Mary
Beth Hanrahan
While attending a field trip from Taft High School in Woodland
Hills, California, Mary Beth toured the Foster & Kleiser Billboard
manufacturing facility. Later that day, staring at the awesome billboards
as the bus made its way down Sunset Boulevard, she remembers being
struck by the communication potential of image and scale. “I
could imagine my art there,” Hanrahan claims. Nearly 10 years
later, she moved to Los Angeles to consciously pursue a career as
a display artist and prop maker. It was during that time that she
began painting. Mary Beth uses large scale, site specific, public
painting as a communication device, and as a vehicle for community-based
activism and involvement. The idea, the message, and the intended
audience determine the art medium she employs on each project. For
Mary Beth, money and mediums are a means to an effect. The opportunities
for awareness-expansion and innovation exist primarily in the process
of bringing her works to life. Among her most respected works is
the Tortilla Flats Mural and Reunion Project. A collaborative venture
of Michael M. Mora and Hanrahan, the 500’ painting depicts
people, buildings, and businesses from the Tortilla Flats neighborhood
that was condemned and displaced when the 101 Freeway came through
Ventura, California during the 1950’s. The images were derived
from photos and oral histories obtained during the course of interviews
conducted with former neighborhood residents.
|