Park Board does it right

 
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May 29, 2008 - 04:08:02 CDT
The Bismarck Park Board did the right thing Tuesday by affirming its support of art produced by students of United Tribes Technical College. The final one in a series of eagle sculptures now can be made so that it can be mounted and viewed in Sertoma Park.

In the process of coming to a decision about the project, the board approved a statement of position on public art. The statement is only a start, in essence a description of how the park district has handled issues of displaying art in parks and what it thinks now.

The plan is for the Dakota West Arts Council to develop comprehensive policy for the park board to review and hopefully implement. That probably won't happen quickly, though it would be much better if it did. The group should produce as soon as it can.

It doesn't seem that the park board had bad intentions when, earlier in May, it voted to hold up on its support of the fifth and final work in the eagle sculpture project. It was more a case of getting cold feet - wanting to wait on approvals until it has definitive guidance from a fully developed public art policy. To have a fleshed-out policy might have given the board more confidence in dealing with some criticism of the eagle displays board members had to handle.

So they decided to put things on hold until at least some policy was stated. The district staff provided that.

Surrounding the way the matter developed have been charges of racism and wounded denials.

It took some grit for the park board to take up the matter again and follow through with its commitment, whatever criticism is lurking out there.

In its statement of where it stands now, the district declares it's committed "to providing and facilitating public art of quality and diversity which adds to the community's vibrancy and identity."

It pledges to "use public art as a vehicle to express our unique history, cultural heritage and legacies ... to foster the community's sense of spirit, pride and community values."

Noting that these are selected declarations from a two-page document, still, they represent the tone.

It's supposed to strengthen a sense of community when people show their creations to the community. The district staff came up with some solid material, including this: "... the public is the final beneficiary of public art."

The controversy isn't really about Native American artists at UTTC or even park board decisions or art policy. It's a matter of Bismarck's continual exploration of its identity. In this self-examination, it will come out that it's a lot of work to keep an open mind, whether toward what should be displayed in a park or toward members of the community.
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Park Board does it right
Comments

Good one wrote on May 30, 2008 9:26 AM:

" Nice going, Tribune. The editorial was right on. Especially the part about the park board raking a "risk" in making this decision. Clear thinking takes great courage. I applaud the park board for doing the right thing, and the Tribune for taking note of it. And truly, I feel the same way about the indoor aquatic/wellness center. It takes great courage to create new ideas, and it's really easy to sit back and criticize bold thinkers. Let's keep Bismack moving in a positive direction. In the end, it's all for the people. "

Excellent wrote on May 29, 2008 11:15 AM:

" I can't agree more with this editorial - especially the last paragraph.

It's the fear of what one might find in their self-examination that may stop one from even considering itself in the first place. Bismarck's M.O. has always been to push away things that are too difficult to wrap its head around. New things - alternative things - outside of the box thinking= it's always easier to say no than to look at all the evidence before making a decision.

Thanks to the park board for doing right by the students at UTTC. It's my only wish and hope that groups keep proposing more public art and that culture and diversity continue their difficult march on Bismarck. "

dvd maker wrote on May 29, 2008 10:12 AM:

" This too is a good thing for Bismarck. Hopefully those from uttc will get out and vote for the park board member who has always supported the sculptures (Zimmerman and hopefully Beattie). "

Independent Conservative wrote on May 29, 2008 9:18 AM:

" I disagree with the assessment of what "it's a matter of" in the final paragraph. What I think it is about is two-fold. One, when a governing body makes a decision, they should stand by it, with the exception of new circumstances affecting public safety. Two, given the subjective nature of art, it is about whether or not it should be broadly displayed in the public square. I maintain an arts park is appropriate and keeps the issue out of critics' hands. "

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