The East Rosedale Monument Project by Christopher Blay will be dedicated to the City of Fort Worth on Saturday, February 1, 2025 with a reception beginning at 2:00pm at the Ella Mae Shamblee Library, located at 1062 Evans Avenue in Fort Worth.
Please join us at the next meeting of the Fort Worth Art Commission on Monday, February 17, 2025, 5:30 p.m., location TBD. An agenda will be posted by Thursday, February 13.
Ciquio Vasquez Park Public Artist J. Muzacz’s Final Design was approved by the Fort Worth Art Commission in December. His first hands-on workshop experience for the community recently took place at the Worth Heights Community Center. Visit the artist’s project webpage to learn more and offer your feedback.
On September 16, 2024, the Fort Worth Art Commission unanimously recommended to acquire a limestone sculpture titled Natura by Fort Worth-based artist Alice Bateman for the Fort Worth Public Art Community Legacy Collection, noting that the heirloom artwork is an important part of Fort Worth’s cultural history. The artwork is one of four created during the popular 1999 public symposium at the Botanic Garden that encouraged Fort Worth City Council to approve a percent for public art ordinance in 2001.
Christopher Blay’s artwork for East Rosedale Avenue recognizes the role of transit buses in the civil rights movement from the 1950s through the 1970s and connects the struggle for equal rights and justice from a national narrative to a local one by transforming a vintage transit bus into a public artwork as a way of talking about and preserving history.
Gordon Huether’s artwork for the Fort Worth Police Department South Patrol Division, entitled Vision, seeks to evoke ideas of clarity, transparency, awareness, and reflection that are essential to effective police enforcement today.
Area C Projects’ artwork entitled Fabled draws upon the library’s role as a teller of stories and stories as creators of place. The artists suggest that what people know about a place comes from the stories it tells about itself. Area C Projects partnered with the Fort Worth Public Library to collect pictures, video and stories from residents of Fort Worth over several months.
Karl Unnasch was recently selected for the Ray White Road Public Art Project. Honors received for past work include two ICSC U.S. MAXI Silver awards in Las Vegas for PLAYTIME JUBILEE and an Americans for the Arts Public Art Network Year in Review nod for RUMINANT out of Washington, D.C. He has created public artworks across the country and has been featured on the Today show and Voice of America. Visit his website to learn more!