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Various communities have employed different programs to develop public art, including: <br />• A rotating gallery program in which cities first provide a venue for artists to display their work, and then <br />annually add one or two of the most popular pieces to the city's permanent collection <br />• Arts dedication (similar to park dedication) from any new private development, redevelopment, or <br />public capital or infrastructure investment <br />• Arts requirement in which any new private development, redevelopment, or public capital or <br />infrastructure investment must incorporate some level of public art <br />• Public art competitions <br />• Support or subsidies for locations for artists to do their work <br />• Support for events (concerts, plays, art fairs) <br />• Artist in Residence programs <br />• Facilitating partnerships between artists and corporate patrons <br />• Pursuing grants <br />• Facilitating simple permitting for temporary or "pop-up" art opportunities <br />Locations <br />The locations identified are places where public art displays would likely be most engaged. In these settings, <br />the art should respond to the context in which it is displayed. Public art, unlike a gallery piece sitting against <br />a blank wall, must fit its setting. This is not to say that public art is not welcome in other locations in the <br />city, nor that every artist's interpretation of what fits a location would be the same, but an artist must be able <br />to answer the question, "how does your art respond to the context and setting in which it will be displayed?" <br />Downtown <br />The historic downtown already shows and hosts numerous pieces of public art, from sculptures and murals, <br />to performances and fountains. It is a pedestrian -focused area with public and private facilities. It is also the <br />heart of the community, and an area commonly identified with Elk River. <br />Public art projects in the downtown area could further enrich the experiences of visitors and locals alike. <br />Opportunities for public art could include functional pedestrian amenities such as benches, lights, planters, <br />and gates or railings. Additional public art could fit into buildings or in storefront windows or facades. <br />Potential points of focus or themes for public art could include the river or the area's history, or art could be <br />created in response to the built form of the district. Art in this location will likely be oriented to the human <br />scale. <br />Community Gateways <br />Community gateways create a visitor's first impression of Elk River as they enter the city. These gateways thus <br />serve as the city's welcome, whether it is for a first time visitor or for residents returning home from their daily <br />commutes. <br />Public art at community gateways must consider the way in which people will interact with it. Someone <br />entering Elk River from the north along Highway169 will likely be traveling at highway speed. Thus, the <br />gateway must be legible from a greater distance and at high speeds. Viewers will not be able to consider the <br />91 City of Elk River - Parks and Recreation Master Plan <br />