Across the world on the English typing internet, various human beings have engaged in cataloguing public art in their communities. These are mainly volunteers even if a few people can spend “company time” working on the project. Please send me more volunteer sites at gw@glennweiss.com
100% SELF FUNDED
Philadelphia Art
I far as I can tell Chris Purdom is just a guy with a hobby who has photographed and catalogued nearly 500 images. I especially like his “people” category. So far he has found 14 public art works of Ben Franklin.
Public Art in Singapore
Peter Schoppert’s site features a database of 127 artworks. Schoppert write that he started the database in August and September 2001, as part of his research for a paper on kitsch and the Singapore modern. He continues to add photographs and maintains a good written blog with an eye to new creative public worlds in Singapore and elsewhere via the internet.
New York City Subway
David Pirmann started this volunteer website as a hobby related to his love of the New York City subway. At some point, he started gathering photographs of the public artwork with the help of many volunteer photographers. Very comprehensive.
Portland Public Art
“C”, the anonymous author of Portland Public Art blogspot and picasaweb photobank, attempts to spark dialogue on public art in Portland with a much more participatory audience that other public art bloggers. See his/her comments to me on why he/she became engaged in public art at the bottom.
The Blog
The Pictures
Seattle Outdoor Art
For reason unknown to me, the queen city of public art, Seattle, has no official comprehensive website of the City’s public art collection. (The surrounding county at 4culture.org has an excellent database). With this online absence, Peter and Mimi James and now Bob and Mary Hunter maintain Seattle Outdoor Art. Well-organized and cross-referenced site started by a retired banker because the art was there. See Regina Hackett’s interview with Mimi James at the bottom of this blog.
Pruned
International Based in Chicago
This blog is so good that I can’t stop reading it. Alexander Trevi’s mind links all kinds of stuff to public art and public space. He does not catalogue Chicago public art, but he can really surf.
VOLUNTEER ORGANIZATION
Mural Conservancy, Los Angeles
A volunteer non-profit similar to historic preservation organization. Good photographic documentation of a vast number of murals in Los Angeles
INSTITUTIONS
Philadelphia Murals
Developed as an exercise by the Cartographic Modeling Lab (CML) at the University of Pennsylvania that specializes in spatial analysis using Geographic Information Systems (GIS). This is the ultimate fantasy in public art databases. Fly to your neighborhood and the murals pop right up with a click of the mouse.
Public Art in Los Angeles
Simple enough to say – librarians should be in charge of all public art image databases. So much information about each work. Produced by Ruth Wallach and the University of Southern California Library
SHE MAKES A PROFIT, I HOPE
Art on File
Colleen Chartier is the grand dame of public art photography. She and Rob Wilkinson still let you see thumbnails a huge number of images of significant public art, public space and architecture worldwide. Digital images are available in sets or individually for about $6.00 each.
FLICKR AND GOOGLE EARTH
Flickr
For the visually hardy, Flickr groups can keep you looking at good and bad photographs of public art for months. Here are a few groups.
Public Art
Sculpture
Pacific Northwest – Art in Public Spaces
Google Earth Photo Dots
Last week, my version of Google Earth showed “x” that expanded into photographs. I was able to see several public artworks in Buenos Aires. This week, it is gone. I was hoping to understand how these apparently volunteer photographs were selected for use on Google Earth. Any help?
INTERVIEW AND STATEMENT BY PUBLIC ART BLOGGERS
Seattle Outdoor Art Creators
Monday, March 31, 2003
A moment with … Peter and Mimi James, public art chroniclers
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER
While jogging around Seattle, retired banker Peter James noticed there was a wealth of public art in obscure as well as prominent locations, and notenough information about either. Today he and his wife, photographer Mimi James, run a Web site devoted to Seattle’s public art, www.SeattleOutdoorArt.com. Online since last July, the site has attracted more than 20,000 hits and includes 282 pieces of art.
