Weekend Herald

Public art can breathe joy into our lives

Public art helps us create identities that are distinct and unique to our part of the world, to celebrate our heritage and make our spaces more culturally vibrant.

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News that Auckland Council will pay $550,000 from its $2.2 million regional public art fund for a single sculpture is likely to lead to the usual complaints about why it spends money on art at all.

After all, doesn’t the region have enough problems paying for core services and infrastruc­ture such as transport? This week, council stumped up a further $500 million for the City Rail Link after a budget blowout escalated project costs.

On top of transport, there are numerous well-documented issues with water quality, housing and the environmen­t which demand attention and money spent on them — often urgently. These are vital but there is more to living in a city than dealing with utilitaria­n concerns that — when highlighte­d day in, day out — can suck any joy out of life.

It becomes a question of prioritisa­tion and balance; the 5.6 metre Boy Walking sculpture proposed for Potters Park in Balmoral will cost roughly just 0.01 per cent of council’s annual revenue. Now consider the benefits, both tangible and intangible, it — and Auckland Council’s other 399 pieces of public art — bring (that collection is valued at around $39 million).

There can be economic ones; art tourism is recognised as one of the world’s fastest growing markets, attracting visitors who might spend an extra night or two in a city, dine in local restaurant­s and buy from nearby shops.

Then there are the things we might not realise art can do, such as making a woman feel safer walking through a laneway. That’s what happened when David Svensson’s Eyelight Lane ,a neon light installati­on, was erected in Fort Lane.

Previously a dimly lit alley which deterred some from using it as a convenient shortcut to Britomart, it now feels safer because it’s a good deal brighter and busier.

A vibrant work such as Reuben Paterson’s Andale, Andale at the Remuera Rd entrance to Newmarket Train Station, with its glittering flowers, might not be to everyone’s taste but it can certainly lift one’s

mood on an otherwise bad day.

Public art helps us create identities that are distinct and unique to our part of the world, to celebrate our heritage and make our spaces more culturally vibrant. Think about great civilisati­ons — they are remembered, in large part, for their art and culture.

Look at the outpouring of grief when Paris’ Notre Dame came close to being razed to the ground, and the thanks given that many of the art and cultural treasures were saved. Equally remember the shock and tears shed for Afghanista­n’s Buddhas of Bamiyan, once the world’s largest standing Buddhas, blown apart by the Taliban.

It shows us that public art matters; it’s not to say we shouldn’t debate, discuss and, yes, talk about the cost of it — after all, art is meant to challenge and provoke — but it should be balanced by a more nuanced appreciati­on of what it’s doing for all of us and how soulless, dour and grim our communitie­s would be without it.

Artist Ronnie van Hout’s Boy Walking is about a young person walking optimistic­ally into the future. A local authority that invests in public art has a sense of hope and values creative human endeavour, individual­ity and innovation — the same qualities that may help solve our transport, water and housing woes.

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