Description
Play was initially reviewed in Chicago Tribune, Chicago Sun-Times, NewCity, Chicago Tonight, WBEZ, and more National Print Campaign: Will send advance copies to NY Times, SF Chronicle, Chicago Tribune, Chicago Sun-Times, The Nation, Washington Post, Wall St. Journal, Associated Press, Rolling Stone, The Atlantic, as well as trade publications Publishers Weekly, Booklist, Library Journal, Kirkus Reviews, and Foreword Reviews Pitch features in theater, Chicago-based, & hip-hop journals: Vibe, The Source, Chicago Reader, Fake Shore Drive National TV & Radio Campaign: MSNBC, PBS Newshour, C-SPAN BookTV, Tavis Smiley, NPR's Microphone Check Online and Social Media Campaign: Haymarket Books has 13k FB fans, 8k Twitter followers. Kevin Coval has 5k Twitter Followers, Idris Goodwin has 1k Twitter followers Promotion and publicity to coincide with performances and readings at schools and theaters across the country
About the Author
Kevin Coval is the author of Schtick, L-vis Lives, Everyday People the American Library Association "Book of the Year" Finalist Slingshots: A Hip-Hop Poetica, and an editor of The BreakBeat Poets. He is the founder of Louder Than a Bomb: The Chicago Youth Poetry Festival, Artistic Director at Young Chicago Authors, and teaches at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Idris Goodwin is a playwright, spoken word performer and essayist recognized across mediums by The National Endowment for the Arts, The Ford and Mellon Foundation. His play How We Got On, developed at The Eugene O'Neill Theater Center, premiered at The 2012Festival of New Play.
Reviews
"A romantic ode to the art of graffiti and the act of tagging, a piece that demystifies authorial signatures and charts the storied history of graffiti art in Chicago, shouting out its great artists and their canvases, from Kennedy underpasses to CTA train yards." -Chicago Tribune "A raw, visceral narrative that gives graffiti artists the humanity and genius the headlines rob them of." -Newcity Stage "This is a piece about the overwhelming urge not just to create art, but to get it seen-if only by a scant few before the sandblasters come along." -TimeOut Chicago "A provocative play... that raises philosophical and political questions that are already generating heated discussions among theatergoers of all ages." -Gapers Block "A wildly wrong-headed and potentially damaging work - No amount of classroom discussion will scrub clean the irresponsible ideas promulgated in this play." -Chicago Sun-Times "It was at once an act of artistic expression, social protest, and criminal vandalism-guaranteed to rattle the art world and media establishment, set the Twittersphere abuzz, and send the young rebels underground, if not to jail. This world premiere, written by Idris Goodwin and Young Chicago Authors artistic director Kevin Coval, is simultaneously celebratory and cautionary-clearly sympathetic to the artists' point of view, but not blind to the impact their reckless act would have on their own lives." -Chicago Reader "This production is sharp, exciting and stimulating, both visually and emotionally. It will entertain, educate and is guaranteed to prompt heated discussions about the nature of art and the place for graffiti in our world." -Chicago Theatre Review
"A romantic ode to the art of graffiti and the act of tagging, a piece that demystifies authorial signatures and charts the storied history of graffiti art in Chicago, shouting out its great artists and their canvases, from Kennedy underpasses to CTA train yards." Chicago Tribune "A raw, visceral narrative that gives graffiti artists the humanity and genius the headlines rob them of." Newcity Stage "This is a piece about the overwhelming urge not just to create art, but to get it seen if only by a scant few before the sandblasters come along." TimeOut Chicago "A provocative play... that raises philosophical and political questions that are already generating heated discussions among theatergoers of all ages." Gapers Block "A wildly wrong-headed and potentially damaging work No amount of classroom discussion will scrub clean the irresponsible ideas promulgated in this play." Chicago Sun-Times "It was at once an act of artistic expression, social protest, and criminal vandalism guaranteed to rattle the art world and media establishment, set the Twittersphere abuzz, and send the young rebels underground, if not to jail. This world premiere, written by Idris Goodwin and Young Chicago Authors artistic director Kevin Coval, is simultaneously celebratory and cautionary clearly sympathetic to the artists' point of view, but not blind to the impact their reckless act would have on their own lives." Chicago Reader "This production is sharp, exciting and stimulating, both visually and emotionally. It will entertain, educate and is guaranteed to prompt heated discussions about the nature of art and the place for graffiti in our world." Chicago Theatre Review
Book Information
ISBN 9781608465972
Author Kevin Coval
Format Paperback
Page Count 68
Imprint Haymarket Books
Publisher Haymarket Books