Art

One Gun Gone: Local artist turns guns into art pieces

CandleGun1 The One Gun Gone Project, led by artist and teacher Scott Lapham, is an installation dealing with gun violence that will appear on April 20 under RISD’s Repair and Design Futures program: artworks in real time. This pop-up showing brings awareness and education to the community and asks viewers to confront the issues of gun violence and remember those affected.

The project originated after Lapham lost four of his teenage students to gun violence. His goal became to take guns from the street and bring them into the studio where they become works of art. He sells his art to raise money for a gun buy-back, which allows those in possession of a firearm to hand it over in exchange for money. Lapham described the process as “disrupting a negative economy with a positive, art-making one.”

Glass GunAt the project’s inception, Scott purchased a gun and hired an artist to create four different types of art guns based on it. This first generation of art guns includes the Glass Gun, which represents fragility; the Crayon Gun, which represents children; the Pencil Gun, which represents teaching and understanding; and the Candle Gun, which honors the lost. CrayonGuns

On April 20, RISD guests will be able to see these artworks and interact with them while thinking about gun violence. One artwork, The Black Crayon Gun, is an exact replica of a 9mm pistol. It was modeled from paraffin wax from melted black crayons. This transforms the weapon from lethal to literary, though arguably a more powerful tool, accompanied by the bold caption, “The pen is mightier than the sword.” Visitors to the space may grab hold of the waxy firearm and, on a 9’x20’ PencilGunsheet of paper, draw tally marks, each one representing a life lost to gun violence. Another interactive piece is called The School Desk, a vintage lift-top desk transformed into an altar piece where guests can place candles honoring loved ones lost to gun violence.

The One Gun Gone Project appears at the RISD Museum on Sat, Apr 20, 1 – 4pm.