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T h e I nt e r nat i o nal Awar d f o r P ub li c A r t : M e e t t h e F inali s t s




                                                                                          issue 47 • fall/winter 2012 • publicartreview.org




Issue 47 • About Place
                                                      ABOUT
                                                                       PLACE
                                                                                    Putting art
                                                                                    at the heart
                                                                                    of placemaking




                                                Cambodia’s vibrant public art scene Washington D.C.’s new 5x5 festival
                                             Mixing past and present at the Golden Gate Charles Landry on city making
                         $16.00 USD
PL ACE


                                                                                                                                                                                     O’MAHONY
                                                                                                                                                                                     DE I R DR E
                                                                                                                                      CHANG
                                                                                                                                      C A N DY
PUBLIC ART REVIEW | VOL. 24 NO. 1 • ISSUE 47 | PUBLICARTREVIEW.ORG




                                                                                                           Conversations with five artists who
                                                                                                           think deeply about how public art
26                                                                                                         can shape our experience of place

                                                                     C A N DY C H A N G :                                              Public Art Review: What’s your working definition
                                                                                                                                       of placemaking?
                                                                     Making Cities Comfortable                                         Candy Chang: I think it’s a fancy word for a place that is cared
                                                                                                                                       for and is caring.
                                                                     New Orleans–based Candy Chang creates simple, analog
                                                                     messaging systems that allow strangers to share—                  How do you personally go about the process of placemaking?
                                                                     anonymously and in public—their thoughts, memories, and           What tools and techniques do you use?
                                                                     dreams. Before I Die featured a fill-in-the-blank chalkboard      There are a lot of ways the people around us can help improve
                                                                     affixed to an abandoned house—an invitation to passers-by         our lives. We don’t bump into every neighbor, so a lot of wis-
                                                                     to chalk in their bucket list; I Wish This Was used removable     dom never gets passed on, but we do share the same public
                                                                     vinyl stickers to collect suggested uses for abandoned            spaces. So over the past few years I’ve tried out ways to share
                                                                     storefronts in New Orleans. The spirit of these anonymous         more with the people around me in public space, using simple
                                                                     commentaries may mirror the loose anonymity of Web-based          tools like stickers, stencils, and chalk. They’re accessible to
                                                                     communities, but the similarity stops there. Their physicality    anyone walking by and they’re not very expensive, which puts
                                                                     makes them a site-specific, collaborative intervention.           you in an open-minded mood to keep learning, questioning,
                                                                                                                                       and experimenting, with low pressure.
                                                                                                                                            Some of my small interventions have led to better-
                                                                                                                                       informed big ones. I Wish This Was became a prototype for
                                                                                                                                       Neighborland, a hybrid online/offline tool to help people join
                                                                                                                                       forces, build on ideas, and improve their communities together.
                                                                                                                                                                                                          Photos by Civic Center. OPPOSITE PAGE: Photo by Shake Shack.
MAKERS                                                                                                                                            Interviews by Joseph Hart




                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      DR E I S E ITL
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          DALE I DE N




                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      H E R B E RT
                                                                                                                                                                                                                               MAN U E L
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                JEFRE




                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            SARA




                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       PUBLIC ART REVIEW | FALL / WINTER 2012 | PUBLICARTREVIEW.ORG
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       27
ARTISTS’ PHOTOS (from left to right): Photo by Randal Ford for Fast Company; photo courtesy the artist; photo courtesy Studio JEFRË; photo by Mark Escribano; photo by Nicolai Rismann.




                                                                                                                                                                                            ABOVE: Chang’s Before I Die walls have been made in countries around the world, including Kazakhstan, South Africa, and Argentina. Each wall reflects what’s important to people in that place.
                                                                                                                                                                                            OPPOSITE PAGE: Neighborhood residents used the removable vinyl stickers of Candy Chang’s I Wish This Was project to suggest uses for abandoned storefronts in New Orleans.


                                                                                                                                                                                          What are some of the challenges of orchestrating these                                                      The processes to improve things in public space are often
                                                                                                                                                                                          public exchanges?                                                                                      not very clear. If they were easier, it would enable more people
                                                                                                                                                                                          Public spaces are for everyone, and it’s important to try and                                          to try things out in creative and productive ways. It’s good to
                                                                                                                                                                                          respect all the other people who care for them, too. Depending                                         start with who you think would care and to see if they think
                                                                                                                                                                                          on the project, I either partner with local organizations or I’ve                                      anyone else would care.
                                                                                                                                                                                          asked for permission from the people who I think would care.
                                                                                                                                                                                               For the Before I Die project, I wanted to make it on an                                           Has your thinking about place changed over the years?
                                                                                                                                                                                          abandoned house in my neighborhood. I talked about it with                                             I used to think of sharing with my neighbors for very practical
                                                                                                                                                                                          my neighborhood association’s blight committee, who were                                               reasons, but it’s changed into something much more personal.
                                                                                                                                                                                          supportive and put me in contact with the property owner. I                                            The projects I make come from questions I have. They started
                                                                                                                                                                                          talked about it with the property owner and the residents on                                           out quite practical: How much are my neighbors paying for
                                                                                                                                                                                          the block, who were supportive, too. When I found out I had to                                         their apartments? How can we lend and borrow more things
                                                                                                                                                                                          get a permit, I went and got a permit from the city government.                                        without knocking on each other’s doors at a bad time? How can
PUBLIC ART REVIEW |PUBLIC ART1REVIEW47| |VOL. 24 NO. 1 • ISSUE 47
                    VOL. 24 NO. • ISSUE   PUBLICARTREVIEW.ORG




