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Public art

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(Redirected from Public sculpture)
The Spire of Dublin

Public art is art in any media whose form, function and meaning are created for the general public through a public process. It is a specific art genre[1] with its own professional and critical discourse. Public art is visually and physically accessible to the public; it is installed in public space in both outdoor and indoor settings. Public art seeks to embody public or universal concepts rather than commercial, partisan, or personal concepts or interests.[2] Notably, public art is also the direct or indirect product of a public process of creation, procurement, and/or maintenance.[3][4][5][6]

Independent art created or staged in or near the public realm (for example, graffiti, street art) lacks official or tangible public sanction has not been recognized as part of the public art genre,[7] however this attitude is changing due to the efforts of several street artists.[8][9] Such unofficial artwork may exist on private or public property immediately adjacent to the public realm, or in natural settings but, however ubiquitous,[10][11] it sometimes falls outside the definition of public art by its absence of public process or public sanction as "bona fide" public art.[12]

Characteristics of public art

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Nanas by Niki de Saint Phalle in Hanover, Germany

Common characteristics of public art are public accessibility, public realm placement, community involvement, public process (including public funding); these works can be permanent or temporary. According to the curator and art/architecture historian, Mary Jane Jacob, public art brings art closer to life.[13]

Public accessibility: placement in public space/public realm

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Public art is publicly accessible, both physically and/or visually.[13][14] When public art is installed on privately owned property, general public access rights still exist.[15]

Public art is characterized by site specificity, where the artwork is "created in response to the place and community in which it resides"[6] and by the relationship between its content and the public.[16] Cher Krause Knight states that "art's publicness rests in the quality and impact of its exchange with audiences ... at its most public, art extends opportunities for community engagement but cannot demand particular conclusion,” it introduces social ideas but leaves room for the public to come to their own conclusions.[16]

Public process, public funding

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Chicago Picasso, designed 1962–1963, installed 1967

Public art is often characterized by community involvement and collaboration.[13][4][16] Public artists and organizations often work in conjunction with architects, fabricators/construction workers, community residents and leaders, designers, funding organizations, and others.[17]

Public art is often created and provided within formal "art in public places" programs that can include community arts education and art performance.[17] Such programs may be financed by government entities through Percent for Art initiatives.[13][18]

Longevity

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Some public art is planned and designed for stability and permanence.[5] Its placement in, or exposure to, the physical public realm requires both safe and durable materials. Public artworks are designed to withstand the elements (sun, wind, water) as well as human activity. In the United States, unlike gallery, studio, or museum artworks, which can be transferred or sold, public art is legally protected by the Visual Artists Rights Act of 1990 (VARA) which requires an official deaccession process for sale or removal.[4]

Forms of public art

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Mildred Howard's "The House That Will Not Pass for Any Color Than its Own" in Battery Park City, New York City

The following forms of public art identify to what extent public art may be physically integrated with the immediate context or environment. These forms, which can overlap, employ different types of public art that suit a particular form of environment integration.[13][19]

  • stand alone: for example, sculptures, statues, structures
  • integrated (into façades, pavements, or landscapes): for example, bas reliefs, Hill figure, Geoglyph, Petroglyph, mosaics, digital lighting
  • applied (to a surface): for example, murals, building-mounted sculptures
  • installation (where artwork and site are mutually embedded): for example, transit station art
  • ephemeral (or non-permanent): performances, temporary installations: for example, a precarious rock balance or an instance of colored smoke.[20][21][22]

History of public art

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Wolf Vostell Ruhender Verkehr / Stationary traffic, Cologne, 1969

