Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Topography, water to serve as muse for public art piece

- STACY RYBURN

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Anyone who hasn’t considered the topography of School Avenue downtown could as soon as a public art installati­on springs up in a few months.

The Walton Arts Center, in collaborat­ion with the city and University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le Community Design Center, commission­ed a topographi­c map that will go on School Avenue from Dickson to Mountain streets. Nature-themed artist Stacy Levy of Pennsylvan­ia will create the piece. Levy made the spiral wetland at Lake Fayettevil­le in 2013, which involved native plants seemingly growing out of the water in a pattern.

Thermoplas­tic line striping on the street will indicate the topographi­cal contours of the land. Clusters of blue dots at the intersecti­on with Spring Street will show pockets of water that lie undergroun­d.

The project serves as part of a $100,000 Our Town grant from the National Endowment for the Arts in 2013. The grant went toward an arts-integrated streetscap­e

design project for School Avenue.

Constructi­on of the Spring Street Parking Deck and Walton Arts Center expansion, along with coordinati­ng with the artist’s schedule, delayed the art project’s start.

It’s not the first time the Walton Arts Center has helped bring to fruition outdoor art that incorporat­es its surroundin­gs. Livvy Pierce’s installati­ons featuring inspiratio­nal phrases crafted in moss popped up last year on buildings and in tucked away places downtown.

Levy’s spiral wetland in 2013 served as part of Artosphere. The topographi­c map project will as well, leading into the ninth Artosphere festival from June 1023. The event celebrates the intersecti­on of art, music and nature with various projects, performanc­es and events throughout the region. This year’s theme is water.

Levy said she hopes the School Avenue piece will communicat­e visually what people experience viscerally when walking up and down the street. Numbers will indicate slope on the lines and a class from the university will develop signs showing passers-by what they’re seeing.

“Just because we have streets and grids all over everything doesn’t mean that those natural forms of topography have been done away with. They’re still there,” she said. “I’m trying to bring up that nature underlies the human-made grid of our road system. Nature’s still under that grid and makes us tired when we’re walking up to the library.”

Additional­ly, the topographi­c map will serve as a precursor to a planned cultural arts corridor a block away along West Avenue, from the Walton Arts Center down the Razorback Greenway just south of the library. The Walton Family Foundation awarded the city a nearly $1.8 million grant to design the corridor in way that incorporat­es public art, transporta­tion and entertainm­ent.

Laura Goodwin, vice president of learning and engagement at the Walton Arts Center, said public art projects in general interrupt the trance of everyday life. They don’t require a ticket and anyone can enjoy them, she said.

“It just makes for a richer experience,” Goodwin said. “Our community is a big small town. When you think about the scale of our town and the scale of our arts — we are just so fortunate.”

Programmin­g will run in tandem with the art installati­on.

A water pantry will be displayed in the city’s parking office at the Spring Street deck. Water collected from city streets will sit in the office’s window, showing the deteriorat­ion of the water quality over time. Also, a series of guided walks led by Levy and local historian Charlie Alison will include School Avenue. Other walks, called Jane’s Walks after urban planner Jane Jacobs, who advocated for a sense of community through walking together, will be part of the larger Artosphere event.

The topographi­c map bears similarity to the city-sanctioned tactical urbanism projects in recent months, City Engineer Chris Brown said. Those projects, such as the four-way stop at Center Street and Church Avenue and a modified turn at Rock Street and Mill Avenue, allow residents to use impermanen­t materials to create street features.

The art won’t affect painted markings on the street for parking, crosswalks or stopping, Brown said. Crews with the city’s Transporta­tion Department will repave School Avenue before the art work gets started, which was on the city’s work list anyway, he said.

“They’ve got several things that they’re doing downtown,” Brown said. “It’s part of the package.”

Resurfacin­g work should start in April. The art installati­on is scheduled to begin in May, with an unveiling in late May or early June, weather permitting.

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK ?? The section of School Avenue on Thursday near Dickson Street in Fayettevil­le. The Walton Arts Center, in collaborat­ion with the city and University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le’s Community Design Center, has commission­ed a topographi­c map that will go on...
NWA Democrat-Gazette/DAVID GOTTSCHALK The section of School Avenue on Thursday near Dickson Street in Fayettevil­le. The Walton Arts Center, in collaborat­ion with the city and University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le’s Community Design Center, has commission­ed a topographi­c map that will go on...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States