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Vote for your favorite banner in West Chicago contest

There's still time to stroll down West Chicago's Main Street to view some great works of public art. Winning banners from the 2011 Art Banner Contest, sponsored by the West Chicago Cultural Arts Commission, offer a creative take on the theme, “The Way Things Move.”

This is the fourth year originally designed banners have adorned Main Street light poles. The juried project has generated interest from artists around the Chicago area who submitted their designs for consideration. The result was 20 artists' interpretations on movement, which were turned into 30-inch-by-60-inch street banners.

The public is invited to vote for their favorite in a People's Choice Award category. Ballots are available at city hall, 475 Main St.; at Gallery 200, 200 Main St.; or at the City Museum, 132 Main St. The deadline for voting is Tuesday, Sept. 1, and the winner will be announced at a reception in the fall.

Here's what some of the artists are saying about the inspirations behind their work:

Heide Morris: “My inspiration for ‘Slow Motion' is an actual place on Horseshoe Island in Green Bay, Wis. My husband and I like to take our sailboat to that area and we had anchored in the protected cove at the island, inside the horseshoe. You can access the island by boat and walk the trail around the perimeter. This scene is a spot where the wind has eroded the shore and the trees have started to fall against huge rocks. I took photographs because the shapes and color were so interesting and the spaces seem to draw you in like caves. When the painting was finished I tossed around different titles, but when the banner theme came along slow motion just seemed to fit. The fallen trees symbolize the passage of time as measured in nature's forces. The rocks stand stable and provide time for the trees to grow; the trees push their way through the rocks. The wind and water erode away at it all and I wondered how long it will take before the path I walked is gone.”Michael Canton: #8220;In my case with #8216;Dancing Colors,' as soon as I read about the topic in the banner contest, I knew what I wanted to work with. Koi fish are so colorful, always look to me like flags in the wind. I decided to use digital painting for the technique because of the possibilities that offers. In the end of the day, what I have in my mind and what I have done on the screen are more similar than when I try traditional media.#8221;Harvey Hanig: #8220;I had a few images in mind for the contest and I ended shooting three original pieces anyway. The wind engine was near a restaurant that I eat breakfast at a couple times a week. On that particular day the blades were spinning in the wind, the light was perfect and I shot several takes at long exposures, looking for a certain kind of a softness from the motion blur; yet the black arc of the metal ring that holds the blades in place imparts a strong contrast of hardness against the softness of blades.#8221;Judith Horsley: #8220;My husband and I decided to take our Airedale terrier, Beorn, with us when we went down to Shawnee National Forest and the Catch River Basin for some hiking in early April. It is a long drive, and at one point I looked out my side window to view the scenery and discovered that Beorn had put the window down and had his head happily out the window in the back seat. Instead of immediately making him get back inside, I grabbed my camera from the floor and took a photo of the rearview mirror that contained his happy reflection and the car behind us. I then made him get inside and asked Michael to put on the window child safety locks. I liked the results of the photo, but never had it developed until it was time to search my photos for a banner entry with the theme of #8216;How Things Move.' I'm grateful to the judges for liking this photo of our bad boy dog as much as I do.#8221; Mark Moleski: #8220;If I may base mine on a quote from Jackson Pollock: #8216;The modern artist #8230; is working and expressing an inner world #8212; in other words #8212; expressing the energy, the motion, and other inner forces.'#8221;Britta Renwick: #8220;The story behind my banner, #8216;Party Lights' is that my boys, Sean and Alec, were playing with those glowing necklaces, bracelets last Fourth of July. They had them around their neck, arms, legs #8230; so I told them to move as fast as they could in the dark, and captured the movement of the glowing light! They had a blast dancing in the dark and I had a blast trying to capture the moment.#8221;Mike Smith: #8220;I am a train buff and had an opportunity to photograph a steam train at night at a transportation museum, this was the result.#8221; Joanne Kalchbrenner: #8220;My image is a photograph of my son, Joey, throwing stones in a pond last season.#8221;Kathy Steere: #8220;The clearance room at Von Maur department store is a dangerous place. They had this beautiful, totally impractical pair of pink shoes with ridiculous (for me) heels that I absolutely loved. When they were further reduced the next time I looked, of course I bought them. I had been thinking about the banner theme for months, motion #8212; how things move, and had the idea of showing the shoes somehow. My daughter's boyfriend, Dave Cummins, photographed the shoes many different ways and with many different settings. It was from one of those photographs that I did the colored pencil rendition of #8216;Pink Shoes,' a simple straightforward design that has the subject easy to recognize as you drive by the banner. (And wouldn't you know, the next time I went into Von Maur's, the shoes were even further reduced! Oh well.)#8221;Anni Holm: #8220;The title is: #8216;41ordm;53'18#8221;N, 88ordm;12'35#8221;W,' which are the coordinates of the city of West Chicago. My piece is a photograph, taken from the passenger seat of my car, while driving across the train tracks on Washington Street. Since my husband and I in 2006 moved to #8216;Old Heidelberg' we have experienced an increase in the train traffic with the acquisition of #8216;The J' by Canadian National Railroad. This has not only made it difficult to get anywhere on time, but it also means that we are cut off from the rest of town for long periods of time throughout both day and night. Before the sale of #8216;The J' the city of West Chicago and residents made great efforts to stop the deal, but somehow it still went through. Although, the Canadian National Railroad was required to provide some sort of compensation to both the city and its residents, very little has been done to reverse the negative effect of the increased train traffic. Overall the West Chicago business life and its residents have suffered #8212; in lost time, money, business, work, children, adults, sleep, etc., the list goes on. It's my impression that most of us approach the tracks with hesitation and automatically step a little harder on the accelerator or speed up our walking and exhale in relief when we make it across. To the U.S. Surface Transportation Board, West Chicago (and with that I mean #8216;we') was just some coordinates on the map #8212; a place ideal to send more trains through #8212; which made it easy to make a motion to approve the purchase. This was the main reason I chose to submit this piece for the exhibition themed #8216;Motion #8212; The Way Things Move.'#8221; Fotios Zemenides: #8220;My image is part of a series called #8216;The Disasters' in which I explore the four elemental forces of nature that humanity has struggled against for millennia and survived. The four aspects are Gale (wind), Deluge (water), Eruption (earth) and Conflagration (fire). Each aspect will be explored with 24 different images in 24 different media. The #8216;Beta's' are done using woodblock/linocut prints. This image, #8216;Beta Eruption,' showcased the movement of the Earth in a dramatic fashion. Something so violent, and devastating on our scale, is minor and relatively inconsequential on the global and geologic scale. Nature has neither compassion nor contempt for humanity, it simply goes through its cycle. We are dependent on the Earth, not vice versa.#8221;The best way to view all 20 banners is in person, strolling down historic Main Street. However, they are also online at westchicago.org in the Public Art section under Downtown. The call for art for next year's banner project has been released, and applications may be found at westchicago.org. The 2012 theme is: #8220;America #8212; Who We Are.#8221; The deadline for submissions is Feb. 1, 2012. 7711541Anni Holm captured this image from her car while driving across the train tracks on Washington Street in West Chicago. The title of her piece reflects the coordinates for West Chicago.Courtesy of West Chicago 7211441“Pink Shoes” by Kathy Steere is of a pair of shoes she couldn’t resist when they were on sale at Von Maur.Courtesy of West Chicago