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South Park Walk About:
GP Presents "Hello, I love you..." One spot you won't want to skip is the newly opened Junc Boutique and Gallery, formerly Magpie Boutique and Gallery, and the anticipated "Hello, I love you..." interactive art show going on within. Presented by GRRRRRL Power (GP) and featuring 18 of the local group's female artists, this show will promote the concept of the South Park community and reflect a positive collaboration between art and boutique business. In lieu of San Diego's
serious lack of shopping variety (no offense, Pacific Beach), more fashion-savvy
folk are beginning to head to the local boutiques that have sprung up
along 30th, starting in North Park and crescendo into South Park. Innovative
shop owners are more than willing to step up and fill the void generic
stores leave with well-sought after vintage finds and independently designed
pieces. |
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Culminating this philosophy is Junc Boutique and Gallery owned by Jeffrey Parish. Located on 30th next to Citizen Video, this whimsical but tastefully modern shop is home to a diversified range of style: a designer green satin dress with ruffles hangs facing a rack lined with brightly colored skirts with vintage patterns and cuts. Stacks of jeans, rows of dresses, and second hand men's shirts decorate the store while music plays, emulating a premeditated stance on style in an effortless breezy space. Come March 29th, art of all media will hang alongside the clothes on Junc's no-longer-blank walls. "There's something for everybody," says Parish who bought the space in early spring of 2008, after leaving his smaller shop in Hillcrest. A larger boutique meant more room to support his friends in the local art community. Enter GRRRRRL Power, a feminist art collective born from the mind of an affluent member of San Diego's art scene, Bill Pierce. Pierce created the group when he noticed a lack of female representation in the art shown in San Diego. Now completely run by women artists, GP has grown into an influential artistic force city-wide. Curator and artist Jasmine Worth recounts the story of GP's inception in 2004. "Pierce saw a need for showing [women's work] in a forum where women aren't the minority." By selecting themes and hosting events together, members of GP get the advantage of being inspired by other artists inhabiting varying degrees of success and style. "We get to pick each other's brains," says Worth, "I enjoy having other women artists around. It's empowering." "Hello, I love you..." is a new wave of event collaboration between Junc and GP, a shaking hands of artistic and business venture, introducing the public to the South Park vision that art and commerce can create community, not competition. Crosby Noricks, another curator who helped start the group says, "GP is looking to establish new contacts in San Diego, and there's a natural synergy that emerges from a partnership like this." When participating in a GP show, an independent store owner provides his shop as an art space to promote not only local, independent art, but also to promote women. But it isn't so much
the South Park style that's impressive as it is their sense of community.
A community is created from and defined by the bonds and close-knit relationships
of its residents and members. In South Park, such self-directed style
isn't just an effort to stand out from the crowd; it comes from a self-supported,
ostensibly solid community base. Perhaps understanding this best, Parish's mantra for Junc (which will be painted on the shop floor, visible the second a customer walks in) goes hand in hand with the South Park appeal: "Truly the juxtaposition between old and new creates a style that transcends time." "That's really what South Park is all about," Noricks adds. South Park's solidarity comes from a confidence that knows individuality isn't as simple as putting your clothes on in the morning, but rather from a strongly developed sense of community. "Life becomes
more colorful, playful, and vibrant when you're surrounded by people who
are striving to push their own creative boundaries and live out their
creative expressions" Noricks says. If you seek color and brilliance,
set your gait in South Park's direction where creativity, community and
artistic fashion are seemingly entwined within the city streets.
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