Good Public Art in Bad Public Spaces: Art Critic Jerry Saltz Takes on the Built Environment

In his latest article for Vulture, art critic Jerry Saltz celebrates the latest crop of public art in New York City, such as Deborah Kass' OY/YO sculpture, sitting near the Manhattan Bridge in Brooklyn, commenting on the success of such pieces even though (or perhaps because) many of them have been curated by art-world insiders rather than publicly accountable arts commissions or community engagement processes. But for Saltz, this new wave of high-quality public art has come at the expense of quality public space. Despite his admiration for the art installations, he expresses skepticism of the privately-funded public spaces that house them, such as the much-celebrated High Line, designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro (DS+R) and James Corner Field Operations, as well as future projects such as Pier 55 by Heatherwick Studio, and the "Culture Shed" at the Hudson Yards development also by DS+R. His critique even references a phrase from DS+R that belongs on our list of words only architects use. Read Saltz's full discussion of public art and public space here.

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Cite: David Douglass-Jaimes. "Good Public Art in Bad Public Spaces: Art Critic Jerry Saltz Takes on the Built Environment" 27 Dec 2015. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/779360/good-public-art-in-bad-public-spaces-art-critic-jerry-saltz-takes-on-the-built-environment> ISSN 0719-8884

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