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      • What is Contemporary Public Art? Contemporary public art, beyond traditional galleries, engages communities with innovative installations, sculptures, and murals, addressing social, cultural, and environmental themes.
      www.artelier.com/post/70-top-contemporary-public-art-around-the-world
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    • Beginnings of Public Art
    • Concepts and Styles
    • Later Developments - After Public Art

    Historical Precedents

    Public Art has existed for thousands of years, across numerous cultures and societies, and has served a range of functions. In ancient Greek and Roman culture, for example, sculpture played an important role in communication between the state and the people. Mass-produced statues of the Roman Emperor Augustus Caesar were placed in various public locations to function as propaganda, communicating particular attributes of the leader. This persistent sculptural presence brought to mind his posit...

    The Emergence of Modern Cities and the Public Sphere

    In the wake of the Industrial Revolution, and the resultant relocation of high numbers of people from rural areas to urban centers, the modern city took on new importance in the cultural and social spheres, and became a discerned space of existence with particular effects on the human psyche. Consequently, all Public Art located in modern cities comes into conversation with urban life and mentality. American historian, sociologist, and philosopher Lewis Mumford wrote in 1937 that the city is...

    Public Art as Pride: Community and Memory

    French philosopher Maurice Halbswachs asserts that rather than functioning solely on an individual, isolated level, memory is codependent and co-constitutive, writing that, "It is in society that people normally acquire their memories. It is also in society that they recall, recognize, and localize their memories ... It is in this sense that there exists a collective memory; it is to the degree that our individual thought places itself in these frameworks and participates in this memory that...

    Public Monuments and Memorials

    Monuments and memorials are usually sculptural (sometimes architectural) artworks that are created for the purpose of commemorating or remembering a person, group of people, or historical event. They are often located on a site of importance, such as the site of an important battle or a tragic societal experience. They can mark unifying celebration as equally as facilitate the processing of communal grief. As Federico Bellentani, professor of semiotics and geography, explains, "monuments play...

    Public Murals

    Major muralism movements of the twentieth century, particularly post-Revolution Mexican muralism, and WPA-sponsored murals in the United States, were characterized by content that focused on developing national pride, asserting core national values, and championing technological progress in the wake of devastating events (the Mexican Revolution, and the Great Depression). These murals were not only intended to beautify public spaces, but also to communicate important messages to even the illi...

    Public Sculpture

    When not seeking to commemorate or memorialize, public sculpture serves a range of purposes. Many artists aim merely to beautify and leave their mark on public spaces (such as Jeff Koons' Balloon Flower (Red) (1995-1999, New York City)). Others hope that their works will cause viewers to reconsider their relationship to their urban environment. For example, in Bridge Over Treein New York's Brooklyn Bridge Park, Iranian-born, Minneapolis-based artist Siah Armajani aimed to create a sculptural...

    A number of organizations support, commission, and fund Public Art projects in the United States and beyond. The National Endowment for the Arts (founded in 1965) recently renewed their commitment, in their 2018-2022 Strategic Plan, to "dedicate a portion of grantmaking funds to projects that integrate the arts into the fabric of community life," i...

    • Pop Art. Intended as a reaction to preceding modern art movements, contemporary art is thought to have begun on the heels of Pop Art. In post-war Britain and America, Pop Art was pioneered by artists like Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein.
    • Photorealism. Much like artists working in the Pop Art style sought to artistically reproduce objects, those involved with Photorealism—a concurrent movement—aimed to create hyperrealistic drawings and paintings.
    • Conceptualism. In turn, Pop Art also helped shape Conceptualism, which rejected the idea of art as a commodity. In conceptual art, the idea behind a work of art takes precedence.
    • Minimalism. Like Conceptualism, Minimalism materialized in the 1960s and is still prevalent today. According to the Tate, both movements “challenged the existing structures for making, disseminating and viewing art.”
    • Rosie Lesso
    • Puppy, 1992, by Jeff Koons, Bilbao, Spain. American Pop artist Jeff Koons created his iconic Puppy near the exterior entrance of the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain.
    • Cloud Gate, 2006, by Anish Kapoor, Chicago. No list of contemporary public art would be complete without a reference to Anish Kapoor’s dazzling Cloud Gate, 2006, made for the AT&T Plaza at Millennium Park in Chicago.
    • Yellow Pumpkin, 1994, by Yayoi Kusama, Naoshima, Japan. Get the latest articles delivered to your inbox. Sign up to our Free Weekly Newsletter. Yayoi Kusama’s Yellow Pumpkin is as it sounds – a huge yellow pumpkin around 6 feet tall and 8 feet wide.
    • The Angel of the North, 1998, by Antony Gormley, Gateshead, England. British sculptor Antony Gormley’s Angel of the North, opened in 1998 in Gateshead, England, looms over the skyline of northern England, with arms outstretched in a welcoming embrace.
  2. Public art can express community values, enhance our environment, transform a landscape, heighten our awareness, or question our assumptions. Placed in public sites, this art is there for everyone, a form of collective community expression.

  3. Dec 13, 2022 · To honor the immense currency of public art and its ability to move and influence those outside of institutional spaces, the art and design fabrication company UAP has revealed its seventh annual list of the best public art projects of the year.

  4. Dec 11, 2023 · Seven curators select the best public art of the year, from Tracey Emin’s bronze doors to Phyllida Barlow’s sculptures in a New York park.

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