Wednesday, November 20th at 6:30 pm
Smack Mellon (***Please note the change in location***)
92 Plymouth Street
Brooklyn, NY 11201
(corner of Plymouth and Washington Street)
Tickets available via Eventbrite.
New York City’s vast collection of public art dates to the dawn of the 1800s, and spans a remarkable array of works installed in and among parks, plazas, libraries, court buildings, fire stations, and other civic sites. Encompassing sculpture, painting, lighting, mosaic, glass, textiles, and more, the collection amounts to a five-borough museum with dazzling reach and impact.
Rarely considered as a whole, this body of work gives rise to questions about the value of public art, its evolution over time, and its relevance to an ever-evolving city. How can an urban art collection grow and change? Should we expect public artworks to endure forever? What special considerations are needed for art that’s integrated into infrastructure and architecture? How do we maintain works of wide-ranging materials and methods? And how can we ensure an equitable public art process that reflects a diverse city?
On the occasion of its 2019 Annual Meeting, The Fine Arts Federation of New York, in partnership with the NYC Public Design Commission, presents an evening of dialogue about how public art is commissioned, created, reviewed, and maintained. We are honored to share the perspectives of those directly engaged in the public art process: an artist who recently completed a public monument in the South Bronx; representatives of the Public Design Commission, which oversees permanent, city-owned artworks; the artist and curator who leads the city’s Percent for Art program, which has commissioned hundreds of site-specific projects since 1982; and the Parks Department’s leading authority on art and antiquities.
Panelists:
Keri Butler, Deputy Executive Director, NYC Public Design Commission
Melissa Calderón, Artist
Kendal Henry, Director, NYC Department of Cultural Affairs Percent for Art Program
Jonathan Kuhn, Director, Art & Antiquities, NYC Department of Parks & Recreation
Respondents:
Philip E. Aarons, Lay Member, Public Design Commission, and Partner, Millennium Partners
Mary A. Valverde, Sculptor Member, NYC Public Design Commission, and Interdisciplinary Artist
A reception with wine and light fare will precede the program.