Model buildings painted on control boxes around downtown Boston. They are meant to be miniature versions of nearby buildings.
The biggest guerrilla art piece I have ever done. It might be the largest in the world. It's 1/4 of a mile long and took 45 gallons of paint so far. It's been up for over a year.
Inspired from watching Jan Vormann on YouTube, a wall gap on Congress Street—down the street from the children's museum—was filled with legos. The legos were ripped out of the wall for new high end condos, but the work lives on via the internet as a meme with over 1600 shares. Visit the Dispatchwork website to see lego fills from around the world.
A painted stump on the Commonwealth Avenue Mall.
A utility building is transformed into stack of logs.
Located next to the Harbor Towers in Boston, the two large stainless steel sculptures (installed in 1964 long before laptop computers existed) are examples of minimalist art. The six painted vinyl decals transform them into laptop computer facsimiles—pop art.
Dead trees transformed into art trees. I wrapped them in plastic and sprayed them with house paint. All the overspray hit the plastic and there was no mess. There are dead trees everywhere that need painting.
A kinetic experiment I performed with some leftover paint in the parking lot of Artists for Humanity.
Snidesnarks are places around Boston that are not friendly to pedestrians, but my pavement markings say otherwise.