Norman Arts, Public Arts Board and City of Norman Invite Artists to Submit Designs for Third Annual Artful Inlets Project

Artful Inlets 2021
Submissions Due:
11:59 p.m. Thursday, March 18
APPLY ONLINE HERE


Zoom Info Session: View here
Passcode: UrG+b50a
Click here to view video shown in Zoom Info Session

On behalf of the Norman Arts Council and the City of Norman, Oklahoma, the Norman Public Arts Board seeks artist submissions for Artful Inlets.

The City of Norman operates and maintains a series of underground pipes, open channels, ditches, and roadways used to collect or convey stormwater runoff from our homes and businesses to the nearest body of water, such as a creek, stream, or lake. In urban areas, stormwater runoff from hard surfaces, like roofs and driveways, flows along the side of the road until it reaches a storm drain, which is an opening or grate in the curb connected by pipes to the nearest waterbody. Water and other materials that enter these storm drains are transported directly to our creeks and streams without any treatment. Some of the pollutants that enter our local creeks and streams with stormwater runoff include grass clippings, oil, trash, fertilizers, pesticides, and pet waste.

For the 3rd Annual Artful Inlets program, the Norman Arts Council, Public Arts Board, and City of Norman are inviting artists to submit designs that will transform city storm drains into works of public art. These artful inlets will educate and raise awareness that pollutants that go down storm drains have a devasting impact on our local water quality.

There are currently ten Artful Inlets on Main Street, and this year we will be adding an additional five (5) drains identified for this project. They will all be on Legacy Trail west of Jones Avenue from Main Street to Acres Street. The artwork should have a stormwater and/or water quality theme, "Only Rain Down the Drain", and must be adaptable to any of the five specified drains. Each selected artist will incorporate their original design into the prescribed area around the storm drain. See below for details..

Submission Rules

  • Artists (or a team of artists) must be 18 years or older and a resident(s) of Cleveland County, Oklahoma.

  • Artist who completed an Artful Inlets design in 2019 and/or 2020 are eligible to submit in 2021.

  • All designs must be submitted on the provided Design Worksheet.

  • Design proposals must be submitted through Submittable no later than Thursday, March 18th 2021. Only applications submitted through the on-line process will be considered.

  • Artists must submit only original designs and, if selected, must install the selected, original design.

  • Submissions must include a short artist biography and information about the proposed design

  • A list of any additional materials to be used that are not provided must also be included

Design Criteria

  • Artistic excellence

  • Each design must include the slogan "Only Rain Down the Drain" within the design.

  • When designing artwork, each artist is asked to consider the following themes:

  1. Stormwater Pollution

  2. Environmental Protection: the importance of cleaner water

  • The design must be appropriate for a public space.

  • Any materials supplied by the artist must be eco-friendly, not contribute to stormwater pollution, and be pre-approved by the selection panel at least two weeks before the designs are painted.

  • The design may not contain any business reference, promotions or advertisements.

  • It may not contain any breach of intellectual property, brands or trademarks, or depiction of illegal activity.

  • Final painting must match the proposed design.

Selected Artists will receive:

  • $400.00 stipend when installation and sealing is completed

  • A cleaned, primed area stationed off with appropriate traffic control devices while painting

  • Tent to provide shade over the area while painting

  • Sherwin-Williams Armorseal paint – black, white, yellow, red, and blue with a non-slip additive

  • Water for painting

  • Tubs and containers for water and paint

  • Drinking water

Selected Artists must provide:

  • The original design

  • Execution of the accepted design

  • Brushes

  • Any other supplies or tools they deem necessary to execute their design

The artists will be selected based on the materials submitted in this application. Artist selection for this project will be made by a panel including City of Norman staff and members of the Norman Public Arts Board who will choose 5 artists and 1 alternate based on the following criteria:

  • Artistic Merit

  • Incorporation of the theme

  • Feasibility of executing the proposed design

  • Appropriateness of design

The Selection Panel will assign a storm drain to each artist upon selection. Soon after the selected artists are notified, a staff member from the NAC or the City will meet with each artist at their designated storm drain to discuss the specific size and shape of their design relative to their assigned space.

Artful Inlets Information Session via Zoom

An information session was held on February 25, 2021 via ZOOM at 6:30pm. At the meeting, they reviewed the timeline and process for the 2020 Artful Inlets Program. Interested artists who missed the meeting can view the recording, now!

Zoom Info Session: View here
Passcode: UrG+b50a
Click here to view video shown in Zoom Info Session

Timeline

  • Submission deadline is Thursday, March 18, 2021

  • Artists will be selected and notified by Thursday, April 15, 2021

  • Installation of the artwork will be on Thursday, April 29 and Friday, April 30, 2021

  • Mayor Clark’s walking tour celebrating the Artful Inlets will be announced at a later date when it is appropriate to host public gatherings.