                                                                                                                                                                DE I R DR E O’MAHONY:
                                                                                                                                                                Acknowledging Rural Complexity
28
                                                                                                                                                                Artist Deirdre O’Mahony explores the complicated intersec-
                                                                                                                                                                tion of public space, civic life, history, and art. In one piece,
                                                                                                                                                                for example, she reopened an abandoned rural post office as
                                                                                                                                                                X-PO, a public meeting place that hosted events, installations,
                                                                                                                                                                lectures, and art exhibits. A key to X-PO—and to O’Mahony’s
                                                                                                                                                                concept of placemaking—is providing a platform for sponta-
                                                                                                                                                                neous collaboration. “I really wanted to allow space where
                                                                                                                                                                people could share different kinds of knowledge, because it
                                                                                                                                                                has always been my experience that where different forms of
                                                                                                                                                                knowledge come together, interesting things happen.”

                                                                                                                                                                Public Art Review: Do you have a working definition of
                                                                                                                                                                placemaking as you approach your work?
                                                                                                                                                                Deirdre O’Mahony: For me, placemaking is about actively
                                                                                                                                                                engaging with the matrix of human, natural histories and prac-
                                                                                                                                                                tices that shape a place and its context. Placemaking makes
                                                                                                                                                                these connections visible; it acknowledges the complexity of
                                                                                                                                                                the social, environmental, cultural, and economic dimensions
                                                                                                                                                                that affect place.
                                                                      ABOVE: Chang’s Looking for Love Again was commissioned by the Alaska Design Forum.
                                                                                                                                                                How does that manifest in the places you’ve worked?
                                                                      TOP: People writing their memories of and hopes for Fairbanks’ vacant Polaris Building.
                                                                                                                                                                Well, you must understand that in Ireland we have a compli-
                                                                                                                                                                cated relationship with the land that plays out in recurring con-
                                                                    we share more of our ideas for our vacant storefronts?                                      flicts around landscape and land use. These conflicts engender
                                                                          They’ve become more emotional as I’ve become consumed                                 compulsive and passionate responses to particular—and not
                                                                    with personal well-being and what it means to lead a fulfilling                             necessarily picturesque—places: fields, bogs, and so on. These
                                                                    life. And this has made me look at my neighbors differently.                                irrational passions are so deeply felt that the Irish playwright
                                                                    We’re not just neighbors in a place, but we’re also neighbors                               John B. Keane wrote a powerful play about them called The
                                                                    in making sense of our lives. How can we share more of our                                  Field, and the term “Field Syndrome” is sometimes used to
                                                                    hopes, fears, and stories? We struggle with a lot of the same                               describe them.
                                                                    issues. How can we help each other see we are not alone?                                          I live in a very beautiful region called the Burren, in the
                                                                          In an environment where taping a flyer to a lamppost                                  west of Ireland. When I came here in 1991, I was shocked by an
                                                                    is illegal while businesses can shout about products on an                                  environmental conflict about the construction of an interpreta-
                                                                    increasing number of surfaces, we need to consider how our                                  tive center. The plan, and the controversy surrounding it, had a
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     Photos by Civic Center.




                                                                    public spaces can be better designed so they’re not just reserved                           profound effect on local relations and raised all sorts of issues.
                                                                    for the highest bidder. With more ways for residents to share                               The central question concerned the power relations that gov-
                                                                    with one another, the people around us can not only help us                                 erned who drove the representations, cultivation, preservation,
                                                                    make better places, they can help us lead better lives.                                     and interpretation of place.
Observing this controversy forced me to try to identify a                                     cess of collective reflection on a sustainable future.
                                                                            contemporary place-based practice that could begin to address                                           As a public art project, it created a space for the many dif-
                                                                            the fragmented and fluid nature of rural society today. Since                                      ferent “publics” in the locality to meet—much as the old post
                                                                            then, my version of placemaking has tried to complicate per-                                       office had done until it shut in 2002. I really wanted to allow
                                                                            ceptions of rural life. I want to make visible some of the more                                    space where people could share different kinds of knowledge,
                                                                            complicated reasons behind recurring conflicts about environ-                                      because it has always been my experience that where different
                                                                            mental regulation, changes in land use, and the effect of these                                    forms of knowledge come together, interesting things happen.
                                                                            changes on individual and collective subjectivities.                                                    I used a mix of processes from installations, talks, curated
                                                                                                                                                                               exhibitions, and events, in order to animate a conversation
                                                                            So does your work specifically attempt to challenge these                                          on what people felt was important in their place. Various
                                                                            perceptions? If so, how?                                                                           groups started to meet regularly. Understandings—of each
                                                                            I’m interested in how this mix of expectations plays out in                                        other and our various skills and practices—developed.
                                                                            the social unconscious in rural areas. As a result, my projects                                    Opinions and ideas on the future for the place differed
                                                                            explore an expanded idea of the relationship between arts                                          widely. Some participants had a deep knowledge going
                                                                            practice and cultural activism. X-PO is a good example of this.                                    back centuries; others had limited knowledge but a lot of




                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              PUBLIC ART REVIEW | FALL / WINTER 2012 | PUBLICARTREVIEW.ORG
                                                                                                                                                                               enthusiasm. Connections were made, friendships were made,
                                                                            This was the abandoned rural post office that you turned into                                      and discoveries were made.
                                                                            a meeting place.
                                                                            That’s right. In Kilnaboy, in North Clare, I had finished a tem-                                   So you kind of turned the space over to these folks, right?
                                                                            porary public art project called Cross Land in 2007, and it left                                   What were some of the projects that emerged?
                                                                            me with a lot of unanswered questions about the sustainability                                     I curated the space for just eight months, and since then, local
                                                                            of a very beautiful landscape—and one that has been shaped by                                      users of the space have taken over managing and funding it.
                                                                            more than 5,000 years of farming. The question for me became                                       Among the events was an exhibit of archival photographs of
                                                                            how best to engage different stakeholders in an extended pro-                                      the parish, which graphically demonstrated the rapidity of

