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Sanctifying those who govern, harnessing official religion for state ends, inspiring the people, channeling their dreams-even in modernity angels adorn public structures and monuments, whether in victory pillars, war memorials, or paintings of the apotheosis or heavenly ascension of great leaders. The Apotheosis of Pittsburgh, by the then-renowned American artist John White Alexander, is a series of 48 murals, all painted by Alexander between 1905 and 1915, in the grand staircase of the Carnegie Institute (now the Carnegie Art Museum) in Pittsburgh, a cultural haven sponsored by industrialist Andrew Carnegie, dedicated in 1895. Alexander died in 1915, leaving his enormous mural cycle unfinished.
Western Pennsylvania History, 2001
2012
The historic city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania has been the home to Native Americans and immigrants from around the world. It is also home to a large variety of gargoyles, grotesques and monsters carved in stone and adorning banks, government buildings and churches.
College & Research Libraries News
Pittsburgh will be thrilled to welcome the ACRL 2023 Conference from March 15 to 18, 2023. We want to introduce the vibrant arts and culture scene in Pittsburgh, AKA Paris of Appalachians, AKA the City of Bridges (clocking in with a total of 446 of these structural feats). Many of these sites are within easy walking distance of the conference center. Audrey Biega surveys the rich number of arts, architecture, and cultural institutions in our city. William Daw and Kathy Kienholz describe the history and impact of two of Pittsburgh's celebrated African American artists, August Wilson and Teenie Harris. And, finally, I must highlight one of my favorite hidden gems of Pittsburgh (or, well, Millvale), the Maxo Vanka murals (https://vankamurals.org/) at the St. Nicholas church. These church paintings, created by the artist Maxo Vanka in 1937 and 1941 with Vanka's bold socialist-informed and emotional style, will forever change how you think about ecumenical art and politics.-Chloe Persian Mills, article editor Art and museums in Pittsburgh Audrey Biega While you enjoy your stay in Pittsburgh, we encourage you to take in the city's unique character as it is revealed through our eclectic range of neighborhoods, each with their respective artistic hubs. In anticipation of your tour of Pittsburgh's arts and culture offerings, and in the spirit of Mr. Rogers-"Won't you be my neighbor?" Downtown The meeting of the Allegheny and the Monongahela form the Ohio-and thus these three rivers create the peninsula which is Downtown Pittsburgh. Downtown's Cultural District (https://culturaldistrict.org/) offers several galleries to visit (all free and open to the public): Future Tenant, SPACE, Wood Street, 707 Penn Gallery, and 937 Gallery, to name a few. These spaces host seasonally rotating exhibitions, presenting a range of audiovisual, installation, and fine art, both local and global.
2018
This study relates the pattern of public art in the city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to culture-based urban renewal. This project will reveal the relationships between the locations of public art, the processes of urban renewal, and the settlement pattern of the city. Post-industrial cities like Pittsburgh use public art projects alongside investment to try to revitalize economically and socially vulnerable places. These attempts can lead to positive revitalization or damaging gentrification or may have no impact. Results largely depend on place-context and the details of the strategy. A database of physical and social features was constructed to use a methodology derived from the study of settlement patterns. Based on spatial relationships between features associated with either positive or negative types of urban development, neighborhoods in Pittsburgh are identified, classified, and analyzed. This analysis reveals the spatial context that contributes to the distribution of public art and its relationship to revitalization projects. In a parallel investigation, these same concepts are explored through an arts practice-based methodology. This methodology creates additional insight into the process of research and the importance of public art research. This study will identify places that may produce positive kinds of growth in a city in need of a new direction. It will also reveal key areas of improvement for public art policy and administration in Pittsburgh and develop tools to understand why public art is important and how better to implement public art plans and maintain public art data.
