The late Hüsker Dü drummer Grant Hart was a fan of three-word titles, starting with his band's 1982 debut, "Land Speed Record." Now he has a new posthumous work called "Times, Places, Situations," a triptych of collages by Hart that his friend and collaborator Chris Larson has transformed into a three-dimensional work.
Within the next two weeks, these mural-like, 16-foot-wide sculptural reliefs will adorn the Palace Theatre in downtown St. Paul.
"I see the project as a collaboration between Grant and I," said Larson. "I am appropriating his work to make this work."
The mural/sculptures have a messiness much like the punk rock aesthetic Hart pioneered. A car rolls down the side of a building. Earth is in orbit. Santa Claus' face is collaged into a vintage camera.
With a title lifted from the lyrics to a Hart song — "Flexible Flyer," from Hüsker Dü's 1985 album "Flip Your Wig" — the triptych is based on work Hart made by slicing together images found in vintage magazines. SignMinds, a Minneapolis company run by artist Ben Janssens, translated them into 3-D through a complex layering technique that combines laser-cut aluminum with acrylic decals.
The three pieces will be installed on a blank wall of the theater facing St. Peter Street.
Joe Spencer, president of the St. Paul Downtown Alliance, gave the green light on the project. He had been trying to figure out how public art might become a part of the city-owned Palace, which was reopened after an extensive renovation in 2017.
It all clicked shortly after Hart's passing that year when Spencer had a conversation with Nate Kranz, general manager of First Avenue, which manages the Palace. Spencer watched the 2014 documentary "Every Everything: The Music, Life and Times of Grant Hart," which discusses the musician's artwork, and realized that Hart was friends with Larson, a noted artist and professor at the University of Minnesota.