                                                                              BELOW: Deirdre O’Mahony’s X-PO is housed in a former post office. BOTTOM LEFT: X-PO hosts community events and art exhibits. BOTTOM RIGHT: A portrait of a postman who lived in the building.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              29
TOP: Photo by Peter Rees. BOTTOM LEFT and RIGHT: Photos by Ben Geoghegan.
change in the landscape. One group used the space to present                                                  J E FRË:
                                                                     their version of the story of their family and community who                                                  Creating Places, Not Objects
                                                                     had been the subject of the Harvard Irish Survey in the 1930s.
                                                                     A mapping group spent five years charting every house, new                                                 Artist Jefre Manuel, who works under the name JEFRË, is a
                                                                     and old, going back to the earliest parish records of 1847.                                                relative newcomer to public art. Three years ago, at the age
                                                                                                                                                                                of 35, the practicing designer had a heart attack and triple
                                                                     Is there a common thread among these projects?                                                             bypass. The experience convinced him to retire from architec-
                                                                     X-PO lays no claim to be representative. It is, rather, the act of                                         ture/landscape architecture and return to his artistic practice
                                                                     participation that is at the core of the project. This, for me is                                          (among other places, he studied at the School of the Art Insti-
                                                                     the essence of placemaking—an ontology of place experienced                                                tute of Chicago). Today, he’s won a number of large compe-
                                                                     in a moment of “being-with,” as Jean-Luc Nancy proposes.                                                   titions, thanks in large part to his approach to placemaking.
                                                                                                                                                                               “Because of my background in public space and architecture,
                                                                     So would you say it’s “neutral” ground?                                                                    I’ve never been interested in creating objects; I create places,”
PUBLIC ART REVIEW | VOL. 24 NO. 1 • ISSUE 47 | PUBLICARTREVIEW.ORG




                                                                     That’s not quite right. X-PO means accepting difference and                                                he says. “It’s not about a single element, it’s about a collection
                                                                     disagreement. By its very existence, X-PO has challenged some                                              of elements that make a place.”
                                                                     local organizations and provoked opposition. It is very pub-
                                                                     lic—it performs a kind of coming together that is based on the                                                Public Art Review: Can you describe your approach
                                                                     here and now, not on a priori relations or inherited standing in                                              to placemaking?
                                                                     the community. Interestingly, for the purposes of public artists,                                             JEFRË: For me, it’s the literal definition of the word place. Mil-
                                                                     while X-PO was run under the banner of “art” it was largely                                                   lennium Park is a place not only because it has iconic sculp-
                                                                     unquestioned, even as it questioned some of the fundamen-                                                     tures. It also has great civic parks, architecture, and restau-
                                                                     tal power relationships and assumptions of its rural location.                                                rants. And people.
                                                                     Only after it was taken over by the regular users of the space                                                     If you think about great cities, when I ask you, “What is
                                                                     did it become contested. Still, it survives well and continues                                                your favorite place and why?” you’re not going to say the Sears
                                                                     to function despite, or possibly because, it is “in dissent” with                                             Tower or the Empire State Building. You’re going to say Cen-
                                                                     some local hierarchies.                                                                                       tral Park or Millennium Park. Those are places. No one single
30


                                                                       Construction on JEFRË’s planned cube for Kissimmee, Florida’s new Lakefront Park, rendered here,
                                                                       begins in January 2013. In addition to being a sculpture, it will serve as a performance and civic space.
sculpture or building or landscape will make a place. It’s all
                                                                                                                those elements combined—plus the people who use it.

                                                                                                                So how does this approach translate into your practice?
                                                                                                                Because of my background, I don’t really have a certain
                                                                                                                medium or style. I give you one specific thing related to con-
                                                                                                                text and history and I don’t repeat it again. As a result, my
                                                                                                                work is very site specific. I’m not someone who has to find a
                                                                                                                place to plop a piece. I’m also very careful to be sure that 80
                                                                                                                percent of my materials and work is all done with local folks,
                                                                                                                so the tax money is going back into the community. Program-
                                                                                                                ming is also very important—the idea that you’re not creating
                                                                                                                things that are static. The most successful public art pieces
                                                                                                                are interactive.




