KEEN Blog

Posts Tagged ‘Hybrid.STAND’

Catching Up with STAND Winner Carrie La Seur

Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009

Marshalltown, Iowa- Coal Plant In 2008, energy and environmental lawyer Carrie La Seur received a $5,000 grant from KEEN as a result of being a runner-up in KEEN’s Hybrid.STAND contest. The Hybrid.Stand contest was a KEEN initiative that awarded $150,000 to fund different innovative ideas centered around sustainability. There were three overall categories, Stand Up, Stand Out and Stand For, each having a grand prize of $25,000 and 5 runner-up prizes in the amount of $5,000.

La Seur is the founder and president of Plains Justice law firm. Plains Justice is a public interest environmental law center working for environmental justice and sustainable communities in the Northern Plains region of the US, including eastern Montana and Wyoming, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska and Iowa. Their docket includes Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, Resource Conservation and Recovery Act and energy policy work.

Last year, two of their biggest projects were fighting proposals for two massive coal-fired power plants in Iowa, both near significant minority communities. Each proposal was able to be defeated. Plains Justice has turned their efforts to shifting state and federal energy policy toward cleaner, climate-friendly solutions. It is also expanding a national “Clean Energy Ambassador” program, in which utility insiders educate public power managers on how to lower customer bills using advanced energy efficiency programming. Plains Justice continues to work with landowners and grassroots community activists to resist dirty energy projects, and it has hired a Ph.D. epidemiologist as a Public Health Specialist to educate communities about air and water quality issues. According to La Seur, every penny from the KEEN grant went to support Plains Justice’s programming.

In the video below, Carrie La Seur speaks at a rally to save an Iowa Heritage Farm from a planned coal plant in Waterloo, Iowa. The proposed coal plant was cancelled this year.

To learn more about Plains Justice or to make a donation, check out http://plainsjustice.org.

Catching up with STAND winner Toby Atticus Fraley- Found Object Artist

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

When you think of objects like picnic coolers, vacuum parts, ski poles or coffee thermoses the word art normally doesn’t come to mind. Not unless you’re Toby Fraley. This Pittsburgh area artist finds inspiration in vintage objects found at yard sales, flea markets, estate sales, or on eBay auctions. With the objects he finds, Fraley has created a collection of art called the Robot Series. The robots are created from random objects such as vintage picnic coolers, vacuum parts and numerous miscellaneous odd items.

When it comes to finding material, Fraley says he looks for form and material first. Most vintage pieces he uses have nice, clean styles to them and are commonly made from aluminum and steel which will still hold up in the years to come. He says he avoids using some vintage plastics due to their fragileness and discoloration. Rarely will Fraley find items in mint condition so he has to be sure that they will clean up or repair well enough to use before purchasing.

Robot 21

It takes roughly between two to four weeks to build a single robot. Each robot stands approximately 36-48 inches tall and is wired to light up. Robots are named for the numerical order in which they are built. Two of the robots (Robots 3 and 12) are actually in separate private collections of Grammy Award winning musicians. Fraley also has a public art exhibit of robots 31-34 (“Robots in Flight”) permanently on display at the Civic Center in Scottsdale, Arizona. Recently, the Pittsburgh Children’s Hospital has commissioned him to create seven pieces for entrance corridor in their new hospital.

Toby Fraley has supported himself as an artist full-time since 2001. He began going to school for art but soon discovered that self-teaching was far more beneficial. Today he participates in a local art show (The Three Rivers Arts Festival) and a wholesale show in Philadelphia (Buyers Market of American Craft) and the bulk of his projects come from public art and private commissions.

Last Year, Fraley was a runner-up in KEEN’s STAND contest in the Stand Up (Create) category. He was awarded $5,000 for his creative repurposing of found objects into art, which he put to use by buying more “junk”. To see more of his robots, as well other various works of art he creates, check out www.tobyatticusfraley.com

The Hybrid.STAND contest was a KEEN intiative that awarded $150,000 to fund different innovative ideas centered around sustainability. There were three overall categories, Stand Up, Stand Out and Stand For, each having a $25,000 grand prize and five $5,000 runner-up prizes.

Robot 26