Hi there, 

I am looking for examples of artworks located in traffic roundabouts. Any images or projects you can share would be greatly appreciated! 

Many thanks, 
Piper 

Piper Faust / Project Manager 

Weingarten Art Group 
Houston | New York 
M. 713.504.0692O. 713.520.0561 
http://weingartenartgroup.com







On Oct 9, 2018, at 7:53 PM, Public Art Network <nobody@simplelists.com> wrote:

(Previous discussion continued)
RE: Examples of Public Art in Dog Parks - Elayna Toby Singer (09 Oct 2018 13:38 UTC)
RFQ Deadline 10/26/18 - City of Chicago Riverwalk East Public Art Design Project - Joanna Goebel (09 Oct 2018 14:18 UTC)
Public Art Ownership protocol - Fiona Bond (09 Oct 2018 16:43 UTC)
Re: Public Art Ownership protocol - Ann Wykell (09 Oct 2018 17:10 UTC)
Re: Public Art Ownership protocol - Julia Muney Moore (09 Oct 2018 17:16 UTC)
Congratulations MTA Arts & Design! - Traver, Michelle (09 Oct 2018 20:52 UTC)
Re-codifying public space - Brueggemann, Sherri (09 Oct 2018 22:37 UTC)

RE: Examples of Public Art in Dog Parks by Elayna Toby Singer (09 Oct 2018 13:38 UTC)
Reply to list

    Check out Tampa’s new dog hang out. I was very impressed - clever, fun, great function and vibe. It was highlighted on a tour last spring at annual Florida Association of Public Art Professionals conference. Great activation and placemaking project and heaven on earth for urban dogs and their human friends.  Talk with Robin Nigh and Melissa LeBaron, the dynamic duo rubbing fire sticks with amazing artists all over Tampa.

     

    Elayna Toby Singer

    Palm Beach County Art in Public Places

    2633 Vista Parkway

    West Palm Beach, FL 33411

    http://www.pbcgov.com/fdo/ART

    esinger@pbcgov.org

    (561) 233-0235 

     

    From: public_art_network@americansforthearts.simplelists.com <public_art_network@americansforthearts.simplelists.com> On Behalf Of Wilkinson, Emily
    Sent: Thursday, October 04, 2018 5:07 PM
    To: public_art_network@americansforthearts.simplelists.com
    Subject: Examples of Public Art in Dog Parks

     

    Hi all!

     

    I am trying to collect examples of public art that has been placed in dog parks. Please send any examples that you have!

     

    Thanks for your help!

    Emily

     
     

     

    Emily Wilkinson, M.A., M.Ed.

    Director for Public Art

     

    System Administration Building | 1508 Knoxville Avenue | Suite 103

    Box 42014 | Lubbock, TX  79409-2014

    T 806.742.2116 | D 806.834.1668

    texastech.edu/publicart

     TTUS Public Art Program on Facebook

    TTUS Public Art Program on Twitter

    TTUS Public Art Program on Instagram

     

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RFQ Deadline 10/26/18 - City of Chicago Riverwalk East Public Art Design Project by Joanna Goebel (09 Oct 2018 14:18 UTC)
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    Good morning, all.


    This is a reminder to professional artists and artist teams with a demonstrated history of completing large-scale, outdoor public art projects:

     

    City of Chicago Riverwalk East Public Art Design Project 

    Request for Qualifications

    Deadline for Submissions: Friday, 10/26/18, 11:59pm, CST

    Design fee: $10,000 (3-4 finalists)

    Projected budget for implementation of artwork: $1-3 million

     

    Professional artists and artist teams with demonstrated experience completing large-scale outdoor public art projects are invited to submit their qualifications for a public art design project that will respond to sites along Riverwalk East, located on the south bank of the Chicago River, between Michigan Avenue and Lake Shore Drive. Through the Riverwalk East Public Art Design Project, artists at the height of their field will develop ambitious, innovative design proposals that activate and enhance this half-mile long beloved natural amenity and recreation area. 

     

    A committee will select 3-4 finalists who will each receive a $10,000 design commission and will be invited to tour the site, meet with stakeholders, review existing plans, and receive community input. Finalists will work in collaboration with the project team to develop comprehensive public art proposals that respond to both current site conditions and forthcoming developments. There is no residency requirement for this call.  The projected budget for final commission and implementation of artwork is $1,000,000 - $3,000,000.

