28 April 2009

Changes to public art funding

| johnboy
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There’s been a lot of talk over the weekend about announced changes to the controversial public art program.

Oddly enough none of it has appeared online.

So I asked the Chief Minister’s office if there would be a statement on the subject and they have kindly provided this:

    Statement from the Minister for the Arts, Jon Stanhope:

    The economic downturn has led the Government to review its level of investment in public art and the recent decision to cease the Percent-for-Art Scheme.

    New funding to the Scheme will be capped to $1.2 million each year over the next two years and then cease. The Government will then review its capacity to provide ongoing support for public art.

    The decision to cease the Scheme has led to a re-examination of priorities within the now finite level of funding available. A key consideration has been spreading the benefit of remaining funds across the ACT.

    The decision to discontinue the Major Canberra Artwork project has not been taken lightly. Issues raised by the NCA and the continuing level of uncertainty regarding the future of the City Hill site, particularly the strong potential for a change in the height of Vernon Circle, were also significant considerations in discontinuing the project.

So there you go.

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Skidbladnir said :

Things don’t need to be beautiful to be considered art.

+1

The world is not all sweetness and light, so there’s no point having Pollyanna art. And there is a kind of beauty in ugliness. The film ‘Slumdog Millionaire’ is a good example. Plenty of ugliness in the visceral, but a contextual beauty belies it. [/artspeak]

SammyLivesHere11:10 pm 29 Apr 09

I like the art work some of it is really eye opening. But how can we enjoy it if we can’t stop the car, walk around it, have a picnic at the bottom of it, watch it in different light, photograph it, read the plague? mmm I say move the Woden one to the side road so we can stop trying to anticipate the propellers moving.. and concentrate on driving!

Pommy bastard7:38 pm 29 Apr 09

peterh said :

at least it doesn’t look like a prank on the side of the road. The stones on logs on the GDE look as if they were put together by backyard blitz…

+1

I don’t think that a committee would necessarily be the way to go on selecting public art. Especially not a committee of public servants. It may depend a lot on who was on the committee. But, I am sceptical of committees.

I do think that there should be some sort of discussion – consultation process on how to proceed with public art. How the art was selected should be one of the issues for that discussion.

Gungahlin Al5:36 pm 29 Apr 09

deezagood said :

trevar said :

Now that I look more closely, I think perhaps they might not be kittens… but they’re cute and cuddly anyway. And I like books. Actually, now that I don’t think they’re kittens anymore, I like it better.

Oh gosh – are they books? Why yes, they are – I thought it was a pile of rocks (as stated previously, I didn’t look too closely the first time). Okay – now that I know this art represents possums (?) climbing and reading a pile of books, I view it differently … maybe a tribute to Mem Fox or other Australian literature? So whilst I now think this has more meaning than a bunch of kittens climbing a pile of rocks, I still don’t think it is particularly beautiful or interesting …

Ah – the dawning… Yes, and remembering many of us call our kids possums, you see that the concept of possums scrambling over open and closed books could have a lot of meaning for many people. Outside shops – I don’t know- is there a newsagent/bookshop there? Outside a school or library – certainly. This looks to be (without seeing the end result in place note) one of those cute whimsical pieces I was referring to. Hence why I like it.

I’m reminded of a response by some school mates of mine too many years ago when I said something about liking David Bowie. They responded in unison “it’s not whether you like David Bowie – it’s whether you get David Bowie”. And such it is with art. Often whether you ‘like’ the piece may be irrelevant – do you ‘get’ the subtext of it?

Those strange characters are here.
http://images.google.com.au/images?hl=en&q=Zdzis%C5%82aw%20Beksi%C5%84ski&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wi

(The Google image results are by no means his entire set of works)

deezagood said :

I still don’t think it is particularly beautiful or interesting …

Things don’t need to be beautiful to be considered art.
Otherwise people like Hans Rüdi Giger or Zdzis?aw Beksi?ski would have (or had, in Beksi?ski’s case) no careers, even though their product is mostly about either selling people their nightmares back to them, or giving them entirely new ones.

trevar said :

Now that I look more closely, I think perhaps they might not be kittens… but they’re cute and cuddly anyway. And I like books. Actually, now that I don’t think they’re kittens anymore, I like it better.

