OFA


More information.


The Open Field Agency reframes public art as an ongoing, community-based project, working closely within the complex processes of urban redevelopment. This approach was conceived of for the Dank Street South Precinct after many discussions with locals and community organisations about how to maintain social and spatial openness of a place which is undergoing rapid transformation. In our discussions with the local community about the Dank Street South Precinct we were faced with a series of questions:

• How can this place become and remain truly public?
• How can we bring together the voices of new and old communities and in process enrich a public space where all feel welcome?
• How can we harness the power of redevelopment to resist exclusive gentrification and make space for existing communities of First Nations, working class people and creatives in the city?
• How can we embed ongoing creation of culture here, now and into the future?

In response to these questions, the OFA will facilitate an ongoing series of creative residencies for artists, First Nations knowledge keepers, scientists, historians, researchers, community groups and others. Each resident will be tasked with inciting and continuing discussions with the diverse publics of this site, proposing new uses, forming new collectives and augmenting the public space.

Re-imagined as a process of slow, repetitive care, public art becomes the ongoing practice of tending to a site and the many publics who may use it. The project’s new approach to public art moves beyond the creation of one- off interpretive objects to become an ongoing practice of tending to a site and its many publics. It creates an ongoing practice of making things public. Of nurturing and caring for the publicness of a site. In this case it particularly involves tending to and maintaining the site’s openness of access, of meaning and of opportunity.


Learn more about the background of the project here:

Open Field Agency Public Art and Public Domain Strategy