracts decades of highway expansion that effectively cut off the surrounding working class African American neighborhoods from the park. As a local resident and public artist, Graham Coreil-Allen collaborated with Bikemore, Baltimore City Department of Transportation, and neighbors on creating identification signage and directional stencils along the Big Jump pathway. Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding August 2018 Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street, Baltimore, MD Aerosol traffic paint, cut vinyl Dimensions vary Project partners: Bikemore, Baltimore City DOT
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Big Jump Baltimore Walking Tour with Graham & Ms Dee, photo by Brian O'Doherty.jpgThe Big Jump is a temporary path accessible by foot, bike, and mobility devices along Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street in Baltimore, Maryland that counteracts decades of highway expansion that effectively cut off the surrounding working class African American neighborhoods from the park. As a local resident and public artist, Graham Coreil-Allen collaborated with Bikemore, Baltimore City Department of Transportation, and neighbors on creating identification signage and directional stencils along the Big Jump pathway. Big Jump Baltimore Wayfinding August 2018 Druid Park Lake Drive and 28th Street, Baltimore, MD Aerosol traffic paint, cut vinyl Dimensions vary Project partners: Bikemore, Baltimore City DOT Photo by Brian O'Doherty: https://www.odohertyphoto.com/
Pop-Up Crosswalks & Pedestrian Playscapes
26th Street Agility Trail & Vista Bench
https://grahamprojects.com/projects/26th-st-agility-trail-vista-bench/
September 2018
200 Block of 26th Street, Baltimore, MD
Agility Trail destroyed November 2018 due to train wall collapse.
Greene Tree Agility Trail
https://grahamprojects.com/projects/greene-tree-agility-trail/
April 2017
Pikesville, MD
Footprints Crosswalk
https://grahamprojects.com/projects/footprints-crosswalk/
September 2016
Druid Hill Park Entrance at Auchentoroly Ter & Gwynns Falls Pkwy, Baltimore, MD
Harbor Hopscotch
https://grahamprojects.com/projects/harbor-hopscotch/
July 2016
Inner Harbor Promenade, Baltimore, MD
HopXcotch Rivalry
https://grahamprojects.com/projects/hopxcotch-rivalry/
July 2014
Charles Street Bridge, Artscape, Baltimore, MD
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26th St Agility TrailThe 26th Street Agility Trail consisted of a colorful array of foot-based games stenciled on the sidewalk for kids to play while walking to the nearby Margaret Brent Elementary and Middle School. Around the corner, the Guildford Bridge Vista Bench provides residents with a place to sit and watch trains going by in the tunnel below. 26th Street Agility Trail and Vista Bench September 2018 200 Block of 26th Street, Baltimore, MD Aerosol traffic paint, bench 400’x12’ Project partners: Harwood Community Association, Central Baltimore Partnership
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Guilford Bridge Vista BenchThe 26th Street Agility Trail consisted of a colorful array of foot-based games stenciled on the sidewalk for kids to play while walking to the nearby Margaret Brent Elementary and Middle School. Around the corner, the Guildford Bridge Vista Bench provides residents with a place to sit and watch trains going by in the tunnel below. 26th Street Agility Trail and Vista Bench September 2018 200 Block of 26th Street, Baltimore, MD Aerosol traffic paint, bench 400’x12’ Project partners: Harwood Community Association, Central Baltimore Partnership
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Greene Tree Agility TrailThe Greene Tree Agility Trail is an interactive playscape for younger children to engage their neighborhood public space through physical games and exercises. The project was commissioned by the Greene Tree Homeowners Association as a way to activate a disused former basketball court. The five color installation was made using a combination of stencil-based and hand painting techniques. The agility trail features an array of playful activities, including tip toe, jump, hop, hopscotch, side step, balance, and foursquare. Greene Tree Agility Trail April 2017 Greene Tree community, Pikesville, MD
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Footprints CrosswalkFootprints Crosswalk was a temporary crosswalk made of colorful stencils marking various walking tracks connecting the residents of Baltimore’s Auchentoroly Terrace neighborhood to the adjacent Druid Hill Park. The installation location was selected by residents through a Plan4Health-funded engagement process led by the Rails-to-Trails Conservancy and BikeMore in collaboration with the Auchentoroly Terrace Association and public artist Graham Coreil-Allen. Including foot, hoof, bird, and paw prints, the playful tracks of Footprints Crosswalk allude to both people and other creatures that frequent Druid Hill Park. The crosswalk is enhanced with "Save Lives" street signs hung all around the intersection that draw attention to the pedestrians’ rights-of-way. The west side of Druid Hill Park is cut off from the neighborhood by Auchentoroly Terrace, a former three lane boulevard turned into an eight lane highway during Baltimore’s 1960s era of destructive, car-oriented urban planning. Most residents in the area do not own cars, so the lack of safe crosswalks along the thoroughfare is a major hinderance to connecting with an otherwise beautiful space for urban recreation and exercise. Rails-to-Trails and BikeMore invited input during community meetings in and around the Druid Hill Farmers Market. For these meetings, resident and public artist Coreil-Allen made reusable whiteboard maps for participants to mark which intersections needed the most attention. Based on this input, the intersection of Auchentoroly Terrace and Gwynns Falls Parkway was selected as the best place to create a temporary project highlighting the need for increased pedestrian safety and connectivity. Footprints Crosswalk September 28, 2016 - October 2016 Auchentoroly Terrace & Gwynns Falls Parkway, Baltimore, MD
