Sidewalk Sam

Sidewalk Sam is the pseudonym of Robert Charles Guillemin (May 4, 1939 – January 26, 2015), a Boston-based artist who resided in Newton, Massachusetts. He is best recognized for his reproductions of European masterpieces, chalked or painted on the sidewalk. Following an accident in 1994 that left him paralyzed, Guillemin increased his focus on large participatory art projects for communities and businesses. His motto, on a stickie at the top of his computer, was "Entertain, Inspire, Empower and Unite".

Robert C. Guillemin (a.k.a., Sidewalk Sam) staves off a light rain with an umbrella as he finishes his artwork (c. 1976-1978).
Robert C. Guillemin uses acrylic paint to copy a detail of "The Reader" by French painter Jean-Honoré Fragonard.

History

Guillemin first took to the streets of Boston and Cambridge, Massachusetts in the summer of 1973, drawing famous artworks on crowded street corners where passersby filled a bucket with change.[1] By the early 1980s, Guillemin found business sponsors for his street artworks and shifted to longer-lasting acrylic paints. Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Guillemin also organized chalk-drawing festivals, open-air art exhibits, and public art events that engaged participants in the creation of large mosaics, murals, and banners. In 1990 and 1991, Guillemin organized the Boston Artists’ Summer Festival.[2]

In 1994 Guillemin fell 30 feet from the roof of his home[3] which paralyzed him from the chest down and made him into a wheelchair user.[4] After his accident, Guillemin returned to street painting and continued to organize participatory art events in Boston and internationally. He has appeared on the Today show and Good Morning America, and been featured in People magazine, the New York Times, Carnegie magazine, and a high school social studies textbook.[5][6][7][8][9][10][11]

Mr. Guillemin died in his sleep at his home in Newton, MA on Monday, January 26, 2015, at age 75.[12]

Education

As an undergraduate Guillemin attended Boston College, the University of Illinois, and, finally, Boston University, where he received a Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) in 1962. While at Boston College, he also attended courses at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts (a.k.a., Boston Museum School).

After graduation from Boston University he traveled to Paris and attended courses at the École des Beaux-Arts and the Académie de Grande Chaumière. Starting in 1965, Guillemin studied for his master's degree in painting at Boston University, where Walter Tandy Murch (1907–1967) was the chief graduate painting faculty. Guillemin received his MFA in 1967.

Solo exhibitions

  • Structural Surfaces: April, 1971, the Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University.[13]
  • Quick Sketches: December, 1971, the Institute of Contemporary Art on Beacon Street in Boston.

Group exhibitions

  • Flush with the Walls: June 15, 1971, Boston Museum of Fine Arts. Guillemin worked with a group of five artists (Kristin Johnson, Todd McKie, Martin Mull, David Raymond and Jo-Sandman) to stage a protest event/exhibition in a men's restroom located in the museum's lower level.[14]

Awards and recognitions

  • Official Screever of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 1984.

Family

Computer scientist Ernst Guillemin was his uncle, and he is the younger brother of M.I.T. mathematician Victor W. Guillemin, recipient in 2003 of the American Mathematical Society's Leroy P. Steele Prize for Lifetime Achievement.[15] His brother-in-law is revolutionary historian Ray Raphael.

gollark: ddg! parallel construction
gollark: Of the US.
gollark: Like anyone *obeys* the *Constitution*.
gollark: Given the massive* success\*\* of campaigns against mass surveillance before, this will*** go well.
gollark: Communism detected. Deploying the [REDACT].

References

  1. "In Boston, There Is A Danger of Stepping On, Say A Rembrandt," by Laird Hart, The Wall Street Journal, July 17, 1974, page 1.
  2. "Artist's Work Moves out onto the Streets in Summer Festival," by Christine Temin, The Boston Globe, August 2, 1991 (Arts Section)
  3. Nicas, Jack, Sidewalk Sam paints verses on Longfellow July 2010, The Boston Globe
  4. "Welcome back, Sidewalk Sam," The Boston Globe, 27 October 1995, page: 41.
  5. Romano, Stephen (14 July 1980). "Sidewalk Sam's Street Corner Art Is Here Today, Walked on Tomorrow". People.
  6. "Sidewalk Sam". HarvardSquare.com.
  7. Carmody, Dierdre (15 December 1982). "New York Day by Day: Unaccustomed Setting for the Mona Lisa". The New York Times.
  8. Morris, Bernadine (12 September 1984). "Six Fashion Views at a Benefit". The New York Times.
  9. Singer, Natasha (13 September 2007). "A Spriz Here, a Jitter or Two There". The New York Times.
  10. "Sidewalk Sam". Carnegie Magazine. 50 (1–6): 229. 1976.
  11. Banks, James (1992). The World Past and Present. Glencoe Secondary Long. p. 45. ISBN 9780021460106.
  12. "Sidewalk Sam, artist who turned streets into canvas, dies at 75" The Boston Globe, 27 January 2015
  13. "Art Bog: Squeeze at Brandeis Hits Rose Museum Exhibit," By Charles Giuliano, Boston Herald Traveler, April 10, 1971.
  14. Painting in Boston: 1950-2000 (exhibition catalogue), eds. Rachel Rosenfield Lafo, Nicholas Capasso, and Jennifer Uhrhane (Lincoln, Mass: DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park; Amherst, Mass.: distributed by University of Massachusetts Press, 2002), page: 34-36.
  15. "News, Events and Announcements". ams.org. Retrieved December 21, 2010.

Further reading

  • The Improper Bostonian, 29 August–11 Sept 2007, p. 28
  • Sayings for Sidewalk Sam, compiled and calligraphed by F.N. Wombat (e-book pending through Art Street Inc website)
  • Time, 4 Nov 1985, p. 70—photo of Sidewalk Sam (left) with Garrison Keillor.
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