                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                 PUBLIC ART REVIEW | FALL / WINTER 2012 | PUBLICARTREVIEW.ORG
                                                                                                                How do you achieve that with a single sculpture as opposed
                                                                                                                to, for example, Central Park?
                                                                                                                You create an opportunity to be inside it or walk through it,
                                                                                                                like the Eiffel Tower. For example, I recently won the competi-
                                                                                                                tion for a sculpture in Kissimmee’s new Lakefront Park. Their
                                                                                                                waterfront is located near Disney, which is their competition.
                                                                                                                And they understood that they have an opportunity to create
                                                                                                                an icon for the city—something that would identify the water-
                                                                                                                front not only as a destination, but as an icon that could com-
                                                                                                                pete on a national scale.
                                                                                                                     The sculpture is a cube of water that represents a common
                                                                                                                form seen in the local Indian tribe. By day it acts as a civic                                                                                                   31
                                                                                                                fountain, by night it transforms itself into a cultural perfor-
                                                                                                                mance space, and on the weekends it becomes a civic venue
                                                                                                                for celebrations like weddings. It’s more than a sculpture; it’s a
                                                                                                                blank space and people make it art.
                                                                                                                                                                                     Sara Daleiden’s projects encourage exploration: Being Pedestrian (above) involves walking
                                                                                                                                                                                     training exercises and The Los Angeles Urban Rangers (below) serve as city guides.
                                                                                                                SARA DALE I DE N:
                                                                                                                Encouraging Public Intimacy
                                                                                                                Raised in Waukesha, Wisconsin, Sara Daleiden now lives in
                                                                                                                Los Angeles, where she takes an interventionist and activist
                                                                                                                approach to redefining the public spaces of her adopted city.
                                                                                                                Much of her work is rooted in the tradition of the flâneur, who
                                                                                                                experiences urban space through directionless walking. Trans-
                                                                                                                plant this concept to car-crazy L.A., and the badge of pedestri-
ABOVE: Photo by Nate Page. BELOW: Photo by Christina Edwards. OPPOSITE PAGE: Rendering courtesy Studio JEFRË.




                                                                                                                anism takes on a radical hue.

                                                                                                                Public Art Review: How would you define placemaking?
                                                                                                                Sara Daleiden: I think of it in terms of how we use public space.
                                                                                                                It all boils down to how we socialize and how we function in a
                                                                                                                location. Everything comes down to power dynamics and how
                                                                                                                we interact socially. By looking at public spaces and how we
                                                                                                                inhabit them, we can begin to understand those power dynamics.
                                                                                                                      I’m inspired by the work of William Whyte and The Social
                                                                                                                Life of Small Urban Spaces. It raises interesting questions about
                                                                                                                public space. Where do people want to go? What are their behav-
                                                                                                                iors when they get there? What do they need? What’s the human
                                                                                                                behavior? What’s the stereotype of how you think people will
                                                                                                                act? What do their bodies physically need in public spaces?

                                                                                                                How do these questions inform your practice?
                                                                                                                One of my projects is the Los Angeles Urban Rangers. The idea
                                                                                                                behind it is to use the National Park Ranger system to guide
                                                                                                                people through the urban landscapes of Los Angeles. It’s a
                                                                                                                huge megalopolis, right? We treat it like a national park with
                                                                                                                hikes, maps, guides, and field kits, and we’re a friendly guide,
like a park ranger. Our goal is to empower people to get out                                        many surveillance cameras can they count? What makes them
                                                                     into the landscape and experience it in interesting ways.                                           feel they can sit here and why?
                                                                          The Rangers is a multidisciplinary group. My background                                              On another project, Being Pedestrian, I collaborate with a
                                                                     is as a visual artist, and we also have historians, geographers,                                    dancer and we do walking training exercises, because nobody
                                                                     architects, and other disciplines.                                                                  walks in LA. For example, we’ll ask people to link arms and
                                                                                                                                                                         walk in pairs, with one person walking backward. It’s a sensi-
                                                                     Why do you take the multidisciplinary approach?                                                     tizing gesture. We think of the project as training in wandering,
                                                                     In general my work is less discipline-specific. If the question                                     teaching people to slow down and be curious. It’s encouraging
                                                                     is “How do we make L.A. a better place to live,” the answer                                         an environmental experience.
                                                                     can come from planners, artists, architects, geographers. It’s all
                                                                     collaborative. These projects are almost designed to question                                       So your goal is to take people out of their routines so they
PUBLIC ART REVIEW | VOL. 24 NO. 1 • ISSUE 47 | PUBLICARTREVIEW.ORG




                                                                     authorship. We’re serving a community, or cultural function,                                        experience place in a different way?
                                                                     but we’re doing it with a real consciousness of metaphor—and                                        Sort of. But it’s also a question of routines being enforced by
                                                                     a geographer has just as much ability to read metaphor in a                                         public spaces and of reshaping these spaces. We need more
                                                                     given place as I do.                                                                                creative thought, because we’re creating parks and plazas and
                                                                                                                                                                         they’re not being used.
                                                                     What are some examples of that reading from your work with                                               I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the idea of public inti-
                                                                     the Rangers?                                                                                        macy. That’s a difficult term, because it can be construed as
                                                                     Los Angeles is such a privatized city. With the Rangers, some-                                      sexual, but I use it to mean that feeling of being bonded or
                                                                     times we look at confusing spaces, like a private plaza that                                        connected to your tribes. It’s very human to want to be able
                                                                     looks like a public plaza. Or we’ll play games designed to                                          to move fluidly between different collective experiences—
                                                                     make people alert to their surroundings in new ways. Are they                                       and private experiences, too. Public space can either foster or
                                                                     comfortable in a space? Why not? What do they notice? How                                           diminish public intimacy.


