St. Joseph sponsors a summer of dog gone fun

Dogs from the past and the future were part of the fun when St. Joseph unleashed its summer public art display, Hot Diggity Dogs. Think Dyno-Mutt in a dinosaur costume and a mechanized Robo Dog solar panel and you’ll get the picture. The dogs will remain downtown until Oct. 1.Some, like artist James O’Haver of St. Joseph, dressed for the occasion the day the dogs went on display. O’Haver in overcoat and deerstalker cap matched his creation, the basset hound Sherlock Hound. Numbers on the statue’s base read 221, a tip of the deerstalker cap to 221 Baker St., the home of fictional detective Sherlock Holmes.Excerpt: “I’m a Sherlock Holmes fan, along with Hercule Poirot and other British mystery genre that’s on television,” O’Haver said. “I really love that stuff. I loved the whole idea of doing one of the animals as Sherlock Hound.”O’Haver said initially he wasn’t going to do Sherlock Hound, but when he came downtown and learned there was no address between neighboring Marie’s Hallmark at 219 State and Signal Travel and Tours at 223 State, he couldn’t resist. There had to be a 221, he said.”I thought that would add a little mystery to it, and I thought of doing Sherlock Hound on a base that has 221 – the missing address,” said O’Haver, an artist with a studio at the Box Factory for the Arts. “I seem to be creating a quite little stir. The costume helps a little bit, but the kids like the idea of Sherlock Holmes.”For more information on St. Joseph’s sixth year as sponsor of a downtown public art project, read the entire story.Source: Herald-Palladium

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Dogs from the past and the future were part of the fun when St. Joseph unleashed its summer public art display, Hot Diggity Dogs. Think Dyno-Mutt in a dinosaur costume and a mechanized Robo Dog solar panel and you’ll get the picture. The dogs will remain downtown until Oct. 1.

Some, like artist James O’Haver of St. Joseph, dressed for the occasion the day the dogs went on display. O’Haver in overcoat and deerstalker cap matched his creation, the basset hound Sherlock Hound. Numbers on the statue’s base read 221, a tip of the deerstalker cap to 221 Baker St., the home of fictional detective Sherlock Holmes.

Excerpt:

“I’m a Sherlock Holmes fan, along with Hercule Poirot and other British mystery genre that’s on television,” O’Haver said. “I really love that stuff. I loved the whole idea of doing one of the animals as Sherlock Hound.”

O’Haver said initially he wasn’t going to do Sherlock Hound, but when he came downtown and learned there was no address between neighboring Marie’s Hallmark at 219 State and Signal Travel and Tours at 223 State, he couldn’t resist. There had to be a 221, he said.

“I thought that would add a little mystery to it, and I thought of doing Sherlock Hound on a base that has 221 – the missing address,” said O’Haver, an artist with a studio at the Box Factory for the Arts. “I seem to be creating a quite little stir. The costume helps a little bit, but the kids like the idea of Sherlock Holmes.”

For more information on St. Joseph’s sixth year as sponsor of a downtown public art project, read the entire story.

Source: Herald-Palladium

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