de-Signs = iPhone photos of signs with some of the words erased.
Steal Across America Tour Diary #2: Columbus and Kansas City
I’m on book tour promoting Steal Like An Artist. See all upcoming dates?
After a flight cancellation and some major delays, Columbus, OH was a whirlwind, but the event at the Ohio State Barnes & Noble was a kind of homecoming — I grew up just 20 miles south in Circleville, so I got to see my parents, my best friend, my college roomate, aunts, uncles, cousins, my 7th grade English teacher, and even my kindergarten art teacher! Signed a lot of books. Got some Max & Erma’s room service. Columbus is a much more vibrant and happening place than I remember it from my childhood.
I had a nice couple of days in Kansas City — a TEDx talk at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, a fun radio interview at KCUR, eating BBQ and visiting the cool arts district with my new pal Dick Brown (that’s him in the freight elevator), more eating in repurposed gas stations, and hanging out at First Friday.
Next week: Lexington, Chapel Hill, Atlanta, and Savannah! See the dates?
You can see more from my tour diary or follow along as it happens on Twitter: @austinkleon
Steal Like An Artist is a New York Times Best Seller
Steal Across America Tour Diary #1: NYC, Philly, San Diego
Had an incredible start to the #StealAcrossAmerica tour this last week.
Monday, I flew to NYC, wandered around that night, wrote a sappy little piece about NYC in a diner, and had a few whiskeys at a place called Jimmy’s.
Tuesday, had a terrific plate at Szechuan Kitchen, had my first real photo shoot with Complex Magazine, ate Shake Shack with my publicist, gave a talk at the Columbia bookstore wearing the same outfit as my editor, and took the Amtrak to Philly.
Wednesday, I walked all over Philly, ate a delicious falafel sandwich at Mama’s Vegetarian (can’t imagine a cheesesteak tasting better), toured the amazing Mutter Museum, walked Rittenhouse square, and my handler Joan took me for sushi at Pod. While we were eating, my editor called to tell me that we made the New York Times Best Seller list. (!!!) Gave my talk at the Penn bookstore, went back to the hotel and collaged and watched Game Of Thrones.
Thursday, Deena Gerson, a museum guide I met at the Penn reading who happens to collect my prints, gave me a wonderful tour of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, including the Zoe Strauss show and the incredible Cy Twombly room. Deena was even nice enough to drive me to the airport! On my flight with spotty wi-fi, conducted my first 10,000 ft. Q&A. Got into San Diego that night, and my wife Meg flew out to meet me. Had some delicious midnight deep dish at Berkeley Pizza in the Gaslamp district.
Friday, our friend Jed Sundwall drove us around, and then we spent the day at the zoo and Balboa park. Fun day.
Saturday, we spent mostly at the AIGA Y Conference, and later that night we hung out and watched the sun set over Pacific Beach. I met a ton of nice people, but I really dug the work of Andrea Dezsö. Check her out.
Sunday, we had a helluva adventure, walking down to Black’s beach, climbing up the treacherous stairs to the gliderport, and checking out the Salk Institute.
Thanks to everyone who came out to the readings and to everyone who shuttled us around and helped us find the good spots.
If you want to follow this week’s adventures, follow me on Twitter.
The New York Trip That Changed My Life
Note: this is an edited version of a sappy talk I gave at the Columbia University bookstore last week.
I know I’m probably supposed to read something from the book, but this is the very first stop on my book tour, the first book tour I’ve ever been on, and to be honest, I’m already a little sick of the book. (My publicist is back there somewhere cringing.)
Instead, I’d like to read you something I wrote on the plane yesterday and last night at the Red Flame diner on West 44th Street. It’s a short story about New York. (I know everybody has a New York story, but just bear with me.)
Almost exactly 9 years ago I was a sophomore in college at this place called Miami University in Ohio. Miami, as in the American Indian tribe — “we were a university before Florida was a state!” (My life is full of weird naming justifications — I’m a guy named Austin from Ohio who lives in Austin, so I have to constantly say the same, “Austin was a family name before *Texas* was a state!”)
Anyways, I’d heard through some sort of campus communication that the Fine Arts School ran this special “Leadership in The Arts” program during spring break where you could apply to go on this fully-paid week-long trip to New York City and meet Miami alumni who were working in the arts. (The program was run by Pamela Fox, now the president of Mary Baldwin College.)
New York City. Nothing could be more exciting to me. See, I grew up in the middle of a cornfield in southern Ohio, and when I was young all I wanted to do was get the hell out of Ohio and go somewhere where something was happening.
New York, for me, was all that was Happening.
That’s where Allen Ginsberg lived! That’s where Taxi Driver was filmed! That’s where the Velvet Underground and The Ramones wrote all their great music!
To me, getting to visit New York for a week was better than Disneyland: It was like going to the motherland. The big city!
It sounds corny and cliched, but it’s really true.
I wasn’t a student in the fine arts department, but I’d taken a few drawing courses and the program was open to all majors, so I threw my name in the hat with an essay. Well, what do you know, my application for the trip was accepted, and spring break of 2003, I got on a plane with a bunch of my classmates and we flew into LaGuardia.
We were here for a week — every day we met a different alumnus, sometimes several. The itinerary, looking back on it, was insane: Yo-Yo Ma with the Philharmonic, walking the Brooklyn Bridge, dinner in Chinatown, jazz at the Blue Note, Grand Central, the Frick, Matthew Barney’s Cremaster Cycle at the Guggenheim, The Producers on Broadway, La Traviata at the Met, a tour of the Ailvin Ailey School, my first soul food at Silvia’s in Harlem, Picasso at the MOMA…
At some point, we ended up in Jerry Seinfeld’s building on the upper west side, drinking tea and eating cucumber sandwiches at Ted and Betsy Rogers‘ place. Ted was the very generous alumni who I believe arranged most of the trip — so generous, in fact, that when I mentioned I was studying the classics, he took me upstairs and showed me his incredible library lined with books, overlooking Central Park.
And yes, at some point I made my way to Columbia, and I thought it was the perfect campus, and I bought a t-shirt in the bookstore and told myself I would go to grad school here. (I never made it to grad school, but that’s another story…)
Does this sound a little Cinderella to you? A little too perfect? Because it kind of was…
You see, I loved art, but I never thought an artist was something I could be. I didn’t know any artists, I didnt grow up around any artists. I had it in my head that artists didn’t come from little places like Circleville, Ohio, and they certainly didn’t go to *my* college.
That spring break trip changed all that. Suddenly I met people who’d been me, people who were far away from home, who were leading the kind of life that I wanted. Now, most of these alumni we met were relatively unknown, but damn it, they were artists! They lived in New York City!
I’m telling you all this because when I got back from that trip, I knew what I wanted to be: I wanted to be an artist. Before, there was no chance of that happening. It was unfathomable to me. Now, it seemed like it was at least an option.
So I wanted to be an artist, I wanted to live some kind of creative life, but I had no idea how to do it.
And that’s where this little book comes in. Quite simply, it’s a list of 10 things I wish I knew right after that New York trip. I wrote it so that I could stick it in a time capsule and send it back to the 19-year-old me, the 19-year-old me who knew it was possible to become what he wanted to be, but wasn’t quite sure how.
Anyways, I really really like this town. We’re all lucky to be here.
Thanks for having me.
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