An Elephant in Your Living Room, or the Squaw Peak Pot Controversy

 
GENERAL

Research Abstract
An Elephant in Your Living Room, or the Squaw Peak Pot Controversy
The question we asked ourselves from the beginning of the Squaw Peak Mitigation Project was can public art really help mitigate the impact of a new freeway on the neighborhoods around it?ン We had good reasons to wonder. To the communities living in its path, the freeway was, as artist team member Lajos Heder characterized it, as welcome as a two-ton elephant in your living room.ン The team's onerous task was to turn the unwanted pachyderm into a house pet. Within weeks of the project's installation, this analogy had new meaning. If the freeway was an elephant to those living near it, the Squaw Peak project quickly became the Phoenix Arts Commission's elephant. Inflammatory local and national headlines even encouraged some in the city to argue that the project and the entire Percent-for-Art Program had become the city's beast. (p. 1)
October 1992 Monograph (National Assembly of Local Arts Agencies) exploring a Percent-for-Art controversy involving public art in Phoenix
BIBLIOGRAPHY

Periodical (article)
Dunbar, Nina and Whitehurst, Deborah
Americans for the Arts Monograph
Volume 1, Number 1
September, 1992
PUBLISHER DETAILS

Americans for the Arts (formerly National Assembly of Local Arts Agencies)
1000 Vermont Ave., NW 6th Floor
Washington
DC, 20005
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