Wikipedia talk:Articles for deletion/Look Up!

Here is the historical facts as to why this page should not be deleted.

The term "Look Up!", has been used in different calendar years by established journalists, in established publications. These established journalist are, Sharon Mizota, Chadd Scott, and Brett Bralley. The following publications are the publications that used the term "Look Up" in the description of Artists' Billboards, Forbes, Los Angeles Times, and the Newsroom for San Jose State University.

One of the contributing sources in support of this article "Look Up!" is Sharon Mizota. Mizota is a recipient of an Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant, and an art critic whose writing appears regularly in the Los Angeles Times. In 2008, the title of a Los Angeles Times article she authored on Artists' Billboards was entitled "Look, up in the sky! It’s women’s art."

Another one of the contributing sources in support of this article "Look Up!" is Chadd Scott. Scott covers art and travel for Forbes.com in addition to owning and operating seegreatart.art. In 2020, Scott's opening to his Forbes article on Artists' Billboards went, "Look up. You may see work by your favorite artist."

The third contributing source in support of this article "Look Up!" is Brett Bralley. Bralley is an editorial, marketing, and UX writer and editor specializing in science, technology, and innovation. Her work has appeared in higher education outlets, such as Washington Square (San José State University), UAB Magazine (The University of Alabama at Birmingham), Celebrate (Hoffman Media), Coastal Living (Meredith Corporation), Lookout Alabama, The Anniston Star, and more. In 2021, Bralley's opening to her San Jose State University's Newsroom article on Artists' Billboards went, "There’s a new art exhibit opening this week in San Jose — but you won’t find it in a gallery. Instead, look up."

If multiple reliable publications have discussed a topic, as the case here, across multiple calendar years, this improves the topic's probability of being covered in Wikipedia.

The subject matter of these Artists' Billboards that have been described as Look Up! are based on the use of billboards for addressing social issues. The term Artists' Billboards is based on an academic paper by Colombian artist Patricia Correa published in Theory Now. Theory Now is a peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary journal of contemporary critical thought.

Every reference in this "Look Up!" article is supported by reliable sources who speak to an art exhibition on a billboard as being related to a social justice issue.

Three references, two of which occurred in the same calendar year used the term/phrase Look Up! for mass public dissemination. In 2015, The Billboard Creative was the curator of an event featuring 14 artists from seven countries. In utilizing the services of PR Newswire, published the following press release, "Look Up! Billboard Creative Art Show Open on the Streets of L.A. Through May 15."

In 2021, Silicon Valley Fine Art and Real Estate Broker Anna D. Smith curated two billboard events. In utilizing the services of Eventbrite, an online event management and ticketing website for mass dissemination, published the following titles to these events, "Silicon Valley's Newest 'Look Up!' Exhibition Tickets, Oct 18 - Nov 17, 24-hours, and "Anna D. Smith's 'Look Up! 2' Hope & Beauty Art Exhibition Tickets, Mon, Dec 27, 2021 at 1:00 AM."

Published means, for Wikipedia's purposes, any source that was made available to the public in some form.

The reliability of a source depends on context. Each source must be carefully weighed to judge whether it is reliable for the statement being made in the Wikipedia article and is an appropriate source for that content.

Across decades, in different calendar years, Artists' Billboard curators and journalists have used the term or phrase "Look Up!" to describe an art exhibition involving Billboards. I sincerely hope you will restore the article back to Wikipedia.

Reference
Selena Ebony (talk) 02:03, 22 November 2022 (UTC)