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City SitesCity Sites is an innovative visual art employment project developed by Carclew Youth Arts, which employs visual artists to work under the mentorship of professional public artists. Based on the highly acclaimed Gallery37 project in Chicago, USA, the City Sites project is designed to provide intensive training in the Visual Arts for artists between 17 and 26. Since the first project began in January of 1997, City Sites has employed over 330 visual artists. WHAT IS CITY SITESCity Sites is an inventive art, employment and mentorship project providing South Australians with an opportunity to further their artistic skills through employment in the visual arts. Carclew Youth Arts developed this unique project as a response to the career development needs of visual artists. City Sites employs visual artists to work under the mentorship of professional artists to produce public artworks including mosaic and jarrah park benches, drinking fountains, murals, paving features and more. City Sites is an exceptional public arts project, giving participants an insight into the working life of a full-time artist. The program establishes vital networks between visual artists, commissioning bodies (City Councils, Government Agencies, local businesses) and the community. All participants aged between 17 and 26 years of age (inclusive) are employed as trainee artists under the mentorship of professional artists. Together they design and manufacture public artworks specifically for each client's individual design brief. Paid employment for the trainees is a key principle of City Sites. The artists learn skills in a variety of art forms and also undertake research and extensive consultation with clients - from initial discussions of the client brief, to the design and presentation of concepts to the final creation of the artwork. These processes introduce the artists to skills necessary in gaining employment as professional practitioners. The increasing demand for places in the annual project has meant the talent of artists accepted into the City Sites program is extremely high. Since the project's inception in 1997, over 330 artists have participated in the project. REGIONAL SITES Carclew Youth Arts and Country Arts SA have a long and successful history of delivering arts workshop projects to regionally isolated young people. Both organisations are committed to expanding artistic and creative opportunities for children and young people in South Australia. Each year the City Sites team, in close consultation with local communities and partnership with Country Arts SA, travels to regional areas of South Australia to create Regional Sites.
Through increasing community awareness and support of the City Sites project, there is a growing demand for larger scale artworks from commissioning bodies. Larger works are sometimes unable to be designed and manufactured within the strict month time line of the January project so City Sites has also developed the Graduate projects which are undertaken at various times of the year on an as needs basis. Projects are accepted as Graduate projects if there is seen to be further professional and artistic development opportunities for the artists involved. These projects enable Carclew to re-employ many of the artists who have successfully graduated from previous January projects. (Providing that they are still under the age of 27 at the time of the commencement of the project). This enables further skill development in practical areas of the negotiation, design and manufacture of larger scale artworks to strict budgets and time lines. Past examples of Graduate projects include a large mosaic paving feature for the City of Holdfast Bay and the award-winning Goodwood Community Centre works.
The three dimensional Black Forest, constructed of different metals, vividly re-creates the extensive Eucalypt Forest that dominated the Goodwood landscape at time of settlement. The multi coloured Whirly Gig symbolises the bringing together of the community. The window treatments in the library depict early transport, advertising and the Royal Show grounds that are such a feature of the area. The painted mural celebrates local history and architecture. "Extensive negotiations between Hames Sharley, Council and Carclew were successfully able to resolve issues of siting, aesthetics and engineering, while still allowing the young artists the freedom of expression so vital and integral to any public art installation. It is to the credit of all parties that the measure of the art works ultimate success is recognition by the Royal Australian Institute of Architects," said Christopher Colyer, Community Development Officer, The City of Unley.This project received funding through the Australia Council for the Arts and the Centenary of Federation committee.
COMMISSIONING – Affordable Public Art works.Do you want to add colourful, original and meaningful public artwork to your community or business premises? Have you considered mosaic paving, park benches, murals or contemporary café tables? Do you want to support the career development of talented, young South Australian visual artists? These organisations recognise the career and network benefits for young people through participation in City Sites. They also recognise the advantages of featuring high quality artwork in their environment. All artwork is created specifically for the clients, from a brief they generate. Thus the artwork designed reflects the aims and ideas of the client brief. "The City of Salisbury has been a City Sites’ client for over 5 years. City Sites has provided several significant outcomes for this Council, those being the development opportunities for artists, the significant educational benefits for council staff and elected members, high quality artworks whilst also assisting with the development of a significant working partnership between this Council and Carclew. The City of Salisbury has a long-term commitment to seeing art in the public realm and to the implementation of other arts and cultural initiatives within this City. Projects like City Sites provide opportunities to engage emerging artists and new ideas to be incorporated into this commitment. The continuing success of City Sites has created an ideal situation where this council and emerging young artists have the opportunity to work on ambitious projects that would be otherwise out of reach.City Sites has a proven track record and has continually provided successful outcomes for this Council." Nichola Kapitza, Manager Culture and Youth Planning, The City of Salisbury, May 2005. The project provides a platform for the work of young people to be publicly valued by business, local government and the broader community. The commissions are real, as are the expectations of the clients. The project aims to give a "face" to the arts for the commissioning bodies, as they are practically involved in the creation of their artworks. For the young artists the brief is real, with the public artworks created on show to the public permanently. ContactJill Newman - Project Manager Telephone - 08 8267 5111 | |||