Course Description

This course will investigate the ways in which artists have presented narratives in the public realm and the organizations that have made the presentation of those works central to their curatorial practices over the last 40 years. Focusing on recent works presented in New York’s public spaces by Creative Time, The Public Art Fund, the Percent for Art Program, Arts for Transit and other non-profits organizations, this course will look at what it meant to tell stories and open discourses that challenged or interrogated widely-held value systems, the events and the politics of their time. In addition to the specifics of current and other key works and projects, we will discuss the conditions that governed the development of public performance, temporary and permanent installations, the ways in which those works were influenced by public approval processes and governmental agencies, media coverage and community response. Each student’s final project will be an on-line proposal for an exhibition that conveys a “narrative“ developed in the context of this course, referencing other relevant works .

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Subway Art- Lower Manhattan

Red Line. Trains 1.2.3

CHAMBERS STREET

Entrance. Massimo Vignelli. Helvetica













Every NYC subway station greets new yorkers and visitors with clean, democratic typeface. Designed in 1970, the signs became a signature of New York as much as yellow taxis.

Oculus. Kristin Jones/ Andrew Ginzel/ Rinaldo Piras. 1998.

















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Oculus consists of 300 unique mosaic eyes that were drown from a photographic study completed by Jones and Ginzel. The project represents the eyes of young New Yorkers and is completed in stone mosaic by Rinaldo Piras. The central eye positioned on the floor completes the composition ans serves as a center of the world map. 

Stuyvesant High School, with concentration in science, engineering and technology, is located near the Chambers street station. It creates the direct connection between the mosaic eyes of the station and the eyes of the children that soon will be responsible for the world. The art work was placed there to humanize the station and create a sense of intimacy for the commuters as the eyes are the most vulnerable and telling part of the human nature. This was before 9/11. The subway station is in the close proximity to the World Trade Center, which significantly changed the perception of the art work. As the mechanisms of public surveillance tightened up, the eyes could be seen as the symbol of authority presence, diminishing the intended sense of intimacy. Notably, New York City Hall, Manhattan Municipal Building and the Court House are all located near the Chambers street and are the major destinations for commuters, adding up to the sense of govern control and sending commuters to Orwellian 1984.


WALL STREET

Subway Wall, Harry Roseman, 1990



















Source here

Subway wall is bronze relief that represents of underlying geology of the area. The nerrative of the subway wall is still relevant today as it was 25 years ago. As commuters decent underground, it is expected to see rock formation as they are the Telamons of life on the island. The Wall became a symbol of tamed nature that cateres to the people.



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