32                                                                     BELOW: Herbert Dreiseitl’s “recycle hill,” which overlooks a restored meandering river system, is topped by local Singapore sculptor Kelvin Lim Fun Kit’s An Enclosure for a Swing.
                                                                       OPPOSITE PAGE: Dreiseitl’s award-winning design for Portland, Oregon’s Tanner Springs Park includes stormwater management and an art wall made from recycled historic rail tracks.
PUBLIC ART REVIEW | FALL / WINTER 2012 | PUBLICARTREVIEW.ORG
                                                                                                                                                                                                                 33




                                                                   H E R B E RT DR E I S E ITL:
                                                                   Redesigning the Urban Experience                                       Yet your work also has a strong environmental focus.
                                                                                                                                          Yes. It’s another component: a celebration of air, light, water—
                                                                   From his studio in Germany, Herbert Dreiseitl designs public           the environment. It’s a question of getting in contact with
                                                                   spaces that explore “the interaction of the individual with his        something that is lost. Our cities are a totally artificial environ-
                                                                   surroundings.” Dreiseitl says he was first inspired to explore         ment—that’s a fact. As a result, we have a strong desire to sit
                                                                   placemaking by his work with heroin-addicted youth. “I fig-            outside and feel air and light, to feel the temperature change
                                                                   ured out that the way to reach young people is through their           from day to night. People are longing for that.
                                                                   surroundings. The key question to social life is how you feel at
                                                                   home in a place.”                                                      Do you bring the public into your process?
                                                                                                                                          Placemaking is never accomplished by one person. It’s a social
                                                                   Public Art Review: In your practice, where do you place                process where you bring in people with multiple fields of
                                                                   emphasis when it comes to creative placemaking?                        expertise. That’s so important to make it a vibrant place.
                                                                   Herbert Dreiseitl: A lot of our public places in cities are domi-           I like to work on public engagement, though in the United
                                                                   nated by ugliness and constructed by engineers who only look           States, it’s very different from here. It can be much more compli-
                                                                   for how to get traffic from A to B as fast as possible. There’s no     cated in the U.S. because people are very opinionated and it can
                                                                   social awareness about what people really need.                        be hard to get people to think outside of their opinion. But it’s
                                                                        I’m interested in creating a space where people are getting       absolutely essential to have that dialogue with the local people.
                                                                   in contact with each other, and also the environment. That’s                During that dialogue, I’m trying to look behind what peo-
                                                                   why we focus on water, because water has an amazing ability            ple say, what’s the message, which is often the unspoken. What
                                                                   to be in a permanent process of transition, and it’s the opposite      is the real intention? It’s very important for artists to listen to
Photo © GreenWorks PC. OPPOSITE PAGE: Photo © Atelier Dreiseitl.




                                                                   of the hard, harsh environment we have in our modern cities.           that. It’s almost a spiritual dimension.
                                                                   Water seems like a therapeutic or healing influence.
                                                                                                                                          What about your team? How much work do you do with
                                                                   Is there a “language” of placemaking? Or a set of principles           other professionals?
                                                                   that set it apart from mere engineering?                               I like to work with teams—my office team is a mixture of
                                                                   I would say rather that placemaking is always an impression            architects, landscape architects, engineers, and professionals
                                                                   of our culture, of what we think has value. You can see this           in urban design and planning. We also work with many other
                                                                   in different cities. In every city, there are fantastic places. You    professionals on projects. More and more, we in the field of
                                                                   go there and you immediately take it in—such an incredible             art have to connect. We have to create a network. That’s what
                                                                   atmosphere. This atmosphere was certainly not driven by traf-          placemaking really is.
                                                                   fic or logical engineering. It is more like a cultural event. Places
                                                                   like that are a living room for society.                               Joseph Hart is associate editor of Public Art Review.

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Nov Issue - Public Art Review