During the two days of installation, the artists will be photographed, interviewed, and a video will be made to give each artist an opportunity to talk about their design, their motivation for participating, and their process. These will be used to create a feature segment for the following virtual 2nd Friday.

Please note that if there are any changes to the installation schedule due to inclement weather, selected artists will be contacted with alternate installation dates. Possible alternate dates include Wednesday, April 28 and Monday, May 3, 2021.

Defined space for artwork

The area that artists are allowed to paint is approximately a three (3) feet wide by ten (10) feet long area on the sidewalk/bridge above the inlet/channel (see template below). Additional area around the inlet is also available and will be discussed with selected artists to allow for incorporation in selected designs prior to installation.

Artists must use the template to propose designs. Although the various storm drains are shaped differently, the prepared and sealed sidewalk surrounding the drains will be in a rectangular shape. Be mindful that some changes to your design may be required to accommodate the specific location. Each artist will meet with a staff member of the NAC or the City as soon as they have been selected so they can become familiar with the size and shape of their assigned inlet and make any modifications to their design as needed.

Each storm drain is made of metal with a metal grate in front of it that varies in shape and position, as represented in the photos below. The shape of each paintable surface is a rectangle. The design should fill the entire canvas and be adjustable to highlight the drain nearest each location. Please use the template as a guide.

Copyright

The design must be original and must not infringe on any other person’s intellectual property rights.

Each selected artist further grants the City of Norman, Norman Arts Council, and the Public Arts Board the exclusive rights to reproduce the design (including electronic images) for fundraising, educational, and promotional purposes.

Vandalism

While the City of Norman will provide a clear, vandal-resistance varnish, artists should also be aware that the City of Norman cannot prevent vandalism to said artwork, although every effort will be made to protect it.

Maintenance

The finished works will be on working drains and regular maintenance by the City may damage the artwork. Additionaly time and/or weather may eventually cause artwork to fade. If, in the opinion of the City, NAC, and PAB, the artwork can be touched-up or refreshed, reasonable attempts will be made to contact the artist to see if they want to do that work without additional compensation.

Removal

Artwork must be consistent with submitted and selected artwork. If, in the opinion of the Public Arts Board, the artwork does not reflect the submitted design, the City has the right to remove it partially or completely.

Artists can anticipate the artwork being in place a minimum of one year. However, the City and NAC have the right to remove the artwork at any time if they jointly agree that the artwork is inappropriate due to design, condition, or vandalism. The City reserves the right to remove the artwork immediately if it presents a danger to public safety or the drain needs maintenance, repair, or replacement.

Liability

Each artist agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the City of Norman, Norman Arts Council, and the Public Arts Board from any loss or damage, any and all third party claims, demands, actions, legal fees or costs for which the Artist is legally responsible, including those arising out of negligence, willful harm, or crimes by the Artist or the Artist’s employees, agent or subcontractors. This “hold harmless” agreement shall survive beyond the term of the Artist’s service contract.

The City of Norman, Norman Arts Council, and the Public Arts Board will not be liable or responsible for any bodily or personal injury or property damage of any nature that may be suffered by the Artist, their employees, agents or subcontractors in the performance of this Project, except to the extent of any negligence or misconduct on the part of the City of Norman, Norman Arts Council, and the Public Arts Board.

Commissioning of artists is implemented without preference to racial or ethnic origins, sex, sexual orientation, religious affiliation, disability or age.

The Norman Arts Council and the City of Norman reserve the right to modify this solicitation and to request additional information or proposals from any or all participating artists. The Norman Arts Council and the City of Norman also reserve the right to accept or reject, at any time prior to the commissioning of a work, any or all proposals when the acceptance, rejection, waiver or advertisement would be in the best interest of the project. In addition, they may solicit proposals from artists not responding to this call and reserves the right to select an artist outside of the pool of artists responding to this call.

Questions

Debby Williams, Public Art Manager, Norman Arts Council
debby@normanarts.org
405-360-1162

Download Guidelines
Submit Design
Artful Inlets Worksheet-01.jpg




The City of Norman, Norman Arts Council Invest in Local Arts Community with CARES Act Funding

Norman Arts Council is pleased to announce 17 local arts organizations have been awarded a Norman CARES Act: Arts Recovery Grant totaling $172,000. 

These grants were made available to FY21 Norman Arts Council Project and Operational Support Grant recipients to help enable the return of their community arts programming in 2021 and offset the costs of safety protocols, capacity restrictions and/or any other adaptations required to responsibly produce and share their respective art offerings.

