Running the City: Why public art matters
By (Author) Felicity Fenner
NewSouth Publishing
NewSouth Publishing
1st August 2017
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Urban and municipal planning and policy
711
Paperback
208
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
Leading Australian curator Felicity Fenner profiles activity-based and pop-up contemporary public art projects from Australia and around the globe. Running the City explores art projects that bring together diverse disciplines and cultures including running, cycling, architecture, and guerilla gardening.
From runners taking to the streets of Sydney's CBD in Runscape to Work No. 850, where athletes sprinted through the corridors of Tate Britain, the book surveys recent art projects that utilise the city both as subject matter and a site for art. Participatory, temporary, and permanent community-driven art projects reveal how public space can be activated in ways that are original, subversive, fun, and unexpected. The theme of running both in the context of athleticism and agency underscores the artworks here.
More than just site-specific public art, the art projects examined in Running the City change the way we think about and inhabit our cities.
Felicity Fenner is the Director of UNSW Galleries, at The University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. She is a founding member of the City of Sydney Public Art Advisory Panel and a curator of over 30 contemporary art exhibitions. Her research focuses on aspects of place, as seen in exhibitions such as the Adelaide Biennial of Australian Art (2008), Once Removed at the 2009 Venice Biennale, Michael Nyman: CineOpera (Sydney Park Brickworks, 2011) and Running the City (2013 International Symposium of Electronic Arts).