Associated Press - August 26, 2007 9:04 AM ET
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - On the outside, Chris Skorija's (Score-E-ha) minivan looks like a lot of others.
But on the inside, the Louisville resident has turned it into a mobile studio that can transform the plainest brick wall into a work of art.
Skorija brings the brick and mortar alive with psychedelic light beams and a barrage of color - all projected from his mobile studio, a minivan jam-packed with computer equipment.
Dubbed "Guerrilla Projections," Skorija's project is a collaborative effort of worldwide artists connected through the Internet site Craig's List.
The video artworks range from rave-inspired pulses of color to nature scenes and time-stop photography.
Skorija then bleeds the pieces together and projects them on outdoor walls with more than $10,000 worth of computer equipment and a generator inside of his minivan.
But Skorija says don't look for deeper meaning in the pictures. He says it's art just for the sake of art. |