“Norman art events, programs and festivals have long been central to our city’s cultural identity, elevating our quality of life, attracting visitors, bolstering small businesses and supporting the community at large,” said Erinn Gavaghan, Executive Director of Norman Arts Council. “The return of all these Norman traditions and treasures will be absolutely essential to Norman’s recovery, economically, as well as a vital opportunity for all neighbors and loved ones to come together and heal, emotionally.”

The ongoing pandemic has had a catastrophic impact on the arts worldwide with performances, festivals and other large, public gatherings ground to a halt. The impact in Norman is only deepened by the equally dire effect on the tourism industry. Norman’s Transient Guest Room Tax provides significant funding to Norman Arts Council, which further enables the organization to grant a generous portion to organizations working in the arts and arts education in the City of Norman. 

The City of Norman allocated $500,000 from CARES Act Funding to the Norman Arts Council in the fall to bolster the operation of the organization itself, as well as its ability to fulfill project and operation support grants for FY21 (July 2020 through June 2021). 

The remaining $172,000 was designated to fund the Norman CARES Act: Arts Recovery Grants. The application opened on December 21, 2020 and closed on December 31, 2020. The Norman Arts Council Grants Panel reviewed grants and determined award recommendations that were approved by the Norman Arts Council Board on Friday, January 15, 2021. 

“We are grateful the City of Norman — both the City Council and the citizens who voiced their support — recognized how essential the arts are to Norman and directed funding to Norman Arts,” Gavaghan said. “Norman CARES Act: Arts Recovery Grants make the difficult task of weathering this period easier and help ensure that a return to normal, when it’s safe to do so, is possible.”

Here are the 17 Norman Cares Act: Arts Recovery Grant recipients:

A to Z Productions
Central Oklahoma Dance Company
Cimarron Opera
The Depot
Firehouse Art Center
Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art
Jazz in June
Medieval Fair
Namron Players
Norman Ballet
Norman Cultural Connection
Norman Music Alliance
Oklahoma Youth Sing
Resonator
Scissortail Productions
Sooner Theatre
World Literature Today

PHOTO: Beach Fossils at Norman Music Festival in 2019, courtesy of Nathan Poppe

Artist, Printmaker Katherine Liontas-Warren, Collection of Visual Poets Kick Off 2021 MAINSITE Exhibition Slate

MAINSITE will host two exciting exhibitions in the space to kick off the new year. One half of the space will showcase Water and Land, a collection of watercolors and prints from Oklahoma artist Katherine Liontas-Warren. The other will come alive with Visual Poetry on the Page: With, Within, and Without the Word, a group exhibition of visual poets from across the globe, organized and curated by Crag Hill.

The space will open to the public on Wednesday, January 13, with the exhibition set to run through Saturday, February 13. A digital premiere and opening reception will take place at 6 p.m. Friday, January 8 as a part of the Virtual 2nd Friday Norman broadcast hosted that evening on the 2nd Friday Norman Art Walk Facebook page. 

Both the exhibition and digital premiere will be free and open to the public. Masks are required of all visitors to the gallery. The gallery is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday, weekly. 

Reaching by Katherine Liontas-Warren

Reaching by Katherine Liontas-Warren

Water and Land is a collection of recent works by Liontas-Warren centered on the passages, time and motion, and the symbolism water and land have come to represent in those concepts. 

“Water represents my desire to return to my birth state and meditatively embrace the powerful waves of the sea, which capture my heart and spirit, while the land is an anchor, describing my surroundings at a certain time and moment in my life,” Liontas-Warren said in her artist statement for the exhibition. “As I embrace both water and land in an intimate and curious way, I realize that my life is constantly in motion and that the aging process is a normal ascension into another chapter of my life.”

Liontas-Warren is an accomplished artist and resident of Oklahoma since 1984. A professor of art at Cameron University, she was awarded the Oklahoma Governor’s Art and Education Award in 2014, recipient of the Bhattacharya Research Excellence Award, a member of the Cameron University Faculty Hall of Fame and winner of the Artist of the Year distinction by the Paseo Art Association. 

She has exhibited in over 450 shows throughout the United States and abroad. The Museum of Texas Tech University recently acquired 90 works by Liontas-Warren for the Artist Printmaker Research Collection.

Scott Helmes

Scott Helmes

Robin Tomens

Robin Tomens

Visual Poetry on the Page: With, Within, and Without the Word explores a movement that asks viewers to read the works as visual art. Unlike concrete, written poems, a visual poem “typically includes many other elements than alphabetic text,” including any number of mediums or artist manipulation, including painting, photos, digital manipulation or any other means to “obliterate the boundary between visual arts and literature.” 