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Footprints CrosswalkFootprints Crosswalk was a temporary crosswalk made of colorful stencils marking various walking tracks connecting the residents of Baltimore’s Auchentoroly Terrace neighborhood to the adjacent Druid Hill Park. The installation location was selected by residents through a Plan4Health-funded engagement process led by the Rails-to-Trails Conservancy and BikeMore in collaboration with the Auchentoroly Terrace Association and public artist Graham Coreil-Allen. Including foot, hoof, bird, and paw prints, the playful tracks of Footprints Crosswalk allude to both people and other creatures that frequent Druid Hill Park. The crosswalk is enhanced with "Save Lives" street signs hung all around the intersection that draw attention to the pedestrians’ rights-of-way. The west side of Druid Hill Park is cut off from the neighborhood by Auchentoroly Terrace, a former three lane boulevard turned into an eight lane highway during Baltimore’s 1960s era of destructive, car-oriented urban planning. Most residents in the area do not own cars, so the lack of safe crosswalks along the thoroughfare is a major hinderance to connecting with an otherwise beautiful space for urban recreation and exercise. Rails-to-Trails and BikeMore invited input during community meetings in and around the Druid Hill Farmers Market. For these meetings, resident and public artist Coreil-Allen made reusable whiteboard maps for participants to mark which intersections needed the most attention. Based on this input, the intersection of Auchentoroly Terrace and Gwynns Falls Parkway was selected as the best place to create a temporary project highlighting the need for increased pedestrian safety and connectivity. Footprints Crosswalk September 28, 2016 - October 2016 Auchentoroly Terrace & Gwynns Falls Parkway, Baltimore, MD
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Footprints Crosswalk Save LivesFootprints Crosswalk was a temporary crosswalk made of colorful stencils marking various walking tracks connecting the residents of Baltimore’s Auchentoroly Terrace neighborhood to the adjacent Druid Hill Park. The crosswalk was enhanced with custom "Save Lives" street signs warning motorists to yield to pedestrians.
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Harbor HopscotchHarbor Hopscotch is a 103’ long, colorful hopscotch court playfully activating the ramp entrance to West Shore Park at Baltimore’s Inner Harbor. The temporary installation of teal, electric blue, and fuchsia colored spray chalk was commissioned by the Waterfront Partnership of Baltimore to bring more people into the south end of this prominent public space. Pedestrians strolling on the Inner Harbor Promenade are met with a large project ground graphic inviting them to hop up the ramp leading into West Shore Park. The graphic also encourages participants to share pictures of each other jumping using the hashtag #HarborHopscotch and @waterfrontpartnership. Harbor Hopscotch West Shore Park, Inner Harbor, Baltimore, MD July 14, 2016
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Harbor HopscotchHarbor Hopscotch is a 103’ long, colorful hopscotch court playfully activating the ramp entrance to West Shore Park at Baltimore’s Inner Harbor. The temporary installation of teal, electric blue, and fuchsia colored spray chalk was commissioned by the Waterfront Partnership of Baltimore to bring more people into the south end of this prominent public space. Pedestrians strolling on the Inner Harbor Promenade are met with a large project ground graphic inviting them to hop up the ramp leading into West Shore Park. The graphic also encourages participants to share pictures of each other jumping using the hashtag #HarborHopscotch and @waterfrontpartnership. Harbor Hopscotch West Shore Park, Inner Harbor, Baltimore, MD July 14, 2016
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HopXcotch Rivalry Girl JumpingHopXcotch Rivalry in action. HopXcotch Rivalry was two extreme hopscotch courses crossing for one action packed, two person race. Inspired by the success of my Hopscotch Crosswalks in downtown Baltimore, this project brought playful pedestrian action to the middle of Artscape’s Field Day programing along Charles Street. Participants started at competing ends of the yellow and teal hopscotch paths had to jump fast while staying on track. The two 50’ long courses met at the middle, presenting an opportunity for racers to bump each other of course. The easy-to-understand and play game was enhanced with organized hopscotch tournaments at scheduled times throughout the Artscape weekend. Special thanks to the HopXcotch Rivalry tireless referees Melvin Thomas and Jake Lasovick. HopXcotch Rivalry July 18-20, 2014 Artscape N. Charles and Lanvale Streets Baltimore, MD
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HopXcotch Rivalry - participant signing the wall of winnersHopXcotch Rivalry invted to sign the Wall of Winners HopXcotch Rivalry was two extreme hopscotch courses crossing for one action packed, two person race. Inspired by the success of my Hopscotch Crosswalks in downtown Baltimore, this project brought playful pedestrian action to the middle of Artscape’s Field Day programing along Charles Street. Participants started at competing ends of the yellow and teal hopscotch paths had to jump fast while staying on track. The two 50’ long courses met at the middle, presenting an opportunity for racers to bump each other of course. The easy-to-understand and play game was enhanced with organized hopscotch tournaments at scheduled times throughout the Artscape weekend. Special thanks to the HopXcotch Rivalry tireless referees Melvin Thomas and Jake Lasovick. HopXcotch Rivalry July 18-20, 2014 Artscape N. Charles and Lanvale Streets Baltimore, MD