United States, 20th century

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In the 1930s, the production of national symbolism implied by 19th century monuments began being regulated by long-term national programs with propaganda goals (Federal Art Project, United States; Cultural Office, Soviet Union). Programs like President Roosevelt's New Deal facilitated the development of public art during the Great Depression but was wrought with propaganda goals. New Deal art programs were intended to develop national pride in American culture while avoiding addressing the faltering economy.[16] Although problematic, New Deal art programs such as FAP altered the relationship between the artist and society by making art accessible to all people.[16] The New Deal program Art-in-Architecture (A-i-A) developed percent for art programs, a structure for funding public art still utilized today. This program allotted one half of one percent of total construction costs of all government buildings to the purchase of contemporary American art for them.[16] A-i-A helped solidify the policy that public art in the United States should be truly owned by the public. It also promoted site-specific public art.[16]

The approach to public art radically changed during the 1970s, following the civil rights movement's claims on public space, the alliance between urban regeneration programs and artistic efforts at the end of the 1960s, and revised ideas of sculpture.[23] Public art acquired a status beyond mere decoration and visualization of official national histories in public space. Public art became much more about the public.[16] This perspective was reinforced in the 1970s by urban cultural policies, for example the New York-based Public Art Fund and urban or regional Percent for Art programs in the United States and Europe. Moreover, public art discourse shifted from a national to a local level, consistent with the site-specific trend and criticism of institutional exhibition spaces emerging in contemporary art practices.

Environmental public art

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La Joute by Jean-Paul Riopelle, an outdoor kinetic sculpture installation with fire jets, fog machines, and a fountain in Montreal.

Between the 1970s and the 1980s, gentrification and ecological issues surfaced in public art practice both as a commission motive and as a critical focus by artists. The individual, Romantic retreat element implied in the conceptual structure of land art, and its will to reconnect the urban environment with nature, is turned into a political claim in projects such as Wheatfield – A Confrontation (1982) by American artist Agnes Denes, as well as in Joseph Beuys7000 Oaks (1982). Both projects focus on the increase of ecological awareness through a green urban design process, bringing Denes to plant a two-acre field of wheat in downtown Manhattan and Beuys to plant 7000 oaks coupled with basalt blocks in Kassel, Germany in a guerrilla or community garden fashion. In recent years, programs of green urban regeneration aiming at converting abandoned lots into green areas regularly include public art programs. This is the case for High Line Art, 2009, a commission program for the High Line, derived from the conversion of a portion of railroad in New York City; and of Gleisdreieck, 2012, an urban park derived from the partial conversion of a railway station in Berlin which hosts, since 2012, an open-air contemporary art exhibition.

The 1980s also witnessed the institutionalization of sculpture parks as curated programs. While the first public and private open-air sculpture exhibitions and collections dating back to the 1930s[24] aimed at creating an appropriate setting for large-scale sculptural forms difficult to show in museum galleries, installations such as Noguchi's Garden in Queens, New York (1985) reflect the necessity of a permanent relationship between the artwork and its site.

This relationship also develops in Donald Judd’s project for the Chinati Foundation (1986) in Texas, which advocates for the permanent nature of large-scale installations whose fragility may be destroyed when re-locating the work.

Sustainability and public art

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The Gangsta Gardener, Ron Finley, in one of his public food gardens

Public art faces a design challenge by its very nature: how best to activate the images in its surroundings. The concept of “sustainability” arises in response to the perceived environmental deficiencies of a city. Sustainable development, promoted by the United Nations since the 1980s, includes economical, social, and ecological aspects. A sustainable public art work would include plans for urban regeneration and disassembly. Sustainability has been widely adopted in many environmental planning and engineering projects. Sustainable art is a challenge to respond the needs of an opening space in public.

In another public artwork titled "Mission leopard"[25] was commissioned in 2016 in Haryana, India, among the remote deciduous terrain of Tikli village a team coordinated by Artist Hunny Mor painted two leopards perched on branches on a water source tank 115 feet high. The campaign was aimed to spread awareness on co-habitation and environmental conservation. The art work can be seen from several miles across in all directions.

Ron Finley's work as the Gangsta Gardener (or Guerrilla Gardener) of South Central L.A. is an example of an artist whose works constitute temporary public art works in the form of public food gardens that addresses sustainability, food security and food justice.[26][27][28]

Andrea Zittel has produced works, such as Indianapolis Island that reference sustainability and permaculture with which participants can actively engage.[29][30]

Interactive public art

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Public sculpture that is also a musical instrument (hydraulophone) by Steve Mann, which the public can play.