  • 1. T h e I nt e r nat i o nal Awar d f o r P ub li c A r t : M e e t t h e F inali s t s issue 47 • fall/winter 2012 • publicartreview.org Issue 47 • About Place ABOUT PLACE Putting art at the heart of placemaking Cambodia’s vibrant public art scene Washington D.C.’s new 5x5 festival Mixing past and present at the Golden Gate Charles Landry on city making $16.00 USD
  • 2. PL ACE O’MAHONY DE I R DR E CHANG C A N DY PUBLIC ART REVIEW | VOL. 24 NO. 1 • ISSUE 47 | PUBLICARTREVIEW.ORG Conversations with five artists who think deeply about how public art 26 can shape our experience of place C A N DY C H A N G : Public Art Review: What’s your working definition of placemaking? Making Cities Comfortable Candy Chang: I think it’s a fancy word for a place that is cared for and is caring. New Orleans–based Candy Chang creates simple, analog messaging systems that allow strangers to share— How do you personally go about the process of placemaking? anonymously and in public—their thoughts, memories, and What tools and techniques do you use? dreams. Before I Die featured a fill-in-the-blank chalkboard There are a lot of ways the people around us can help improve affixed to an abandoned house—an invitation to passers-by our lives. We don’t bump into every neighbor, so a lot of wis- to chalk in their bucket list; I Wish This Was used removable dom never gets passed on, but we do share the same public vinyl stickers to collect suggested uses for abandoned spaces. So over the past few years I’ve tried out ways to share storefronts in New Orleans. The spirit of these anonymous more with the people around me in public space, using simple commentaries may mirror the loose anonymity of Web-based tools like stickers, stencils, and chalk. They’re accessible to communities, but the similarity stops there. Their physicality anyone walking by and they’re not very expensive, which puts makes them a site-specific, collaborative intervention. you in an open-minded mood to keep learning, questioning, and experimenting, with low pressure. Some of my small interventions have led to better- informed big ones. I Wish This Was became a prototype for Neighborland, a hybrid online/offline tool to help people join forces, build on ideas, and improve their communities together. Photos by Civic Center. OPPOSITE PAGE: Photo by Shake Shack.
  • 3. MAKERS Interviews by Joseph Hart DR E I S E ITL DALE I DE N H E R B E RT MAN U E L JEFRE SARA PUBLIC ART REVIEW | FALL / WINTER 2012 | PUBLICARTREVIEW.ORG 27 ARTISTS’ PHOTOS (from left to right): Photo by Randal Ford for Fast Company; photo courtesy the artist; photo courtesy Studio JEFRË; photo by Mark Escribano; photo by Nicolai Rismann. ABOVE: Chang’s Before I Die walls have been made in countries around the world, including Kazakhstan, South Africa, and Argentina. Each wall reflects what’s important to people in that place. OPPOSITE PAGE: Neighborhood residents used the removable vinyl stickers of Candy Chang’s I Wish This Was project to suggest uses for abandoned storefronts in New Orleans. What are some of the challenges of orchestrating these The processes to improve things in public space are often public exchanges? not very clear. If they were easier, it would enable more people Public spaces are for everyone, and it’s important to try and to try things out in creative and productive ways. It’s good to respect all the other people who care for them, too. Depending start with who you think would care and to see if they think on the project, I either partner with local organizations or I’ve anyone else would care. asked for permission from the people who I think would care. For the Before I Die project, I wanted to make it on an Has your thinking about place changed over the years? abandoned house in my neighborhood. I talked about it with I used to think of sharing with my neighbors for very practical my neighborhood association’s blight committee, who were reasons, but it’s changed into something much more personal. supportive and put me in contact with the property owner. I The projects I make come from questions I have. They started talked about it with the property owner and the residents on out quite practical: How much are my neighbors paying for the block, who were supportive, too. When I found out I had to their apartments? How can we lend and borrow more things get a permit, I went and got a permit from the city government. without knocking on each other’s doors at a bad time? How can
  • 4. PUBLIC ART REVIEW |PUBLIC ART1REVIEW47| |VOL. 24 NO. 1 • ISSUE 47 VOL. 24 NO. • ISSUE PUBLICARTREVIEW.ORG DE I R DR E O’MAHONY: Acknowledging Rural Complexity 28 Artist Deirdre O’Mahony explores the complicated intersec- tion of public space, civic life, history, and art. In one piece, for example, she reopened an abandoned rural post office as X-PO, a public meeting place that hosted events, installations, lectures, and art exhibits. A key to X-PO—and to O’Mahony’s concept of placemaking—is providing a platform for sponta- neous collaboration. “I really wanted to allow space where people could share different kinds of knowledge, because it has always been my experience that where different forms of knowledge come together, interesting things happen.” Public Art Review: Do you have a working definition of placemaking as you approach your work? Deirdre O’Mahony: For me, placemaking is about actively engaging with the matrix of human, natural histories and prac- tices that shape a place and its context. Placemaking makes these connections visible; it acknowledges the complexity of the social, environmental, cultural, and economic dimensions that affect place. ABOVE: Chang’s Looking for Love Again was commissioned by the Alaska Design Forum. How does that manifest in the places you’ve worked? TOP: People writing their memories of and hopes for Fairbanks’ vacant Polaris Building. Well, you must understand that in Ireland we have a compli- cated relationship with the land that plays out in recurring con- we share more of our ideas for our vacant storefronts? flicts around landscape and land use. These conflicts engender They’ve become more emotional as I’ve become consumed compulsive and passionate responses to particular—and not with personal well-being and what it means to lead a fulfilling necessarily picturesque—places: fields, bogs, and so on. These life. And this has made me look at my neighbors differently. irrational passions are so deeply felt that the Irish playwright We’re not just neighbors in a place, but we’re also neighbors John B. Keane wrote a powerful play about them called The in making sense of our lives. How can we share more of our Field, and the term “Field Syndrome” is sometimes used to hopes, fears, and stories? We struggle with a lot of the same describe them. issues. How can we help each other see we are not alone? I live in a very beautiful region called the Burren, in the In an environment where taping a flyer to a lamppost west of Ireland. When I came here in 1991, I was shocked by an is illegal while businesses can shout about products on an environmental conflict about the construction of an interpreta- increasing number of surfaces, we need to consider how our tive center. The plan, and the controversy surrounding it, had a Photos by Civic Center. public spaces can be better designed so they’re not just reserved profound effect on local relations and raised all sorts of issues. for the highest bidder. With more ways for residents to share The central question concerned the power relations that gov- with one another, the people around us can not only help us erned who drove the representations, cultivation, preservation, make better places, they can help us lead better lives. and interpretation of place.