“Visual poetry is what we can see,” organizer Crag Hill said in his curator statement. “It can be what we see when we see within, behind, and beyond words, when we see through parts of words, through and with letters, parts of letters, the ineffable marks we make on and in spaces we inhabit and aspire to live with and for.”

The exhibition includes dozens of works by a number of visual poets from across the world, including Rosaire Appel, Bill DiMichele, Scott Helmes, Dona Mayoora, Stephen Nelson, Robin Tomens and more. 

Mosaic Sculptures to Provide Communal Space for Visitors to Norman's Newest Park

A look at one of the three sculptures that compose Triptych at Valerie Theberge's studio

A look at one of the three sculptures that compose Triptych at Valerie Theberge's studio

Norman’s newest park brings Norman’s newest piece of public art with it. Triptych by Valerie Theberge joins Norman’s ever-expanding collection of world-class public art and can be seen at Ruby Grant Park, 3110 W. Franklin Rd, Norman, which opens to the public on Friday, December 4. 

A virtual ribbon cutting for the park and dedication for Theberge’s art will be broadcast at 1 p.m. Friday, December 4 on the Norman Parks and Recreation’s Facebook page

Triptych — the working title for the piece — is a trio of sculptures celebrating the City of Norman, the spirit of the park’s namesake Ruby Grant and the rhythm of the grounds itself. With joyful and uplifting colors, the mosaic glass-tiled pieces highlight and complement the natural setting, nodding to our community’s artistic, progressive, pioneering spirit with intricate hand cut patterns.

“The artwork gives visitors a place to pause and commune with the surroundings,” Theberge said in the narrative explaining the inspiration and purpose behind the piece. “In the spirit of Ruby Grant, the sculptures are grouped facing each other and can be considered an outdoor classroom where people can gather and enjoy the wide array of flora and fauna.”

Theberge was selected out of 61 requests for qualification submissions, which were generated from artists and designers from across the globe. Three finalists were asked to create design proposals, and Theberge was chosen by the selection panel composed of stakeholders from the Norman Parks and Recreation, City of Norman, Norman Arts Council, Public Arts Board Ruby Grant Park Ad Hoc Advisory board and regionally-renowned Norman artist Don Longcrier. 

Theberge graduated from the San Francisco Art Institute, where she majored in painting and drawing. She moved to China to study the Chinese language and Chinese painting. She received a certificate in Chinese painting in 1992. Her art career took her to Hong Kong where she trained with a British company and specialized in the art of mosaics. Theberge has worked on projects in mainland China, Hong Kong, Macau, India and the United States. She currently works in her studio located in the Washington, DC- metropolitan area.

The selection was approved by the Norman Arts Council Board and the Norman Public Arts Board in March.

This is the fourth public art project made possible through the Norman Forward 1% for Art Program, led by Public Art Manager Debby Williams. Mark Aeling’s SPLASH was installed at the Westwood Family Aquatic Center, 1017 Fairway Drive, in December 2017. James Johnson’s Prairie Wind was installed at Norman Public Library East, 3001 E. Alameda, in June 2018. Paul Cocksedge’s Unbound was installed at Norman Public Library Central, 103 W. Acres, in July 2019. 

Watch FB Live Broadcast at 12pm Friday

Norman Arts Council Accepting Spring 2021 Arts Education Scholarship Applications

NAC Arts Ed Spring 2021-01.jpg

Spring 2021 Arts Education Scholarships
Due: 11:59 p.m. Friday, December 11
LEARN MORE & APPLY HERE

After a brief pause in the program, Norman Arts Council is again accepting arts education scholarships for programs and lessons set to take place in spring 2021.

Due to the pandemic, Norman Arts Council’s Arts Education Scholarships were placed on hold until funding issues were resolved. The Norman Arts Council was fortunate to receive emergency funding from a number of entities, including: Mid-America Arts Alliance, Oklahoma Arts Council, and The City of Norman. Thanks to them and many others for seeing our need, we are able to provide scholarships this upcoming semester.

The Norman Arts Council invites students in grades K-8 who live or go to school in Norman, Oklahoma to apply for a scholarship of up to $500 to offset the cost of an arts education experience provided by an established arts organization or educator.

Students should express a strong desire to enhance their arts education experience beyond what is offered at schools. Demonstration of a past commitment to visual or performing arts, ability to complete the student’s selected art program and financial need are other criteria considered. Preference is given to visual arts programs.

Scholarship applications are live now through 11:59 p.m. Friday, December 11.

Apply here