Western Pennsylvania History, 1985
is fullprofessor of American History, Alliance College, and librarian of the Crawford County Historical Society. He is the author of numerous articles on Pennsylvania history. Carl K. Burkett, Jr., is a field associate with the Section of Anthropology of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History and archaeology consultant. This study is based upon a report prepared forthe Pittsburgh Urban Redevelopment Authority entitled, A Survey of Historical Sources Relating to the Pennsylvania Main Line Canal in Pittsburgh, 1983.-Editor 1 There is no published comprehensive study of the Pittsburgh canal, though primary sources do exist. Local documents include maps, deeds, business correspondence, and the municipal records of Pittsburgh and Allegheny, but the most extensive collection is the Pennsylvania Board of Canal Commissioners' "Records" in the State Archives, Harrisburg. Interpretive works on the Pennsylvania Main Line Canal providing limited coverage of the canal in the city are WilliamH. Shank's The Amazing Pennsylvania Canals (York, Pa., 1965) and The Pennsylvania Main Line Canal (York, Pa., 1973), by Robert McCullough and Walter Leuba. A general treatment of the Pittsburgh canal can also be found inErasmus Wilson's Standard History of Pittsburg (Chicago, 1898); Leland Baldwin's Pittsburgh, The Story of a City (Pittsburgh, 1937); and Catherine E. Reiser's Pittsburgh's Commercial Development, 1800-1850 (Harrisburg, 1951). A useful bibliography on the canal era in Pennsylvania was compiled by Harry L.Rinker in Theodore B. Klein's The Canals of Pennsylvania and the System of Internal Improvements (1901, reprint ed., Bethlehem, 1973).
Pennsylvania Heritage , 2019
Beginning in the late 1970s, an increasing number of residents and community leaders saw in metropolitan Pittsburgh’s industrial heritage and newly cleared riverfront brownfields an organizing framework for revitalizing communities devastated by urban decentralization and the collapse of heavy industries. Unlike earlier urban renewal, embodied by the city’s celebrated postwar “Renaissance” that razed the messy urban/industrial landscape in order to build a modernist cityscape, historically-themed sites, heritage-based building rehabilitation, and riverfront trails sought to nurture a sense of regional identity, revitalize “authentic” neighborhoods, and enhance the area’s reputation among the highly-educated professionals that urban theorist Richard Florida later called the “creative class.” Pittsburgh mayor Tom Murphy (1994-2006) reimagined most fully the nineteenth-century city as an economic development tool, championing the conversion of abandoned rail lines into recreational trails, pouring municipal resources into the remediation of polluted brownfield sites, and advocating for new office buildings, museums, theaters, and sports stadiums that embraced rather than ignored the rivers. Drawing inspiration from Pittsburgh, and especially the festival marketplace of Station Square, local officials, business owners, and preservationists in nearby Homestead, Pennsylvania and Wheeling, West Virginia secured designation as National Heritage Areas and achieved some success in remaking their declining downtowns. Despite this status, however, both communities struggled to mobilize the economic, cultural and political resources necessary to translate this post-industrial urban vision into reality. This paper takes Pittsburgh, Homestead and Wheeling as comparative case studies for investigating the difficulty in balancing economic development, environmental cleanup and heritage preservation in forging a new regional identity in an area facing a continuing crisis of industrial decline and out-migration.
Beginning in the late 1970s, an increasing number of residents and community leaders in the Pittsburgh metropolitan region saw in the area’s “industrial heritage” and newly cleared riverfronts an organizing framework for revitalizing communities devastated by urban decentralization and the collapse of heavy industries. Heritage themed sites and riverfront trails sought to nurture a sense of community identity, revitalize neighborhoods, and enhance the area’s reputation among the highly-educated professionals that Richard Florida later called the “creative class.” Re-imagining the nineteenth century city as an economic development tool was implemented most fully in Pittsburgh during the administration of Mayor Tom Murphy who declared, “If ever there was a place to unfold the history of Pittsburgh, it is along our riverfronts – a 12 mile story of who we are.” Murphy championed a twelve-mile “Three Rivers Heritage Trail” through the heart of the city as new office buildings, museums, theaters and sports stadiums embraced rather than ignored the rivers. Drawing inspiration from the successful renovation of Station Square on Pittsburgh’s South Side, local officials and preservationists in Homestead, PA and Wheeling, WV succeeded in securing designation as “national heritage areas” and achieved some success in remaking their downtowns. Despite this status, however, both communities struggled to mobilize the economic and political resources necessary to translate this post-industrial urban vision into reality. This paper takes Homestead and Wheeling as comparative case studies in investigating the difficulty in balancing economic development, environmental cleanup and heritage preservation in a region facing a continuing crisis of industrial decline and out-migration.
From the 1879 edition (Volume II) of the marvelous Czech-American annual journal, Amerikán Národní Kalendář, we bring you the exclusive English translation of one Czech immigrants view of the cities of Allegheny and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Known neither for its large, nor robust, Czech population, this is makes for an intriguing view of these important industrial American cities from the perspective of one Czech immigrant.
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