[Design Indaba 2012] Andrew Shoben on how a 'design capital' should view public art
So they famously tuned sets of street railings in cities around Europe so that when you ran a stick along them they played "The Girl from Ipanema".
More recently, they created a public art installation for the launch of the Nokia N8 at Nokia World that allowed you to "splash" digital content onto a wall of LED lights using an app on the phone. Earlier this year, a large 'ball of light' become a 'sun' over London's Trafalgar Square to give 'Londoners a brighter start' to an otherwise cold, dark and dreary Monday morning. The sun was commissioned by Tropicana fruit juice.
Shoben, a professor of public art at Goldsmiths University, was a guest speaker at the Design Indaba 2012 conference, currently taking place
Andrew Shoben: Good public art creates several positive outcomes - a sense of place, and identity for an area and a local audience. It also creates thoughts - discussion, both positive and negative in areas of cities where often things can seem impersonal and distant. And, in Greyworld's work, it creates an opportunity to play and to create.
Shoben: City administrations appreciate the effect that good art can have. The problem is usually who chooses good art? There's a lot of easy, anonymous, lowest common denominator bland work being commissioned. Shame.
Shoben: Well, there are the usual methods of polling and interviewing, media interest and suchlike. I like to sit and watch the audience as they interact with our installations. You quickly get an idea of how engaged or otherwise people are with your work.
Shoben: Those areas have always been Greyworld's zones of preference. But you're right, the town square, and the office forecourt are the kinds of "prestige" areas that have become the de facto place of art.
Shoben: Corporations and wealthy individuals have always been involved in commissioning art. More and more, they have realised that they don't need to paint a giant logo on it, or make it out of their product, for people to appreciate it, and find affection for the brand. "Sympathetic marketing", a light touch, is much more suitable as consumers become even more savvy at recognising adverts.
Shoben: Public art certainly can reflect a city's health - but it need not be confused with wealth. Public art doesn't need to cost the earth; it needs to be well-thought-through, and relevant. The best way to do this is to involve the artists as early as possible in the process.
A Design Capital should think of art not just as a something placed in somewhere, but as a system - allow as many people as possible to interact, comment, create and even creatively destroy the city's art elements.
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