Art Moves REO!
The “Art Movement Project REO Town” was launched early this summer with a call to artists to submit a digital image of new or previously created artwork to be installed on the substation for the duration of six months at which time a new call will be made. This iteration of the original project adds a licensing component; it provides artists with a $1,000 stipend for the work, which artists keep the rights to, and BWL pays the costs to print and install the art. “We were pleased to continue working with REO Town on public art installations at the Central Substation,” said BWL General Manager Dick Peffley. “This expanded direction allows us to keep our commitment to the community while featuring more local artists,” Peffley said.
The first BWL Central Substation art project launched when the substation was first built. In an effort to support the arts in Greater Lansing, and to make the building visually interesting, BWL made a commitment to invest $20,000 every three years to enliven the substation with temporary, rotating public art. BWL partnered with the Arts Council of Greater Lansing to put out its first call to artists in 2018, and artists Dane Vermuelen and Caitlin Gwinn’s colorful lighted design, “City Rhythm,” was installed in 2019.
As public art interest continues to grow throughout the Greater Lansing Region, projects like these open up more doors for artists and create new ways of looking at public art as something that doesn’t have to be static, it can constantly be changing to reflect more perspectives and represent the diverse voices of our Greater Lansing community.
To learn more about the “Art Movement Project REO Town” (#ArtMovesREO) and other creative placemaking and public art opportunities, contact the Arts Council’s executive director, Meghan Martin, at meghan@lansingarts.org.