Oh gosh – are they books? Why yes, they are – I thought it was a pile of rocks (as stated previously, I didn’t look too closely the first time). Okay – now that I know this art represents possums (?) climbing and reading a pile of books, I view it differently … maybe a tribute to Mem Fox or other Australian literature? So whilst I now think this has more meaning than a bunch of kittens climbing a pile of rocks, I still don’t think it is particularly beautiful or interesting …

ant said :

They should have a portion of money for buying art BUT they shoudl not tell anyone howmuch there is! The mob tasked with buying the public art should have to put up a case for each art purchase, and then see if it’s good enough AND if there’s enough money in the kitty. Taht would probably see them not buying silly stuff that costs a fortune at any rate. Might get some value for money, which teh pile of girders next to the road clearly isn’t.

at least it doesn’t look like a prank on the side of the road. The stones on logs on the GDE look as if they were put together by backyard blitz…

They should have a portion of money for buying art BUT they shoudl not tell anyone howmuch there is! The mob tasked with buying the public art should have to put up a case for each art purchase, and then see if it’s good enough AND if there’s enough money in the kitty. Taht would probably see them not buying silly stuff that costs a fortune at any rate. Might get some value for money, which teh pile of girders next to the road clearly isn’t.

Gungahlin Al4:22 pm 29 Apr 09

I didn’t mind the “per cent for art” approach, but perhaps 1% was too high, and encouraged departments towards overly large and expensive pieces. Often times it is the less ostentatious and whimsical surprise art pieces that I enjoy most.

And I’m sure hoping this change doesn’t dint our chances of getting a “Bunyip that ate Canberra” statue outside the upcoming new Gungahlin Library. GCC has had great support from the book’s author Michael Salmon BTW. He even sent a stack of his books for prizes for a kids colouring competition in the latest Issue 111 of our Gungahlin Smokesignals newsletter.

deezagood said :

Good lord – are they kittens? I thought they were some sort of native Australian animal (maybe opossums??) – but I must admit I didn’t look too hard. If they are kittens, then I like it even less 😉

Now that I look more closely, I think perhaps they might not be kittens… but they’re cute and cuddly anyway. And I like books. Actually, now that I don’t think they’re kittens anymore, I like it better.

deezagood said :

Art is highly subjective really, so my idea of beautiful probably isn’t everyone’s (or perhaps anyone’s!) idea of beautiful. That is exactly why these decisions shouldn’t be made by just a few.

I think that is precisely why they SHOULD be made by just a few. As sepi says, art by committee is bland. Still, the few selecting shouldn’t be little Jonny Stanhope and his drinking buddies. I would like to know how public artworks are selected in Melbourne, as I do like a lot of what you see there. I can’t imagine they’re selected by a large group, or those tastes that you’re talking about would stall the process every time. This is why I’m a bit of a fencesitter on this one, despite feeling quite strongly about it… I don’t like the process as it stands, but I haven’t heard any better ideas yet.

deezagood said :

Who is advising their purchases I wonder?

The artists’ mums, I suspect.

colourful sydney racing identity3:31 pm 29 Apr 09

I really like the consept of public art and would like to see more of it. There are pieces that do not appeal to me but may appeal to others. Sure brightens up the drab grey of so many of our suburban shops

Especially for struggling artists apparently.

I like public art, and I don’t think consultation is neccessarily the way to go – unless the art is going in your street, why do you care so much about it. Art chosen via committee is goign to be bland bland bland.

I love the bird/wind sculptures and the little man in civic. Pity the art program has been scrapped, but times is tough.

trevar said :

deezagood said :

I guess by comparison to other canberra art, it isn’t too bad … but just think of the beautiful art that could have been purchased.

I am; I’m thinking of the Marquette!

Don’t you like kittens?

Actually, I hate cats of all varieties (okay, maybe tigers are cool), but I like the novelty of it. Yes, it’s peurile, but it’s also fun.

What do you mean by “beautiful”, deezagood?

Good lord – are they kittens? I thought they were some sort of native Australian animal (maybe opossums??) – but I must admit I didn’t look too hard. If they are kittens, then I like it even less 😉 Art is highly subjective really, so my idea of beautiful probably isn’t everyone’s (or perhaps anyone’s!) idea of beautiful. That is exactly why these decisions shouldn’t be made by just a few. I just know that when I go to Melbourne and see random public artworks, I usually think ‘wow’, or ‘isn’t that beautiful’ or ‘I wonder how they made that’ or ‘how clever/amusing’. When I see some of the more recent additions to Canberra’s public artworks, I usually think ‘WTF?’ or just cringe.

Gungahlin Al1:59 pm 29 Apr 09

deezagood said :

justbands said :

>> Unfortunately this decision was not made in time to save Garran shops from one of the ugliest pieces of “art” that this useless govt has ever initiated – see http://203.9.249.2/e-registers/pubnote/pdf/PLAN-200914235-Details_Sheet-01.pdf

Actually, that one looks pretty cool to me.

