Public Art: Theory, Practice and PopulismISBN: 978-1-4051-5559-5
Paperback
208 pages
April 2008, Wiley-Blackwell
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Other Available Formats: Hardcover
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"[Knight] offers a twenty-first-century definition of public art." (AfterImage, July 2009)
"A broad account of public art in the United States, from its history and growth to its current meaning and purpose." (Sculpture Magazine, March 2009)
"The thorough bibliography will greatly benefit public art professionals, artists, art historians, and laypersons. Providing a detailed, frank account of public art and viewer agency across the broadest spectrum, Public Art offers insight into works that might be beyond traditional conceptions. By bringing art that is often at the margins to the center, Knight offers fresh ideas on a subject ripe for further discussion. Recommended." (Choice, November 2008)
"Cher Krause Knight … focuses on the notion of populist involvement as the yardstick by which to measure public art projects. She touches on well-known moments in the history of public art to illustrate the ways that the public has been variously excluded, humored, harangued, or genuinely integrated into projects. Most interesting are her musings on commercial sites, like Disney’s Magic Kingdom and Las Vegas casinos. In their admittedly pandering capacity for spectacle, she argues, such places include the public in ways that snooty art commissions don't—whatever you say about their aesthetic values." (Public Art Review, Fall 2008)
"Cher Knight situates public art in a continuum of visual experience that includes museums, earthworks and Las Vegas. Embracing spectacle and popular engagement, she expands existing parameters to make public art both more provocative and more truly public."–Dr. Harriet F. Senie, author of Contemporary Public Sculpture; The 'Tilted Arc' Controversy; and co-editor of Critical Issues in Public Art
"In this remarkable book, Cher Knight has done a splendid job of
synthesizing current thinking on public art rightly concluding that
in the modern world it is the public who awards value."
–Dr. Sally Webster, Professor of Modern and
Contemporary Art, Lehman College and the Graduate Center CUNY