scholarly journals Sensibility Design Elements of Public Facilities for Improve Urban Image in Jeju: Focusing on Public Art Museums

2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-81
Author(s):  
Seo Young Kim
2014 ◽  
Vol 1065-1069 ◽  
pp. 2702-2705
Author(s):  
Yuan Yuan Guo ◽  
Ting Ting Guo

Under the background of digital times,We are committed to solved these problems which are based on the solution to the problems of social attitudes of contemporary Wuhan citizen from the perspective of public art. Current Wuhan public art is not merely the aesthetic object, but a medium to publicize urban spirit and express public will and citizens ’ personality. The forms of expressions of public art in digital times are highly enriched and diversified; as for Wuhan, a city with distinct characteristics, the public properties of public art should give priority to citizens’ involvement. In order to propel this interactivity, we conducts strategy research so as to improve citizens’ overall aesthetic quality, reproduce urban characteristics of Wuhan and boost urban image of Wuhan by means of public art.


2021 ◽  
Vol 103 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary L. Cummings ◽  
Hala Nassar ◽  
Vishwa Alaparthy

AbstractWhile increasingly popular, small unmanned aerial vehicles, aka drones, are often flown illegally over outdoor public gatherings or public facilities like prisons, threatening the safety of those nearby. There is a clear need to address interloping drones in public spaces from a sociotechnical perspective, including understanding the tradespace of variables. Through surveys, interviews, technology and infrastructure design, and experimentation, we developed a tradespace model of those variables that managers and designers of high-risk settings like public spaces and prisons need to consider in their development or renovation. These include cost considerations, both capital and infrastructure, as well as technology design elements of range and false alarm rates potentially exacerbated by convolutional neural networks (aka, deep learning). Results also highlight that environmental design elements can provide a possible low-tech solution in the design of obstructions that either eliminate or complicate a drone pilot’s line of sight. This effort demonstrates that managers and designers of high-risk settings like public spaces and prisons will have to balance sometimes competing objectives to obtain the best possible outcomes for public safety.


Author(s):  
Ubiraélcio Malheiros

Resumo Esse artigo tem como objetivo abordar a arte pública como imagem da cidade e meio de representação urbana. A ideia é mostrar e analisar intervencões urbanas em espaços e monumentos tradicionais de Belém do Pará – Brasil, que representem a história e a vida da cidade em seus trânsitos e apropriacões, de maneira à resignificar espaços e lugares que sejam imagens coletivas dos habitantes dessa cidade. Assim sendo, “Arte pública como imagem da cidade: seus trânsitos e apropriações” relaciona-se a um panorama da arte contemporânea de Belém, ou seja, da arte urbana (aqui entendida como arte pública efêmera) e de suas manifestações, na última década, que se relacionam e se imbricam com os monumentos tradicionais (arte pública permanente). Todo o trabalho está fundamentado na obra de três artistas paraenses: Berna Reale, Victor de La Rocque e Murilo Rodrigues, que têm como linguagem artísticas intervenções que acontecem em diferentes lugares e monumentos da cidade porque sua tradição é significativa para construcão da imagem urbana e para seus fluxos. É importante lembrar que esses trabalhos são efêmeros – enquanto performances que se desdobram em videos e fotografias – e participaram em diferentes versões do Arte Pará (Importante Salão de Arte Contemporânea paraense).   Abstract Absract: This article aims to present public art as a city’s image and as an urban representation medium. The idea is to present and analyze urban interventions on monuments and spaces that are traditional in Belém do Pará – Brazil, which represent the city’s history and life through its movements and appropriations in a way to bring new meaning to spaces and places that form the collective image of the city’s inhabitants. Therefore, “Public Art as a city’s image: it’s shifts and appropriations” relate to a contemporary art landscape in Belém, in other words, the urban art (understood here as public and ephemeral art) and it’s manifestations on the last decade that relate and add to the traditional monuments (public and permanent art). All the work is based on the work of three artist from Para?: Berna Reale, Victor de La Rocque e Murilo Rodrigues, which have as artistic language interventions that happen in different places and monuments in the city, because their tradition is of significance for the urban image construction and its fluxes. It is important to remember that these works of art are ephemeral – performances that unfold in video and photographs – and that have parti- cipated in different versions of Arte Pará (important exhibition of Pará’s contemporary art).  


1970 ◽  
pp. 31
Author(s):  
Beat Wyss

In March of 1913, a fragmentary manuscript, a folio written on both sides in the handwriting of Georg Friedrich Wilhelm Hegel, was auctioned off in Berlin. Four years later, after a publication by Franz Rosenzweig, it became known as the "Oldest System-Program of German Idealism". One hears the murmuring of a genius in this little text, which has been attributed to Schelling, Hölderlin, or Hegel three friends who studied together in Tübingen. This "fetish" of research on idealism continues to feed the scholarly debate over the fragments authorship and the obscurities of its origin and content.Some new ideas about the purpose of the early public art museums may emerge from the study of the document. It is possible to discern a connecting line ofthought, a common concept of purpose, between Holderlin's idea of 'eternal return' and Mies van der Rohe's Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin, as well as between Hegel's historicism, Schinkel's Altes Museum and James Sterling's Staatsgalerie in Stuttgart. 


2017 ◽  
Vol 3 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 110-129
Author(s):  
Sophie McIntyre

The significant ideological and cultural role of public museums in shaping national identity is widely acknowledged. This paper focuses on the roles of Taiwan’s public art museums in generating nationalist narratives that privilege notions of cultural distinctiveness and authenticity in the visual representation of art from Taiwan. Two exhibitions of contemporary Indigenous art provide a platform for critical analysis of the impact of identity politics on the selection, display, and promotion of Taiwanese Indigenous art. Questions of artistic agency are also explored in this paper, demonstrating how Indigenous artists in Taiwan are increasingly interrogating and contesting systems of museological representation which seek to locate or “frame” Indigenous art within an Austronesian nationalist identity narrative. These exhibitions and the artists’ works and observations offer an insight into the complex and shifting interrelationship between national identity politics and the museological representation of art in Taiwan.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document