  • 5. Observing this controversy forced me to try to identify a cess of collective reflection on a sustainable future. contemporary place-based practice that could begin to address As a public art project, it created a space for the many dif- the fragmented and fluid nature of rural society today. Since ferent “publics” in the locality to meet—much as the old post then, my version of placemaking has tried to complicate per- office had done until it shut in 2002. I really wanted to allow ceptions of rural life. I want to make visible some of the more space where people could share different kinds of knowledge, complicated reasons behind recurring conflicts about environ- because it has always been my experience that where different mental regulation, changes in land use, and the effect of these forms of knowledge come together, interesting things happen. changes on individual and collective subjectivities. I used a mix of processes from installations, talks, curated exhibitions, and events, in order to animate a conversation So does your work specifically attempt to challenge these on what people felt was important in their place. Various perceptions? If so, how? groups started to meet regularly. Understandings—of each I’m interested in how this mix of expectations plays out in other and our various skills and practices—developed. the social unconscious in rural areas. As a result, my projects Opinions and ideas on the future for the place differed explore an expanded idea of the relationship between arts widely. Some participants had a deep knowledge going practice and cultural activism. X-PO is a good example of this. back centuries; others had limited knowledge but a lot of PUBLIC ART REVIEW | FALL / WINTER 2012 | PUBLICARTREVIEW.ORG enthusiasm. Connections were made, friendships were made, This was the abandoned rural post office that you turned into and discoveries were made. a meeting place. That’s right. In Kilnaboy, in North Clare, I had finished a tem- So you kind of turned the space over to these folks, right? porary public art project called Cross Land in 2007, and it left What were some of the projects that emerged? me with a lot of unanswered questions about the sustainability I curated the space for just eight months, and since then, local of a very beautiful landscape—and one that has been shaped by users of the space have taken over managing and funding it. more than 5,000 years of farming. The question for me became Among the events was an exhibit of archival photographs of how best to engage different stakeholders in an extended pro- the parish, which graphically demonstrated the rapidity of BELOW: Deirdre O’Mahony’s X-PO is housed in a former post office. BOTTOM LEFT: X-PO hosts community events and art exhibits. BOTTOM RIGHT: A portrait of a postman who lived in the building. 29 TOP: Photo by Peter Rees. BOTTOM LEFT and RIGHT: Photos by Ben Geoghegan.
  • 6. change in the landscape. One group used the space to present J E FRË: their version of the story of their family and community who Creating Places, Not Objects had been the subject of the Harvard Irish Survey in the 1930s. A mapping group spent five years charting every house, new Artist Jefre Manuel, who works under the name JEFRË, is a and old, going back to the earliest parish records of 1847. relative newcomer to public art. Three years ago, at the age of 35, the practicing designer had a heart attack and triple Is there a common thread among these projects? bypass. The experience convinced him to retire from architec- X-PO lays no claim to be representative. It is, rather, the act of ture/landscape architecture and return to his artistic practice participation that is at the core of the project. This, for me is (among other places, he studied at the School of the Art Insti- the essence of placemaking—an ontology of place experienced tute of Chicago). Today, he’s won a number of large compe- in a moment of “being-with,” as Jean-Luc Nancy proposes. titions, thanks in large part to his approach to placemaking. “Because of my background in public space and architecture, So would you say it’s “neutral” ground? I’ve never been interested in creating objects; I create places,” PUBLIC ART REVIEW | VOL. 24 NO. 1 • ISSUE 47 | PUBLICARTREVIEW.ORG That’s not quite right. X-PO means accepting difference and he says. “It’s not about a single element, it’s about a collection disagreement. By its very existence, X-PO has challenged some of elements that make a place.” local organizations and provoked opposition. It is very pub- lic—it performs a kind of coming together that is based on the Public Art Review: Can you describe your approach here and now, not on a priori relations or inherited standing in to placemaking? the community. Interestingly, for the purposes of public artists, JEFRË: For me, it’s the literal definition of the word place. Mil- while X-PO was run under the banner of “art” it was largely lennium Park is a place not only because it has iconic sculp- unquestioned, even as it questioned some of the fundamen- tures. It also has great civic parks, architecture, and restau- tal power relationships and assumptions of its rural location. rants. And people. Only after it was taken over by the regular users of the space If you think about great cities, when I ask you, “What is did it become contested. Still, it survives well and continues your favorite place and why?” you’re not going to say the Sears to function despite, or possibly because, it is “in dissent” with Tower or the Empire State Building. You’re going to say Cen- some local hierarchies. tral Park or Millennium Park. Those are places. No one single 30 Construction on JEFRË’s planned cube for Kissimmee, Florida’s new Lakefront Park, rendered here, begins in January 2013. In addition to being a sculpture, it will serve as a performance and civic space.
  • 7. sculpture or building or landscape will make a place. It’s all those elements combined—plus the people who use it. So how does this approach translate into your practice? Because of my background, I don’t really have a certain medium or style. I give you one specific thing related to con- text and history and I don’t repeat it again. As a result, my work is very site specific. I’m not someone who has to find a place to plop a piece. I’m also very careful to be sure that 80 percent of my materials and work is all done with local folks, so the tax money is going back into the community. Program- ming is also very important—the idea that you’re not creating things that are static. The most successful public art pieces are interactive. PUBLIC ART REVIEW | FALL / WINTER 2012 | PUBLICARTREVIEW.ORG How do you achieve that with a single sculpture as opposed to, for example, Central Park? You create an opportunity to be inside it or walk through it, like the Eiffel Tower. For example, I recently won the competi- tion for a sculpture in Kissimmee’s new Lakefront Park. Their waterfront is located near Disney, which is their competition. And they understood that they have an opportunity to create an icon for the city—something that would identify the water- front not only as a destination, but as an icon that could com- pete on a national scale. The sculpture is a cube of water that represents a common form seen in the local Indian tribe. By day it acts as a civic 31 fountain, by night it transforms itself into a cultural perfor- mance space, and on the weekends it becomes a civic venue for celebrations like weddings. It’s more than a sculpture; it’s a blank space and people make it art. Sara Daleiden’s projects encourage exploration: Being Pedestrian (above) involves walking training exercises and The Los Angeles Urban Rangers (below) serve as city guides. SARA DALE I DE N: Encouraging Public Intimacy Raised in Waukesha, Wisconsin, Sara