Dear Vince,
This is an important question and I hope the brains on this listserv can help you come up with a solution so artists get paid for their work.
Here are some ideas / questions.
1. It sounds like your default selection method is a limited design competition, perhaps preceded by an RFQ. The easiest way around your issue could be to rethink your selection method. Stop asking multiple artists to develop concept for one project. Pick one artist based on qualifications. Enter into a contract with one artist to come up with ideas based on a significant amount of time and energy working with the site, community, etc. rather than paying for a design competition where you are most likely not paying the artists enough money to come up with concepts. (A recent, and frequent, topic on this listerv).
2.. Does the municipality use the same kind of limited design competition for all other capital projects? Does the municipality you are working with pay multiple other designers (architects, landscape architects) to develop the initial concepts for capital projects? I am guessing they don't do that and they just pick one firm based on qualifications. You hire an architect to develop a library. The architect does not come to the table with a library already designed. Can you align the policy and procedures of the work flow of artists with the work of other designers? If the municipality does pay multiple architects to make design concepts, and you want to keep your limited design competition method, perhaps pointing out that similarity will help.
I hope these ideas are helpful.
Renee
On Wed, Apr 10, 2019, at 1:38 PM, Vince Reddy wrote:
Everyone,
We have run into a situation with a municipal public art program that had, in the past, paid artists for concepts out of bond funds for the capital projects the artwork would
be a part of. Recently, this source of funding has been cut off, because, based on an interpretation of the applicable regulations, bond funds cannot be used to pay for designs that will not be implemented, a situation that always occurs when multiple artists
are producing concepts for a project through which only one concept will ultimately be commissioned.
I assume that the municipality could simply use general fund dollars or income-tax proceeds to cover the cost of artists’ concepts, but I agreed to first do some research on what
funding sources other municipal public art programs use to cover this kind of cost.
Any information or insight any of you may have on this topic would be appreciated.
Thank you.
Vince Reddy
Vince Reddy, AICP
Project Manager
LAND studio
1939 W. 25th St., Suite 200
Cleveland, Ohio 44113
216-621-5413, ext. 107
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