Art Culture: Public Space Art
Public art like that of Koon's Train (2011), Serra's Tilted Arc (1981), Lin's Vietnam Veterans Memorial (1981), and James' Sea Flower (1978), ignite discussion to the point of its modification, re-arrangement, or removal. The reason for this controversial treatment of public art is its ability to embrace a variety of aesthetic practices. The adoption of different aesthetic values like poster art, outdoor sculpture, earthworks, multimedia projections, and community-based projects among others, breaks the public's traditional understanding of art (Glahn, 2000). This critique finds that the public's totalizing classification of public sphere brings about controversy and dialogue over public art displays. By reviewing the famous public art "Tilted Arc" (1981) by Richard Serra, this analysis will show that there are distinct differences between public understanding and professional understanding of public art.
The government with the intention of exhibiting, protecting, and edifying art, commissions public art in America to identifying with national pride. To Levine (2002), artists follow the traditions of public art where it holds the highest moral, aesthetic value, and satisfied the interest of the mass (52). In this context, public art becomes a nuisance is if is deliberately ignores public approval. This policy creates a paradox in the art world, since the art world resists the need to create art that meets the tastes and preferences of states and majority. However, democracies require public art to meet the tastes and preferences of the ruling power and the majority (Levine 53). In this light, public art in public spaces raises controversy in the public because institutional artists defy the majority. Public art that disrupts and reviews the social status, and prevents the community the right to move and inhabit public space is often rejected (Lewis and Lewis 68). This critique uses the example of the "Tilted Arc" in showing how institutional artists defy public sphere, the interests of majority, and creates art that is rejected.
The "Tilted Arc" is an outdoor sculpture commissioned by the General Services Administration, through its program "Art in Architecture Program." The commissioning of this public piece was an attempt by the GSA to reinvent itself, and "rethink of public art as a subsection of the art world" (Fleming 58). The GSA commissioned Serra to create an artwork in the form of a cor-ten steel wall that would run through the plaza, outside the Federal Court House, in New York (Wall Street Journal, Editorial a, 1). The funds for the project were from the coffers of the GSA, which allocates a half of a percent of the cost to prominent artists (Levine 53). The GSA committee selected Richard Serra from a list of professional artists, believing his work was monumental to stand in the shadow of Manhattan's skyscrapers like the World Trade Center (Levine 53). The GSA believed Serra had the artistic skills to create a public art that could capture the fast, enterprise, and energetic movement of Manhattan's inhabitants.
However, the artwork turned out to be a disaster. It was a huge wall set in the plaza and interfered with pedestrian traffic by interrupting the walk path (Fleming 58). Serra intensions were to have deep and disturbing implications to the viewer, to highlight the manner in which public life and involvement with the federal government affected Americans. To achieve this, the artists studied the pedestrians and their movement in the plaza. After completion, the inspection of the sculpture rested on the GSA that included a health and safety inspection. This inspection included lighting, pedestrian traffic, law enforcement, and drainage.
The "Tilted Arc" after completion dissected the plaza space, blocking paths and views for frequent visitors and workers at the plaza. The sculpture was an unfinished Cor-ten steel, solid plate, 2.5 inches thick, 12 feet high, and 120 feet long (Levine 53). The sculpture was site specific since it was fixed into the ground. Serra intended the tilted sculpture to give the viewer a perception of movement, by having different heights, and tilts (Wall Street Journal, Editorial b 1). Since, the sculpture was not finished; it oxidized to have a natural rusty appearance, blending into the site. Given the reaction of the public it is evident Serra did meet his intentions, though it did not meet the expectations of the GSA. Visitors to the plaza that experienced the sculpture realized it was an eye-sore for it inconvenienced and interrupted their daily life (Fleming 59). The interruption led to a court case, as Serra's educational intention was trumped by public opinion.
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