Some public art is designed to encourage direct hands-on interaction. Examples include public art that contain interactive musical, light, video, or water components. For example, the architectural centerpiece in front of the Ontario Science Centre is a fountain and musical instrument (hydraulophone) by Steve Mann where people can produce sounds by blocking water jets to force water through sound-producing mechanisms. An early and unusual interactive public artwork was Jim Pallas' 1980 Century of Light in Detroit, Michigan[31] of a large outdoor mandala of lights that reacted in complex ways to sounds and movements detected by radar (mistakenly destroyed 25 years later[32]). Another example is Rebecca Hackemann's two works The Public Utteraton Machines of 2015 and The Urban Field Glass Project / Visionary Sightseeing Binoculars 2008, 20013, 2021, 2022. The Public Utteraton Machines records people's opinions of other public art in New York, such as Jeff Koon's Split Rocker and displays responses online.

An outdoor interactive installation by Maurizio Bolognini (Genoa, 2005), which everybody can modify by using a cell phone.
Public art on display at Clarence Dock, Leeds, UK

New genre public art

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In the 1990s, some artists called for artistic social intervention in public space. These efforts employed the term "new genre public art" in addition to the terms "contextual art", "relational art", "participatory art", "dialog art", "community-based art", and "activist art". "New genre public art" is defined by Suzanne Lacy as "socially engaged, interactive art for diverse audiences with connections to identity politics and social activism".[16] Mel Chin's Fundred Dollar Bill Project is an example of an interactive, social activist public art project.[33] Rather than metaphorically reflecting social issues, new genre public art strove to explicitly empower marginalized groups while maintaining aesthetic appeal.[16][34] An example was curator Mary Jane Jacob's 1993 public art show "Culture in Action" that investigated social systems though engagement with audiences that typically did not visit traditional art museums.[16]

In the 21st Century public art has often been a significant component of public realm projects in UK cities and towns, often via engagement with local residents where artists will work with the community in developing an idea or sourcing content to be featured in the artwork. Examples would include Adrian Riley's 'Come Follow Me' in Minster in Lincolnshire where a 35m long text artwork in the public square outside the town's Minster includes local residents own stories alongside official civic history and the town's origin myth.[35]

Curated public art

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Salifou Lindou, Face à l'eau, Bonamouti-Deido, Douala, 2010. Commissioned by doual'art for the SUD Salon Urbain de Douala.

The term "curated public art" is used to define the way of producing public art that significantly takes into account the context, the process and the different actors involved. It defines itself slightly differently from top-down approaches of direct commissioning.[citation needed]

If it mainly designates the fact that a curator conducts and supervises the realization of a public art work for a third party, it can also mean that the art work is produced by a community or public who commissions a work in collaboration with a curator-mediator.

For the first, significant examples of these prospective manners of commissioning art projects have been established by the Public Art Fund[36] launched by Doris C. Freedman in 1977, with a new approach in the way the percent for art was used, or the public art funds of Geneva with the Neon Parallax project involving a very large urban environnement in 2005.

For the second one can refer to Les Nouveaux Commanditaires[37] launched by Fondation de France with François Hers in 1990 with the idea a project can respond to a community's wish. The New York High Line from 2009 is a good example although less art is involved. The doual'art project in Douala (Cameroon, 1991) is based on a commissioning system that brings together the community, the artist and the commissioning institution for the realization of the project.[citation needed]

Memorial public art

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Memorials for individuals, groups of people or events are sometimes represented through public art. Examples are Maya Lin's Vietnam War Memorial in Washington DC, Tim Tate's AIDS Monument in New Orleans, and Kenzō Tange's Cenotaph for the A-bomb Victims in Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park in Japan.[38]

Controversies

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Sculpture for an objective experience of architectureDavid Chipperfield and Antony Gormley, Kivik Art Centre, Sweden (2008)

