Mika Tajima, Meridian (Gold), 2016, installation view in Hunter’s Point South Park, New York. Commissioned by SculptureCenter. Courtesy the artist, 11R, New York and Taro Nasu, Tokyo. Photo: Yasunori Matsui
Like it or not, most public art is chosen by people in suits. (Think real estate executives, architects and local officials.) But a funky outdoor sculpture unveiled on 9 June in Long Island City, New York, was selected by a very different panel of judges: high school students.
For the project, more than three years in the making, the non-profit SculptureCenter invited eight local students to take a two-week course in public art. At the end, the students interviewed three shortlisted artists and chose one for SculptureCenter to commission.
In a neighbourhood that is transforming as quickly as Long Island City, the programme, called Public Process, invites visitors to “think about how public space is developed” and who gets to decide, says Mary Ceruti, SculptureCenter’s director.