Hamilton Herald Masthead

Editorial


Front Page - Friday, March 1, 2019

Public Art Chattanooga launches strategic plan




Public Art Chattanooga recently released its 10-year strategic plan outlining opportunities and goals for public artwork, and detailing policy, operational and funding strategies for the City of Chattanooga’s public art program.

The Public Art Strategic Plan was created through an intensive community planning process, CHA Creates: A Public Art Vision. The plan responds to the different perspectives Chattanoogans voiced about what constitutes public art, its purpose and the growing demand for public art to address specific community concerns.

Building on the history of Chattanooga’s public and private partnerships, the plan allows the city to assume a more prominent role in driving the vision for public art in the city and taking the lead in its planning and funding.

“Public art helps define Chattanooga by enhancing the public realm, stimulating dialogue and building community,” says Katelyn Kirnie, director of Public Art Chattanooga. “Our community was thoroughly engaged throughout this process and wants to see more art in more places.”

Consultants Gail Goldman and Barbara Goldstein made six visits to Chattanooga, meeting with various community groups. They found that Chattanoogans strongly value and support public art and look to the city to provide equitable access and opportunity to experience it.

“It’s always encouraging to come into a community and see a great desire for more public art,” Goldman says. “We met with residents young and old, those who live and work downtown and throughout the surrounding neighborhood who want to see more art in their communities.

“It’s clear Chattanoogans see public art projects as a way to convey neighborhood pride and sense of place.”

Incorporating the arts within the community is an essential component to advancing Chattanooga Mayor Andy Berke’s vision. “We will be a city that empowers Chattanoogans to build an equitable, authentic and inclusive community through prosperity and high quality of life,” Berke says.

During a three-month period, Public Art Chattanooga, along with Goldman and Goldstein, conducted 32 interviews, seven focus groups, seven awareness-building events and two community input sessions and collected 222 surveys generated in both English and Spanish.

The input from the community helped cultivate an action plan for public art over the next 10 years driven by the following guiding principles:

• Provide equitable access to a diversity of artists and artistic experiences

• Celebrate our communities’ cultural assets, highlighting the unique character of our neighborhoods, honoring their histories and preserving quality of place

• Elevate the role the artist and the creative process play in connecting people and place

• Encourage multidisciplinary collaboration in the public and private sectors to create vibrant public spaces

• Express Chattanooga’s identity through the built environment.

The full plan is available at www.publicartchattanooga.com/cha-creates.

Source: Public Art Chattanooga