Public art is sometimes controversial. The following public art controversies have been notable:

Online documentation

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Online databases of local and regional public art emerged in the 1990s and 2000s in tandem with the development of web-based data. Online public art databases can be general or selective (limited to sculptures or murals), and they can be governmental, quasi-governmental, or independent. Some online databases, such as the Smithsonian American Art Museum's Archives of American Art. It currently holds over six thousand works in its database.[44]

There are dozens of non-government organizations and educational institutions that maintain online public art databases of public artworks covering numerous areas, including the National Endowment for the Arts, WESTAF, Public Art Fund, Creative Time, and others.[45] Public Art Online, maintains a database of public art works, essays and case studies, with a focus on the UK.[46] The Institute for Public Art, based in the UK, maintains information about public art on six continents.[47]

The WikiProject Public art project began in 2009 and strove to document public art around the globe. While this project received initial attention from the academic community, it mainly relied on temporary student contributions.[48] Its status is currently unknown.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Phillips, Patrica C. (1989). "Temporality and Public Art". Art Journal. 48 (4): 331–335. doi:10.2307/777018. JSTOR 777018. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
  2. ^ Smith, Roberta (2008). "Public Art, Eyesore to Eye Candy". Landscape Architecture Magazine. 98 (12): 128–127. JSTOR 44794099. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
  3. ^ Raven, Arlene, ed. (1989). Art in the Public Interest. Ann Arbor and London: UMI Research Press (University of Michigan. ISBN 0-8357-1970-7.
  4. ^ a b c Finklepearl, Tom (2001). Dialogues in Public Art. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0262561488.
  5. ^ a b Gevers, Ine (ed.). Place, Position, Presentation, Public. Maastrict/De Balie, Amsterdam: Jan van Eyck Akademie.
  6. ^ a b "Americans for the Arts | Public Art". Americans for the Arts. Retrieved March 6, 2020.
  7. ^ Suderburg, Erika, ed. (2000). Space, Site, Intervention: Situating Installation Art. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0-8166-3158-1.
  8. ^ Ellsworth-Jones, Will (February 2013). "The Story Behind Banksy". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  9. ^ Deitch, Jeffrey (2010). Swoon. New York: Harry N. Abrams. ISBN 978-0810984851. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  10. ^ Rafael Schacter, "The World Atlas of Street Art and Graffiti", September, 2013; ISBN 9780300199420.
  11. ^ "Rafael Schacter and His "World Atlas of Street Art and Graffiti"". www.brooklynstreetart.com. 2014-02-13. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
  12. ^ Bacharach, Sondra (October 2015). "Street Art and Consent". British Journal of Aesthetics. 55 (4): 481–495. doi:10.1093/aesthj/ayv030. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  13. ^ a b c d e Jacob, Mary Jane (1992). Places with a Past. New York: Rizzoli International Publications. ISBN 978-0847815104.
  14. ^ Doherty, Claire, ed. (2009). Situation. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0262513050.
  15. ^ Kayden, Jerold S. (2000). Privately Owned Public Space. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. p. 23. ISBN 0-471-36257-3.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Knight, Cher Krause (2008). Public Art: theory, practice and populism. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4051-5559-5.
  17. ^ a b Gude, Olivia. "Public Art Resource Center: Intertwining Practices of Public Art and Arts Education" (PDF). Americans for the Arts Public Arts Resource Center (PARC). Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  18. ^ Fisher, David J. (1996). "Public Art and Public Space". Soundings: An Interdisciplinary Journal. 79 (1/2): 41–57. JSTOR 41178737. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
