Artist Tom Holt is mentioned in Community Canvases, an article by Jane Kwiatkowski exploring the landscape of painted murals in Buffalo. Here's the good stuff:
“Murals do not have to be educational,” said Tom Holt, the graffiti-esque artist whose latest mural will be part of a solo exhibit opening May 31 at the Castellani Art Museum. “They can be just a celebration of color and form.The original murals in the Soundlab bathrooms were painted by Tom, and other pieces have been featured in various Soundlab multi-media events.
“It comes down to the democracy of visual space,” Holt noted. “It’s difficult to obtain mural space. It bothers me that Cellino and Barnes and the McDonald’s Golden Arches inundate us with images as large as they want because they can pay for it.”
Holt moved here in 2002 and within months, he and a group of friends opened Kamikaze, a three-story space for performance art on Ellicott Street. More recently, he painted “a giant almost subterranean” mural for Squeaky Wheel that ran 70 feet.
“Murals are all about audience,” Holt said. “You get to share your art in a spectacular way. The scale should not decrease your sense of signature.” Holt’s signature spray paintings take on a sci-fi, almost futuristic look. He breeds cartoon characters.
Holt pointed out the tattered lion mural at the corner of Delaware Avenue and Virginia Street. The mural was painted by graphic artist Frank Cravotta, director of creative services for the Buffalo Sabres.
“I always thought I wanted to fix that,” Holt said. “That’s the type of space I’d be eager to paint on.”
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