This is just hideous, colourless, lacking in any meaning, humourless and ugly, ugly, ugly. Canberrans must be truly scarred if this piece is considered ‘pretty cool’. Poor Garran.

Yeah I like it too.

Spend the 1.2 million pulling the crap down 🙂

Agreed.

I also liked little Johnny Howard.

It was witty, insightful, funny and even endearing – it was a great caricature.

I think it would be fun to have caricatures scattered around the city of people who have played major national and local roles.

It would give “national expression” to the “Australian values” of a supposed irreverent sense of humour.

But, I have wondered who would make the selections? This could not be done by public servants. But, who then?

deezagood said :

I guess by comparison to other canberra art, it isn’t too bad … but just think of the beautiful art that could have been purchased.

I am; I’m thinking of the Marquette!

Don’t you like kittens?

Actually, I hate cats of all varieties (okay, maybe tigers are cool), but I like the novelty of it. Yes, it’s peurile, but it’s also fun.

What do you mean by “beautiful”, deezagood?

I guess by comparison to other canberra art, it isn’t too bad … but just think of the beautiful art that could have been purchased.

I also like the Marquette for Garran. The pile of leftover steel on the side of the GDE is uglier.

justbands said :

>> Unfortunately this decision was not made in time to save Garran shops from one of the ugliest pieces of “art” that this useless govt has ever initiated – see http://203.9.249.2/e-registers/pubnote/pdf/PLAN-200914235-Details_Sheet-01.pdf

Actually, that one looks pretty cool to me.

This is just hideous, colourless, lacking in any meaning, humourless and ugly, ugly, ugly. Canberrans must be truly scarred if this piece is considered ‘pretty cool’. Poor Garran.

Well chosen, beautiful public art is a wonderful investment and can breathe life into cities. I love some of the public art in Melbourne; it either has the ‘wow’ factor, is colourful, some of it is ironic, and most of the pieces significantly liven up the citscape. I honestly think if the Stanhope government had selected more beautiful/interesting pieces to invest in, then Canberrans wouldn’t be so against the notion of spending on public art in the first place! Seriously – this government’s taste in art is just atrocious, and I can’t fathom that they actually paid money for some of the crap on display in this city. Who is advising their purchases I wonder?

trevar said :

Although I would like to see a statue of Our Great Chief wearing a traditional American Indian headdress erected in Garema Place…

and an arrow through his head?

Back in 2003 or 04, a statue was temporarily erected (I think it toured Australia) called ‘Little Johnny Howard’, which depicted Howard as a diminutive digger, in a uniform slightly too big for his stature. It was hilarious, and made a great point, and I remember His Chiefliness waxing lyrical about it, wanting to buy it for the ACT collection. I suppose that idea was stymied by political machinations, and it is a shame, because no work of that calibre has been purchased by the ACT in the intervening six years.

What has been purchased is less engaging and doesn’t last as long in the memory. They’re all kind of nothingy. This is the problem with art that is public (in the ownership sense); there is a feeling that it should reflect the people that owns it. And how can a work of art do that? One artwork can only really reflect elements within a society, not the society as a whole.

This leaves me bewildered in this debate. I am in favour of consultation and in favour of public art (in both the possessive and the locative sense). But I don’t think they mix. If an artwork is popular, it’s unlikely to be particularly intelligent, insightful, or useful (the converse is true also). Perhaps the government should encourage more art patronage by private enterprise somehow, although even this is only half a solution.

So, I’m glad there’s a bit of a recession on. It means I don’t have to think about it for a few more years. Shut the machine down and crank it up again when the existing arrangements are forgotten.

Although I would like to see a statue of Our Great Chief wearing a traditional American Indian headdress erected in Garema Place…

If they’re going to have rubbish like the flappy thing at Yarra Glen, they might as well put up some useful windmills and make electricity from it.

You’d think the flappy thing could be made to generate its own power, so it could be lit at night.

Skidbladnir,

Colorado also seems to give a path forward on public art.

Though, the sort of consultation process they use seems to be really obvious as a way to do things if you wanted community support.

I don’t think that public art is a bad concept. I think that the publc art program is a great example of how not to do things in a democracy.

The Government spends lots of money without much consultation on things many people don’t like. Then, when people criticise it, it cancels the whole program

A Government using those methods could kill any program.

That flappy thing at Yarra Glen (near the big Woden roundabout/intersection) never got lit up. It’s dark (and practically invisible) at night. He said it’d be lit originally.

Maybe they’re also saving on carbon footprint by hiding it when the sun goes down or helping not to distract motorists when visibility is poorest. Who knows?!