Daleiden now lives in Los Angeles, where she takes an interventionist and activist approach to redefining the public spaces of her adopted city. Much of her work is rooted in the tradition of the flâneur, who experiences urban space through directionless walking. Trans- plant this concept to car-crazy L.A., and the badge of pedestri- ABOVE: Photo by Nate Page. BELOW: Photo by Christina Edwards. OPPOSITE PAGE: Rendering courtesy Studio JEFRË. anism takes on a radical hue. Public Art Review: How would you define placemaking? Sara Daleiden: I think of it in terms of how we use public space. It all boils down to how we socialize and how we function in a location. Everything comes down to power dynamics and how we interact socially. By looking at public spaces and how we inhabit them, we can begin to understand those power dynamics. I’m inspired by the work of William Whyte and The Social Life of Small Urban Spaces. It raises interesting questions about public space. Where do people want to go? What are their behav- iors when they get there? What do they need? What’s the human behavior? What’s the stereotype of how you think people will act? What do their bodies physically need in public spaces? How do these questions inform your practice? One of my projects is the Los Angeles Urban Rangers. The idea behind it is to use the National Park Ranger system to guide people through the urban landscapes of Los Angeles. It’s a huge megalopolis, right? We treat it like a national park with hikes, maps, guides, and field kits, and we’re a friendly guide,
  • 8. like a park ranger. Our goal is to empower people to get out many surveillance cameras can they count? What makes them into the landscape and experience it in interesting ways. feel they can sit here and why? The Rangers is a multidisciplinary group. My background On another project, Being Pedestrian, I collaborate with a is as a visual artist, and we also have historians, geographers, dancer and we do walking training exercises, because nobody architects, and other disciplines. walks in LA. For example, we’ll ask people to link arms and walk in pairs, with one person walking backward. It’s a sensi- Why do you take the multidisciplinary approach? tizing gesture. We think of the project as training in wandering, In general my work is less discipline-specific. If the question teaching people to slow down and be curious. It’s encouraging is “How do we make L.A. a better place to live,” the answer an environmental experience. can come from planners, artists, architects, geographers. It’s all collaborative. These projects are almost designed to question So your goal is to take people out of their routines so they PUBLIC ART REVIEW | VOL. 24 NO. 1 • ISSUE 47 | PUBLICARTREVIEW.ORG authorship. We’re serving a community, or cultural function, experience place in a different way? but we’re doing it with a real consciousness of metaphor—and Sort of. But it’s also a question of routines being enforced by a geographer has just as much ability to read metaphor in a public spaces and of reshaping these spaces. We need more given place as I do. creative thought, because we’re creating parks and plazas and they’re not being used. What are some examples of that reading from your work with I’ve been thinking a lot lately about the idea of public inti- the Rangers? macy. That’s a difficult term, because it can be construed as Los Angeles is such a privatized city. With the Rangers, some- sexual, but I use it to mean that feeling of being bonded or times we look at confusing spaces, like a private plaza that connected to your tribes. It’s very human to want to be able looks like a public plaza. Or we’ll play games designed to to move fluidly between different collective experiences— make people alert to their surroundings in new ways. Are they and private experiences, too. Public space can either foster or comfortable in a space? Why not? What do they notice? How diminish public intimacy. 32 BELOW: Herbert Dreiseitl’s “recycle hill,” which overlooks a restored meandering river system, is topped by local Singapore sculptor Kelvin Lim Fun Kit’s An Enclosure for a Swing. OPPOSITE PAGE: Dreiseitl’s award-winning design for Portland, Oregon’s Tanner Springs Park includes stormwater management and an art wall made from recycled historic rail tracks.
  • 9. PUBLIC ART REVIEW | FALL / WINTER 2012 | PUBLICARTREVIEW.ORG 33 H E R B E RT DR E I S E ITL: Redesigning the Urban Experience Yet your work also has a strong environmental focus. Yes. It’s another component: a celebration of air, light, water— From his studio in Germany, Herbert Dreiseitl designs public the environment. It’s a question of getting in contact with spaces that explore “the interaction of the individual with his something that is lost. Our cities are a totally artificial environ- surroundings.” Dreiseitl says he was first inspired to explore ment—that’s a fact. As a result, we have a strong desire to sit placemaking by his work with heroin-addicted youth. “I fig- outside and feel air and light, to feel the temperature change ured out that the way to reach young people is through their from day to night. People are longing for that. surroundings. The key question to social life is how you feel at home in a place.” Do you bring the public into your process? Placemaking is never accomplished by one person. It’s a social Public Art Review: In your practice, where do you place process where you bring in people with multiple fields of emphasis when it comes to creative placemaking? expertise. That’s so important to make it a vibrant place. Herbert Dreiseitl: A lot of our public places in cities are domi- I like to work on public engagement, though in the United nated by ugliness and constructed by engineers who only look States, it’s very different from here. It can be much more compli- for how to get traffic from A to B as fast as possible. There’s no cated in the U.S. because people are very opinionated and it can social awareness about what people really need. be hard to get people to think outside of their opinion. But it’s I’m interested in creating a space where people are getting absolutely essential to have that dialogue with the local people. in contact with each other, and also the environment. That’s During that dialogue, I’m trying to look behind what peo- why we focus on water, because water has an amazing ability ple say, what’s the message, which is often the unspoken. What to be in a permanent process of transition, and it’s the opposite is the real intention? It’s very important for artists to listen to Photo © GreenWorks PC. OPPOSITE PAGE: Photo © Atelier Dreiseitl. of the hard, harsh environment we have in our modern cities. that. It’s almost a spiritual dimension. Water seems like a therapeutic or healing influence. What about your team? How much work do you do with Is there a “language” of placemaking? Or a set of principles other professionals? that set it apart from mere engineering? I like to work with teams—my office team is a mixture of I would say rather that placemaking is always an impression architects, landscape architects, engineers, and professionals of our culture, of what we think has value. You can see this in urban design and planning. We also work with many other in different cities. In every city, there are fantastic places. You professionals on projects. More and more, we in the field of go there and you immediately take it in—such an incredible art have to connect. We have to create a network. That’s what atmosphere. This atmosphere was certainly not driven by traf- placemaking really is. fic or logical engineering. It is more like a cultural event. Places like that are a living room for society. Joseph Hart is associate editor of Public Art Review.