"Public Art" News
Updated :
Publ.Date : Sun, 05 Feb 2012 21:51:30 GMT
9:15 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.: "The Good the Bad and the Incredible Awesomeness of a Public Art Program," with speaker Martha Peters. 10:30 a.m. to noon: Panel discussion, "Pushing the Limits: Wishful Thinking, Expectations and a Dose of Reality.
PUBLIC ART WATCH: With a vote on whether to include public art at the new Athens-Clarke County Jail likely coming at Tuesday’s county commission meeting, I thought I’d include a handful of recent media reports on the subject in today’s ...
Public art, love it or hate it, has been a part of Long Beach's evolution for the last few decades. No more. At least no more unless the City Council finds another way to finance it. That's because the city's Percent for Art program ended ...
The Watermarks selection process began in 2011 with a regional (250-mile radius) call for artist qualifications (RFQ), followed by a review of submissions by a citizen selection panel and approval by the Public Art Committee prior to final approval by the ...
The Shreveport Regional Arts Council will host Louisiana's first Public Art in Transportation Symposium from Jan. 31 to Feb. 2 at artspace, 710 Texas St., Shreveport. Registration is 10 a.m. to noon Jan. 31. Panelists include Kendal Henry, Wendy ...
Power,” at a special opening reception on Sunday, Feb. 5 from 1-2 p.m. at the East Lansing Public Art Gallery. The Great Lakes Folk Festival, which takes place in August, showcases the traditional cultural treasures of the nation's Upper ...
Downtown is, without a doubt, “under construction.” And as noted previously, the pain associated with the closing of streets, the noise, and the sheer volume of contractors' vehicles taking up precious parking is all a part of creating an even better ...
Many words have been written about the transformation of downtown Oklahoma City from a sleepy business district that went dead after work hours to one that is a nonstop place to live, work and play. But if one really wants to get a good count of ...
Ever since Hans Arp let free-falling scraps of paper shape his collages and Marcel Duchamp let free-floating threads shape his canvases, artists of a certain breed have invited accident into their artwork. But two rather explosive performances ...
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