Pommy bastard10:52 am 29 Apr 09

I’d like to see the results of a Canberra wide poll on whether even $1.2 million should be wasted spent on “public Art”, given the track record of ugly grot that we have paid out of our taxes for so far.

Bah, insert the word fantasy after “So either the Minister for the Arts spent the last year or so in a land of personal”…

It should read “So either the Minister for the Arts spent the last year or so in a land of personal <b fantasy and was never dissuaded from it by his staff, or in a state of denial to his staff.”

I’m flabbergasted.
My flab is literally aghast to the greatest extent possible, that anybody is surprised that this was coming.

In the buildup to the ’08 ACT Election, members of the community on the ABC local talkradio and RiotACT readership were asking questions about public art, and the ability of the budget to withstand any economic downturn.
As far as I’m aware, none of us have teams of civil finance experts, nor economic haruspices available to us, but it seemed as plain as the noses on our faces that these issues were coming more than six months ago.

So either the Minister for the Arts spent the last year or so in a land of personal and was never dissuaded from it by his staff, or in a state of denial to his staff.
Either way, he continued to spend like Paris Hilton, even though it was from the public purse.

By the way, One Percent for Art has been reasonably successful in other jurisdictions when made as a requirement on _developers and architects_, and when the eventual users of the development are able to have some say in the choice\brief of art to be produced.

(EG: Colorado has an art selection process enshrined in law of…:
Each public art process is facilitated by a committee of at least eight members.
The project architect, a representative of the state agency under whose jurisdiction the site resides, at least one “tenant” or daily user of the building, a citizen representing the host community, a professional artist, a member of Colorado Council of the Arts, and one member each from the Colorado Senate and the House of Representatives.)

The ACT model only required consultation of a single “community stakeholder” to take part in the art brief on any “major” commission, and maybe having a single community stakeholder sit on the selection panel (formed of a majority of unelected employees of the responsible Government Agency), while only answering only to one Minister, who was also the Chief Minister and Party Leader, so beyond reproach when it came to public criticism from members of that Party.
(Policy document here: http://www.arts.act.gov.au/pages/images/Action%20Statement%20for%20Public%20Art.pdf)

That it attracted such an astounding level of criticism, and is being quietly killed before a budget, says that it was possibly either a badly conceived concept, or as is a long-standing tradition in ACT Governance, simply heroically mismanaged.

(Anyone from artsACT want to tell us a story and set me straight, either directly or through Johnboy?)

>> Unfortunately this decision was not made in time to save Garran shops from one of the ugliest pieces of “art” that this useless govt has ever initiated – see http://203.9.249.2/e-registers/pubnote/pdf/PLAN-200914235-Details_Sheet-01.pdf

Actually, that one looks pretty cool to me.

I like public art, but some of it is simply hideous and out of place.

The thing about art is that different people like different things. I’m hard put to name one piece of art that everyone likes. I suspect if everyone liked it, it wouldn’t be art.

Public art is a wonderful investment in the future. However, it would be nice if there was the pretence of consultation undertaken before the installation of any. Then at least if I didn’t like it, I could blame myself for not bothering to comment on the proposals.

Pommy bastard8:02 am 29 Apr 09

The problem with public art is it’s designed, created, by and for the “arts community”, not by or for the public.

Personally, my life would not be one jot the more poor if they pulled down the broken clock, the rock egg cups, the scrap steel grasses, and all the other waste of money rubbish that has been erected in Canberra.

The sheep can stay, as kids play on them.

Spend the 1.2 million pulling the crap down 🙂

I don’t mind indecent art, so long as it’s art (ie difficult to make). Like those sheep in Civic. I have no clue what they’re doing, but they’re probably art. I couldn’t make them.

Personally i’m not against artwork. But it should be decent to begin with and priced reasonably, none of the “artworks” so far commissioned have been either of these things.

Perhaps when chairman jon will commit to proper consultation next time the arts program comes up and give the public a say in the choice of the artworks, rather than find out about it the first time you drive past an ugly $200k monstrosity on monday morning.

Do we *really* want to appear as a city with a soul and start attracting Sydneyites and other pointless human units?

The subterfuge of bland, boring nothingness serves Canberra well.

“uncertainty regarding City Hill site”

Are they still looking to build a new a bigger Leg Ass building up there?

“within the now finite level of funding available”

When was it ever infinite?!

Clown Killer7:47 pm 28 Apr 09

A shame really. As far as I’m concerned public art is most certainly within the bailiwick of what a sensible Government should be spending money on rather than competing with the private sector to deliver services that are far better provided by the private sector.

Much of the art we have succeed in its role by challenging the stupid (“that’s not art!”), improving aesthetic amenity and adding value to nearby privately held property and stimulating discussion (viz Al Grasby).

