Title
Unfamiliar Objects in Familiar Spaces: The Public Response to Art-in-Architecture
Author(s)
Steven J. Tepper Steven Tepper (Princeton University)
Abstract
Over the last three decades the federal government, through its Art-in-Architecture program, has funded more than 200 permanent art installations in cities throughout America. This study examines the public response to a sample of 41 such public art projects and attempts to illuminate the factors that lead to official or organized conflict. Findings suggest that controversies are most likely to erupt over abstract art placed in relatively small cities and cities experiencing high rates of population growth. This is especially true when the community is not asked to participate in the project in any meaningful way. And although artistic freedom is the norm, in a few cases, community participation led to editing of provocative or challenging content from a proposed artwork.
Creation Date
1999-03
Section URL ID
CACPS
Paper Number
8
URL
https://culturalpolicy.princeton.edu/sites/culturalpolicy/files/wp08_tepper.pdf
File Function
Jel
Z11
Keyword(s)
Suppress
false
Series
6