3.30.2009

design*obsession : one man's treasure


A recent NPR story profiled an intriguing artist and entrepreneur named Justin Gignac. In that story, titled: “Treasure or Trash? Artist Says It’s in the Packaging”, Gignac puts forth a persuasive argument. While an intern at MTV, Gignac relates that he engaged in a discussion with his fellow workers. One of them expressed the opinion that “. . .they thought package design wasn’t important”, according to Gignac.
That made Gignac rise to the challenge. “So I figured the only way to prove them wrong would be to try to package something that absolutely nobody in their right mind would ever want to buy.” Garbage.
That was a few years ago. Since he began, Gignac has sold over 1000 trash cubes of--selective New York City garbage--around the globe. Making the cubes “compositionally appealing”, Gignac sold his cubes initially as “gag gifts” for $10 each. Now, the cubes sell for as much as $100. Each sealed box comes signed, numbered and tagged as “Garbage of New York City”. A small affixed sticker records the date the trash was selected for the cube.
The gist, according to Gignac? “People’s perceptions have completely changed.” Translation: while some people see nothing but trash, other people see art, especially since the cubes cost more now.
Besides his original venture, Gignac and girlfriend Christine Santora create paintings of items on their wish list—everything from pizza slices to financial security and price them according to the value of the real thing. . .I’m not sure how ‘financial security’ is depicted, but it’s an interesting concept. Gignac observed that sometimes people have a distorted view of what art is really worth. Or what really constitutes garbage? Or the value of garbage? One of his ideas, for example, is to create a 6 by 8 foot painting of a taco and sell it for $1.99, because “that’s what a taco costs.”
interesting idea~~
:: the dieline ::

1 comments:

hiroro said...

oh my gosh that's so funny! what the heck ... hahaha