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"Open Philosophy"
journal has started collecting manuscripts for the topical issue "Does
Publih Art. Have to be Bad Art?" (ed. Mark Kingwell).   Details below:           CALL FOR PAPERS  for a topical issue of  Open
Philosophy  DOES PUBLIC ART HAVE TO BE BAD
ART?     "Open
Philosophy" ( www.degruyter.com www.degruyter.com ) invites submissions for the topical issue  "Does Public Art Have to Be Bad Art?",  edited  by Mark Kingwell
(Toronto University).    The aim of this
topical issue is to explore diverse perspectives and recurring problems in the
area of public art. By public art we mean, among other things, civic and
institutionally commissioned works that are placed in public places such as
community squares and plazas, as well as works that claim to explain or
commemorate the spaces in which they appear. Background controversies are
familiar debates about the use or misuse of public funds, the alleged elitism
of commissioning committees, and the difficulties of art’s relation to its own
site(s). A case such as Richard Serra’s Tilted Arc might serve here as an
example that gathers most of the relevant themes into one example. There is of
course a great deal of discourse on the question of public art in general; the
aim of our deliberately provocative question in the call for papers is to
isolate the specifically controversial status of public art. This in turn
highlights the status of public spaces, and thus offers an especially urgent
version of the always vexed relation between art and politics.   Among the topics we seek to explore are:         *   What makes public art public; the range of
‘publics’;      *   The economics and politics of commissioning and
installing civic art;      *   Notions of philistinism and elitism in debates about
public art;      *   How art relates to place and space; questions of
site and influence;      *   Controversies concerning civic or cultural identity
in public art; ideas of memory, identity, ethnicity, indigeneity, etc.;      *   The very idea of public spaces as shared spaces.     Authors publishing their articles in the special issue
will benefit from:  ·        
transparent comprehensive and fast peer review,  ·        
efficient route to fast-track publication and full advantage of De Gruyter ' s e-technology,  ·         free
language assistance for authors from non-English speaking regions,  ·         no
publish fees.     HOW TO SUBMIT  Submissions will be collected from September 1
to October 31, 2018. To submit an article for the special issue
of  Open Philosophy , authors are asked to access the on-line
submission system at:   www.editorialmanager.com www.editorialmanager.com      Please choose as article type: “Topical Issue Article:
Public Art”.  Before submission the authors should carefully read over
the Instruction for Authors, available at:   www.degruyter.com www.degruyter.com  All contributions will undergo critical review before
being accepted for publication.  Further
questions about this thematic issue can be addressed to  to Mark Kingwell
at  webmail.utoronto.ca [log in to unmask] .  In case of
technical questions, please contact journal Managing Editor Katarzyna Tempczyk
at   katarzyna.tempczyk@degruyterop .              Dr. Katarzyna Tempczyk  Managing Editor, Theology and Religious
Studies  Managing Editor, Philosophy     Find us on Facebook:   www.facebook.com www.facebook.com  www.facebook.com www.facebook.com        DE GRUYTER        De Gruyter
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