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Claim it! Project

January 26, 2017 by Salt Lake Public Art Program

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Claim it! is a multi-year project in which various youth art collectives, guided by artists and educators, spent months exploring the theme of “Claim it” and conceptualizing public artwork that expresses who they are as artists and what is important to them, their families, and communities.

The project began when Megan Hallet, a Civic Arts Curator, held community engagement activities to collect concepts and ideas from the public at libraries and community events. In addition, three teaching artists worked with youth groups to shape the ideas of the community and develop their own ideas into youth-produced artworks and exhibit pieces.  Working with the University of Utah School of Architecture, students had the opportunity to learn about the Westside Master Plan and the connections between three art installation sites—the Sorenson Unity Center, the Oxbow at the 9th South River Park, and the Pump Track. Two community exhibits were mounted to share student artwork, installation models, and Westside Master Plan connections with the public. As the project progressed, the Sorenson Unity Center staff managing the grant worked with Salt Lake City Corporation’s Public Art Program and selected artist Donna Pence to commission three public art pieces. Ms. Pence worked closely with various youth groups to develop designs for the artworks that incorporated their ideas into fully-formed installations.

The first of three installations, “Three Totems” is a series of three totem sculptures representing the three locations and the claims made by the community for physical, spiritual, and communal needs. The Sorenson sculpture is a response to the claims for books, home, family, and music. The Pumptrack totem depicts the physical in the form of bicycles, food trucks, and healthy living. The Oxbow sculpture symbolizes the spiritual in nature through birds, fish, the river, and vegetation. The totem themes and concept were influenced by artworks created in the beginning stages of the Claim it! project. The content reflected in the totems were informed by a short documentary chronicling the project by Kerri Hopkins, while Liz Bunker’s use of stacked cubes to exhibit student art and ideas of how families interact informed the totem concept. The totem series installation has been completed on the Sorenson Campus.

The second installation, “Nature’s Chill Space” was installed at the Ila and Rose Fife Wetlands Preserve from April, 2017 to November, 2018, and reflected the community’s desire for a place to gather, reflect, and talk in a natural setting. The piece consisted of three benches with shade structures and an in-ground mosaic representing a fire pit, following the oxbow shape of the river at the preserve. Benches of native cherry and walnut were shaded by canvases painted with bird imagery from the refuge and supported by teepee poles.

The last installation, “An Assignment of Claims” was installed in June, 2017, directly adjacent to a new bicycle pump track and community garden, along the Nine Line transportation corridor. Drawn from claims and artwork from Latinos In Action students, and playing with concepts of transportation and communication, the piece is comprised of a cluster of twenty signs mounted on steel posts to imitate traffic signs, but with community claims, e.g. “I claim my culture and unity within my community.”

This public art project was funded by the National Endowment for the Arts and the Salt Lake City Public Art Program. Special thanks to the Sorenson Unity Center, Youth City, Salt Lake Art Design Board, the Salt Lake City Arts Council, and Salt Lake City Corporation for their assistance with this project.

The Bike Stops Here: Artist Designed Bicycle Racks

May 7, 2015 by Renato Olmedo-Gonzalez

 

Seeing the rapid growth of bicycling in Salt Lake City and the desire to encourage more people to choose cycling as a transportation option, there is an essential need and desire for safe and secure bicycle parking. To that end, and in the ongoing effort to weave art into the fabric of our urban infrastructure, the Salt Lake Art Design Board requested proposals from Utah artists to design and fabricate bicycle racks that are identifiable, functional, and imaginative. The bicycle racks are installed at 8 downtown locations along the 300 South Cycle Track from 200 West to 600 East.

The project was designed to meet the following goals:

To enhance Salt Lake City’s image as a cultural destination and bicycle friendly city: a community that regards bicycles as a permanent and important part of the City’s transportation system.

To promote clean air, a healthy lifestyle, and encourage more people to choose bicycling as a transportation option.

To provide and integrate into our urban infrastructure, usable public art as aesthetically functional bicycle parking.

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