[Vision2020] PR - Wren Welcome Garden Selection CommitteeRecommends Robert Horner piece for installation
Jay Borden
jborden at datawedge.com
Tue Dec 20 20:24:51 PST 2011
Was that really an answer? Or is that just how you quantify/justify everything that makes all spending now seem cheaper by comparison?
"More police to deal with megaload protesters will cost about $800 billion less!"
"Hiring more government workers will cost about $800 billion less!"
"These waffles cost about $800 billion less!"
Jay
Sent from my Android phone... so ignore the typpos...
-----Original Message-----
From: Donovan Arnold [donovanjarnold2005 at yahoo.com]
Received: Tuesday, 20 Dec 2011, 7:35pm
To: Gary Crabtree [moscowlocksmith at gmail.com]; Stephanie Kalasz [skalasz at ci.moscow.id.us]
CC: vision2020 at moscow.com [vision2020 at moscow.com]
Subject: Re: [Vision2020] PR - Wren Welcome Garden Selection CommitteeRecommends Robert Horner piece for installation
About $800 billion less than we are giving banks that caused the current financial crisis.
Donovan Arnold
________________________________
From: Gary Crabtree <moscowlocksmith at gmail.com>
To: Stephanie Kalasz <skalasz at ci.moscow.id.us>
Cc: "vision2020 at moscow.com" <vision2020 at moscow.com>
Sent: Tuesday, December 20, 2011 4:45 PM
Subject: Re: [Vision2020] PR - Wren Welcome Garden Selection Committee Recommends Robert Horner piece for installation
Could some body please refresh our collective memory just exactly how many tax dollars in total are being lavished on this pile of packed dirt?
g
On Tue, Dec 20, 2011 at 3:18 PM, Stephanie Kalasz <skalasz at ci.moscow.id.us> wrote:
City of Moscow
>206 E Third Street
>Moscow, ID 83843
>Contact: Gary J. Riedner, City Supervisor
>p | 208-883-7006
>e | griedner at ci.moscow.id.us
>w | www.ci.moscow.id.us
>
>PRESS RELEASE
>Wren Welcome Garden Selection Committee Recommends Robert Horner piece for installation
>
>December 19, 2011 (Moscow, Idaho) – The Wren Welcome Garden Selection Committee has formally recommended Robert Horner’s “Helio-Terra” proposal to the City Council for installation at the Wren Welcome Garden, located at the south couplet of Highways 95 and 8, just south of Gritman Medical Center.
>
>The proposed piece as described by the artist, “Helio-Terra is a mass of locally quarried earth that is compacted into a form resembling a seed. The geometry of artwork is a gesture towards the agricultural heritage of Moscow, as well as the grain towers that flank the site. The seed is a concentration of nutrient that gives forth the energy necessary to yield future sustenance, and thus serves as a metaphor for the community of Moscow. Helio-Terra strikes a direct connection between the sun and the harvest. The artwork highlights the furthest reaches of the sun along the horizon and depicts solar-rhythmic seasonal crests that have served as agricultural anchors for thousands of years.”
>
>The recommended piece stands 20 feet tall, and will be constructed of rammed earth, a well-graded mixture of subsoil with varying amounts of iron-oxide affecting the color of the earth to simulate the colors of the rolling hills of the Palouse. Additional features include the variety of concave cavities that correspond to solar orientation.
>
>Selection Committee Member Robin Ohlgren notes of the piece, “At its core, the Horner piece which was the final selection by the Wren Welcome Garden Public Art Committee, evokes several significant features of Moscow and the surrounding Palouse: its landscape, its agricultural traditions, and the innovative people who settled it. The rammed earth symbol of harvest tells a story of the land and of the culture that has evolved here, and gives us a visual reminder of the solar rhythm that influences our lives. It is both innovative and ancient, serene yet dynamic. It will welcome citizens at a busy intersection into our community, and provoke inquiry for years to come.”
>
>Horner resides in Port Townsend, Washington, and has a background in planning and design, as well as archeology and microbiology. In 2008, he decided to dedicate himself to public artwork. His first public art installation was in 2008-09 at Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, Washington. His most recent installation was the Tidal Resonance Chamber in Tacoma, Washington, another rammed earth project. More information about the artist can be found at his website at www.robertmhorner.com.
>
>The selection process for the site began with a Request for Qualifications that closed September 9, 2011. The project was open to Idaho, Montana, Oregon, and Washington artists. Twenty-one submissions were received, and from that the Wren Welcome Garden Selection Committee, an independent selection panel of arts professionals and community stakeholders, selected three semi-finalists after an in depth review of past work, previous experience, and demonstrated skill level.
>
>The Committee was led by Karen Bubb, Public Arts Manager for the City of Boise, Idaho. Bubb’s assistance was made possible by an Idaho Commission on the Arts grants. With her services, the City of Moscow established a process for this and future public art selections. The selection committee was comprised of the following local volunteers:
> * Ann-Marie Bilderback, Moscow Parks and Recreation Commission Member
> * Stephen Drown, Chair of the Landscape Architecture Department at the University of Idaho, Moscow Urban Renewal Agency Commissioner
> * David Giese, Chair of the Moscow Arts Commission and Academic Faculty in Art and Design at the University of Idaho
> * Tom Lamar, City Council Member and liaison to the Moscow Arts Commission
> * Jeanne Leffingwell, Moscow Resident, Public Artist
> * Heidi Linehan, Gritman Medical Center Foundation Executive Director
> * Robin Ohlgren, Moscow Arts Commission Member
> * Donna Woolston, Moscow Arts Commission Member
>
>A site visit with the three finalists was held in late October at which point a Request for Proposals was forwarded to the finalists requiring specific proposals for the design, fabrication, and installation of a permanent outdoor sculpture. The deadline for proposals was November 28, 2011.
>
>Proposals were then displayed and public comment was accepted from December 8 to the 16, 2011 at City Hall in Moscow, Idaho. Artist submissions were also posted on the City of Moscow website on December 10 and are still available for viewing at www.ci.moscow.id.us/art/wrenrfq_temp.aspx. Based on the Committee’s independent selection panel’s input and the gathered public comment, Horner’s design was chosen for recommendation to be approved by the City Council at their next scheduled meeting on January 3, 2012.
>
>Selection Committee Member Donna Woolston, explains the process, “The Wren Public Art project was a rewarding adventure to be a part of the journey of discovering each option and opportunity for Moscow as presented by the professional artist was rich and thought provoking. In the end, as each story was told, the final decision unfolded with it, rendering a thoughtful and exciting conclusion for us all in the form of the Horner sculpture.”
>
>The Wren Welcome Garden was acquired by the City of Moscow via a land exchange with the Idaho Transportation Department in August of 2002. During the summer of 2006, Moscow downtown merchants were asked to submit name suggestions for the park. Wren Welcome Garden is a hybrid of two names proposed and was put forth by the Parks and Recreation Department and approved by the City Council in July of 2006.
>
>###
>
>Story Contact: Kathleen Burns, Arts Director
>Phone: 208-883-7036
>Email: kburns at ci.moscow.id.us
>
>The City of Moscow delivers quality municipal services while ensuring responsible use of resources.
>We anticipate and meet the needs of our diverse population in order to build public trust
> and enhance a sense of community.
>
>
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