Retards of course will be unaware that the first exhibition of Monet’s paintings at the Salon in Paris resulted in rioting in the streets. In that context the lame-arse whinging of the far left and ignorant right kind of makes them look a little out of their depth.

Sonic’s office says: “New funding to the Scheme will be capped to $1.2 million each year over the next two years and then cease. The Government will then review its capacity to provide ongoing support for public art”.

Cease after the next two years? Wow, just in time for the run up to the next election. Coincidence? I think not.

I had a look around the three main party webs sites for their policies on public art.

I did not find anything on the Labor Party web site. Nothing in the Plaform. A bit strange given that they were spending lots on public art.

In the Greens Arts Policy they call for “extending the public art program by increasing the proportion of ephemeral work and introducing a percent-for-art program in all major private developments”. There doesn’t seem much chance of that with the percent-for-art program for public developments having been chopped.

The Liberal’s policy is to have ongoing funding rising to $302 000 a year, proposals from local artists and the public then voting on a shortlist of suggested art pieces.

I think this could provide a starting point for developing a way forward on public art. There would be less spending but still some spending on public art, it would support local artists and there would be some level of community spport for the art chosen.

OpenYourMind26:58 pm 28 Apr 09

I like lots of the art and I think our city spending 1% of its budget on art is a positive thing. A healthy arts program is a sign of a progressive society.

Lots of people don’t like the more controversial art pieces – but that’s the nature of art. If you want your art handed to you on a platter, go and look at the art in a McDonalds ‘restaurant’ or a hotel room. Some of the greatest pieces of art in history were unliked and controversial when they were created.

Oh, and the wind sculpture on Adelaide Ave (and in Tuggers) are awesome.

RayP said :

These decisions on public art seems to have come as a complete surprise. There does not seem to have been any draft proposals or prior discusson so that people would have been aware of what was being considered. I don’t recall any adds in the paper seeking submissions on the future of public art in Canberra, but I might have missed them.

Was there a consultation process prior to this decision? Was there consultation with the arts community or anybody else? And what happens after two years? Is this the end of public art in Canberra? Is anybody going to be consulted on what happens with public art in future?

I have the impression that one of the key issues from the last election was that people in Canberra wanted more consultation before decisions were made. There does not seem to have been much consultation before this decision.

Stanhope also gives as reasons for cancelling the art work for City Hill “issues raised by the NCA and the continuing level of uncertainty regarding the future of the City Hill site”. But I would have thought that a reasonable decision maker would have checked out these sorts of issues before holding a competition and having artists spend time and money putting in entries.

Stanhope? Consultation??? That’s the funniest thing I’ve read all day!

Unfortunately this decision was not made in time to save Garran shops from one of the ugliest pieces of “art” that this useless govt has ever initiated – see http://203.9.249.2/e-registers/pubnote/pdf/PLAN-200914235-Details_Sheet-01.pdf

taninaus said :

and we have the pronographic sheep!

oops – pornographic!

personally I think it is about time. we have lots of things needing to be done and art should only be one part of it. Part of the problem is the art work that they commissioned from the funding might have satisfied the arts community but there wasn’t a good focus on what the community would enjoy/like/appreciate. Those tall things like in the picture hardly ever move and you only get to see them for maybe 1 minute before you wiz past. Visiting other big cities I really like some of the art work in the major centres and attractions, you can walk past it and really appreciate it – and we have the pronographic sheep!

Seems a reasonable decision to me. Curious to know what’s driving it though?

Perhaps the scarceness of worthwile art for them to spend the money on?

These decisions on public art seems to have come as a complete surprise. There does not seem to have been any draft proposals or prior discusson so that people would have been aware of what was being considered. I don’t recall any adds in the paper seeking submissions on the future of public art in Canberra, but I might have missed them.

Was there a consultation process prior to this decision? Was there consultation with the arts community or anybody else? And what happens after two years? Is this the end of public art in Canberra? Is anybody going to be consulted on what happens with public art in future?

I have the impression that one of the key issues from the last election was that people in Canberra wanted more consultation before decisions were made. There does not seem to have been much consultation before this decision.

Stanhope also gives as reasons for cancelling the art work for City Hill “issues raised by the NCA and the continuing level of uncertainty regarding the future of the City Hill site”. But I would have thought that a reasonable decision maker would have checked out these sorts of issues before holding a competition and having artists spend time and money putting in entries.

Hmm, Government cuts a program that I hate, but they are doing it because they have spent like drunken sailors across the board.

I’m sort of happy and not happy at the same time.

In the above photo, which item is the public art?

I think the orange sign with the truck on it is purdy.

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