Regina Hackett: The site’s beautiful. Did you design it? *
Peter: We hired a professional, Christian Patzer. That’s why it looks so good. You can search for art by regions of the city or by medium, and click on any piece to enlarge it. We added a feature called art spotter, so anybody can tell us about an artwork we’ve missed.
Mimi: A lot of art in Seattle isn’t well documented. We’ve had to do some sleuthing. We won’t put the piece on the site until we’ve got the artist’s name, name of the artwork, the medium and the date it was created.
Regina Hackett: Do you ever decide to skip something because both of you hate it?
Mimi: *We’re more about celebrating art than criticizing it.
Regina Hackett: How’d you decide to go online?*
Peter: Mimi got a digital camera. Before that we had photo albums.
Regina Hackett: Who helped on this project? *
Mimi: Lots of people, but I’d say Peter was most encouraged by Wendy Ceccherelli, who was working in public art for the city. She told him we could make a record.
Peter: She said there’s no up-to-date record of all the outdoor art in Seattle, and we could fill the gap.
Regina Hackett: Did you get any financial support?*
Mimi: It’s our hobby. Every single corner of this city, we’ve been to. We do it for love.
Portland Public Art Blogspot Author
March, 2007
I grew up around artists, in a household that owned art and considered it carefully. I trained as an artist, but don’t rely on the arts to earn a living. I decided to live in a provincial city – Portland, Oregon – and to never satisfy an audience, an editor, a curator. This was a long time ago and surviving as a thinking person engaged with the world meant a lot of correspondence – building relationships based on commonly held questions about the state of the world, and the state of creativity.
I started writing in journals and newspapers about art in the early 1980s, at first under my own name, but soon anonymously. I had a career, another persona in another industry that would alter how people considered the writing – and its intent. I thought of the work as a public service, but it was important I liked what I made. It is, in a sense, artwork itself.
As a kid I made friends with a local disk jockey who was very popular. He invited me to the studio and set me up to watch him work two back-to-back programs – about four hours. He did both as other characters – DJs I knew well, but associated with other faces and names. Turned out he played most of the station’s DJs, not just the one I associated with. I asked him about this and he said, the music’s all the same.
In his later years he did birthday parties as an impressionist. He had a repertoire of characters which had been popular a generation before – Jack Benny, Ed Sullivan, Eisenhower, Phil Silvers. I don’t think he got much work, but he liked what he was doing.
I like this city. It’s small enough so you can, if you want, know everyone worth knowing, and it’s history has been stable enough – no wars, no famines, no plagues – you can know the facts of almost any circumstance. It’s a city that depended on shipping and lumber for 100 years, and in the next 100 years will depend on creative industries.
There’s art here – collected and maintained by private individuals, companies, and by a public arts bureau. Quite a bit of it – maybe two thousand pieces scattered around. For people who started here, we overlook these artworks, take them for granted, and forget their origin or purpose. For newcomers – of which there is a hoard – the Portland Public Art blog serves as an introduction to the collection of a city.
We take our ability to see an object for granted – we imagine it’s an almost innate skill, like reading or listening. But when you meet someone who is a trained see-er, someone who has intentionally cultivated an ability to look at a hundred things quickly and pick out the one that is beautiful, you’ll understand this is a terrific and rare talent. I don’t have this ability. I see things slowly, but I am persistent. I keep looking.
The blog gets thousands of hits each month, from all over the world, from people searching for all sorts of stuff. The blog also has a regular readership, a number in the high two digits. The people who read it are for the most part seekers, learners, readers – not makers of art. These seem to be two separate crowds.
C
Ries says
Glenn- do you know about this english one?
Its not very up to date, but it covers a lot of stuff-
http://public-art.shu.ac.uk/weblinx.html
Public Art Research Archive, Sheffield Hallam University, UK
First website to link with Aesthetic Grounds
Anonymous says
You should check out the Public Art program in Vancouver, BC. The city has a directory and quite a bit of work has been done on it.
http://www.city.vancouver.bc.ca/publicart_wac/publicart.exe