![“Save Me,” 2001, orginal file for scanachrome billboard, part of the “Beyond the Walls,” series of public projects organized by the Speed Art Museum, Louisville, Kentucky](https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/c87a208c1cf3892e14d854e86a6178b9d3e095d7b12a18366504618d4e758af4/2-SaveMe.png)
![“Save Me,” 2001, scanachrome billboard, part of the “Beyond the Walls,” series of public projects organized by the Speed Art Museum, Louisville, Kentucky](https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/5fa92629e5f59996514ad7c1852b7fa8c8f8ca2147eb9493cc71348fb1c9987f/1-SaveMe.png)
![Original file for “Save Me”, 2003, public intervention, animated LED billboard, Pittsburgh Cultural Trust, Pittsburgh](https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/220586cbe12c347b561b390e79e1484dd2ea3dfff726d152980b76d112ad8053/4-SaveMe.png)
![“Save Me”, 2003, public intervention, animated LED billboard, Pittsburgh Cultural Trust, Pittsburgh](https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/90453ee601c8daad0c4373d85eeb2726054788290e6d7f8500efd4e527ec7fe9/5-SaveMe.png)
![“Save Me”, 2003, public intervention, animated LED billboard, Pittsburgh Cultural Trust, Pittsburgh](https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/1f0893e1435d721d49f62d78d0c87df970b1857a0e90948dd3cc20358ae3ee4a/3-SaveMe.png)
Save Me an advertising campaign
promoting Redemption, 2003-2000
"Save Me" ambivalently promotes ironic redemption as the solution to suburban American angst. Beginning as a 3D animated gallery work, the campaign has moved across several media platforms: the Speed Museum sponsored billboards around Louisville, and the Wood Street Gallery sponsored an animated LED neon display in downtown Pittsburgh.