     

    For more information, or to apply, visit:

    https://artist.callforentry.org/festivals_unique_info.php?ID=5585



    ***************

    Joanna Goebel

    Curator of Public Art

    Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events

    City of Chicago

    78 E. Washington St.

    Chicago, IL  60602





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Public Art Ownership protocol by Fiona Bond (09 Oct 2018 16:43 UTC)
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    Hi, We have a private donor wanting to fund a memorial sculpture for our community.

    It will be placed on private land (with enthusiastic consent!) next to a public sidewalk. Ultimately, all partners (including the City) want for the City to own the piece and take responsibility for insurance, maintenance and future re-siting (if the site is developed, for example).

     

    Does anyone have examples of legal or city documentation for a city taking ownership/responsibility for a piece of public art that is on privately owned site?

     

    Thanks so much!

    Fiona

     


Re: Public Art Ownership protocol by Ann Wykell (09 Oct 2018 17:10 UTC)
Reply to list

    For most government agencies, government employees cannot  go onto private property to attend to the sculpture or monument - be it maintenance, removal, etc.   I dealt with a version of this issue in the past by having the city and the property owner execute an easement which essentially makes the government the temporary owner of the property.  This deprives the property owner of certain rights to that part of the larger site,  which can be dealt with in the terms of the easement. 
    Ann Wykell
    Social Sector Solutions

    On Tue, Oct 9, 2018 at 12:43 PM Fiona Bond <fiona@creativewaco.org> wrote:

    Hi, We have a private donor wanting to fund a memorial sculpture for our community.

    It will be placed on private land (with enthusiastic consent!) next to a public sidewalk. Ultimately, all partners (including the City) want for the City to own the piece and take responsibility for insurance, maintenance and future re-siting (if the site is developed, for example).

     

    Does anyone have examples of legal or city documentation for a city taking ownership/responsibility for a piece of public art that is on privately owned site?

     

    Thanks so much!

    Fiona

     

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Re: Public Art Ownership protocol by Julia Muney Moore (09 Oct 2018 17:16 UTC)
Reply to list

    I have examples of the reverse situation—private owners placing artwork on city-owned land with the city executing a maintenance agreement with the private owner.

    Julia Muney Moore
    Director of Public Art

    Arts Council of Indianapolis
    924 N. Pennsylvania St.
    Indianapolis, IN  46204
    o (317) 631-3301 x240
    m (317) 332-8382
    jmoore@indyarts.org

    On Oct 9, 2018, at 12:43 PM, Fiona Bond <fiona@creativewaco.org> wrote:

    Hi, We have a private donor wanting to fund a memorial sculpture for our community.
    It will be placed on private land (with enthusiastic consent!) next to a public sidewalk. Ultimately, all partners (including the City) want for the City to own the piece and take responsibility for insurance, maintenance and future re-siting (if the site is developed, for example).
     
    Does anyone have examples of legal or city documentation for a city taking ownership/responsibility for a piece of public art that is on privately owned site?
     
    Thanks so much!
    Fiona
     
    <image001.png>

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Congratulations MTA Arts & Design! by Traver, Michelle (09 Oct 2018 20:52 UTC)
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Re-codifying public space by Brueggemann, Sherri (09 Oct 2018 22:37 UTC)
Reply to list

    Hello Public Art colleagues,

    Wondering if anyone has done a recent re-evaluation of what exactly constitutes public space in public facilities. As I’m sure many forms of governments have been faced with, we are seeing more and more security gates and outright locked doors being placed at the entry way of what used to be public reception areas, public meeting rooms and other public gathering spaces suitable for public art.

     

    We are considering a major reassessment of our public spaces and just how accessible they are or should be to qualify for public art, in particular 2-D works of art placed on walls.

     

    Thank you in advance for any policy or guidelines samples that address locked, or not freely accessible, public spaces.

    Sincerely,

     

    SHERRI BRUEGGEMANN

    manager | public art urban enhancement division

    city of albuquerque

    O 505.768.3833

    cabq.gov/publicart

     

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