  19. ^ "Forms of Public Art | Western Australia Department of Arts and Culture". Government of Western Australia. Retrieved March 6, 2020.
  20. ^ "Interview with Rafael Schacter, Author of the Amazing New Book: The World Atlas of Street Art and Graffiti ~ L.A. TACO". L.A. TACO. 2013-11-13. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
  21. ^ Brooks, Raillan (2013-12-06). "Aerosol Art". The New York Times. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
  22. ^ "Silence / Shapes – Filippo Minelli Studio". www.filippominelli.com. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
  23. ^ Rosalind Krauss, “Sculpture in the Expanded Field”, in: October, vol. 8, spring 1979, pp. 30-44
  24. ^ Plastik, in Zurich, Switzerland, 1931, and Brookgreen Gardens, 1932, South Carolina
  25. ^ Patra, Pratyush (November 26, 2016). "Gurgaon needs public art on wildlife conservation, say artists who painted leopards on water tank". The Times of India. Retrieved 2019-12-30.
  26. ^ Crouch, Angie (September 22, 2020). "Guerrilla Gardener Sparks Food Revolution in South Central LA". NBC Los Angeles. Retrieved April 5, 2017.
  27. ^ McNeilly, Claudia (6 June 2017). "Meet the "Gangsta Gardener" Changing South Central Los Angeles With Soil". Vogue. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  28. ^ Weston, Phoebe (28 April 2020). "Gardens 'This is no damn hobby': the 'gangsta gardener' transforming Los Angeles". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  29. ^ Eishen, James (23 June 2010). "Andrea Zittel discusses her work for IMA's 100 Acres". Artforum. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  30. ^ Sheets, Hillary M. (9 June 2010). "100 Acres to Roam, No Restrictions". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  31. ^ "Pallas/Century of Light". jpallas.com. Retrieved 2018-10-26.
  32. ^ Pallas, Jim (2017). "Century of Light Shines for Twenty-Five Years". Leonardo. 50 (3): 246–252. doi:10.1162/LEON_a_01151. S2CID 57560593.
  33. ^ Abrams, Eve (5 November 2009). "Fundred Dollar Bill Project Aims to Fix New Orleans' Lead-Contaminated Soil". WWNO/New Orleans Public Radio. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  34. ^ Green, Gaye (1999). "New Genre Public Art Education". Art Journal. 58 (1): 80–83. doi:10.2307/777886. JSTOR 777886. Retrieved 21 September 2020.
  35. ^ "Historic heart of Grimsby re-opened to public after £1.8m makeover". Grimsby Live. May 28, 2021 – via www.grimsbytelegraph.co.uk.
  36. ^ https://www.publicartfund.org/ [bare URL]
  37. ^ "Les Nouveaux commanditaires".
  38. ^ Kultermann, Udo (1970). Kenzo Tange. London, United Kingdom: Pall Mall Press. ISBN 0-269-02686-X.
  39. ^ Kerr, Euan (September 2017). "'Scaffold' sculpture's wood to be buried, Dakota official says". MPRNews. Retrieved 26 September 2020.
  40. ^ Miranda, Carolina A. (June 1, 2017). "Sam Durant Sculpture of Gallows in Minneapolis to be Dismantled and Ceremonially Burned". Los Angeles Times.
  41. ^ Stokes, Paul (24 July 2006). "Women killed as artwork floats off". The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 12 June 2008.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  42. ^ Attwood, Alan (2004-06-19). "Peril in the Square: The Sculpture that Challenged a City". Retrieved 2013-10-24.
  43. ^ 'From yellow peril to pure gold: 40 years on, Vault has been vindicated', RAY EDGAR, The Age 30 March 2018
  44. ^ "Art Inventories Catalog". Smithsonian American Art Museum; Smithsonian Institution Research Information System. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  45. ^ "Public Art Resource Center". Americans for the Arts. 15 May 2019. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  46. ^ "Public Art Online". IXIA - Public Art Think Tank (owner and manager of Public Art Online/Arts Council of England. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  47. ^ "Institute for Public Art: Research. Network. Advocacy". Institute for Public Art/Network for Public Art, LTD. Retrieved 22 September 2020.
  48. ^ Miller, Mary Helen (4 April 2010). "Scholars Use Wikipedia to Save Public Art From the Dustbin of History". The Chronicle of Higher Education. Retrieved 16 October 2010.

Bibliography

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