MAKE US YOUR HOMEPAGE | Saturday, November 21, 2009 | WIRELESS CONTACT US | SUBSCRIBER SERVICES | SIGN IN SIGN OUT | MY PROFILE PAGE | MY ACCOUNT

Home > News > Article

Newspaper View Newspaper View      Print this story Print      Email this story Email      Comment Comment      RSS RSS     
Share      Bookmark Bookmark

Convention Center artist selected
The specific site has not been chosen for the work.

A computer-generated rendering shows how Sarah Morris' abstract, tiled artwork will look on a north exterior wall of the Tulsa Convention Center between the new addition and the parking garage.Courtesy
 
By BRIAN BARBER World Staff Writer
Published: 10/23/2009  2:21 AM
Last Modified: 10/24/2009  8:12 AM

The Arts Commission on Thursday approved world-renown artist Sarah Morris to create a large-scale, colorful, abstract wall project for the updated Tulsa Convention Center.

The artwork, which will be made of ceramic tiles in an origami pattern, is expected to cost about $360,000 and will be funded through the local ordinance that sets aside 1 percent of a project's construction dollars for art in an effort to beautify public space.

The Convention Center's $50.5 million expansion and renovation is funded through the Tulsa County Vision 2025 initiative.

A majority of commission members are pushing for Morris' work to be located on a north exterior wall of the building between the new addition and the Civic Center Parkade because of the exposure it would receive from Third Street.

But some want to see it cover the walls of a courtyard that has been created by the juxtaposition of the old Convention Center building, the parking garage and the new addition.

A decision on the location will be made at the Art Commission's Nov. 9 meeting after members are able to visit the potential sites. The location also will determine the final cost.

Speaking through a video conference from New York City, Morris told commission members about how she was inspired by the austere work of the Convention Center's original architect, Edward Durell Stone.

"He was a phenomenal architect," she said of the man who also designed the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., the Museum of Modern Art
in New York City and other famous structures. "He is quite underrated, but I think that is changing."

Morris said she created the design of the Tulsa work, using brilliant colors and geometries that she associates with the city's "unique aesthetic vocabulary and palette."

If the north exterior wall is chosen, the work will encompass more than 3,000 square feet and be made up of weather-durable, hand-crafted ceramic tiles, which will be painted and glazed. The wall is expected to be illuminated with flood lighting.

Morris said that although she prefers the courtyard site because it is a "hidden gem" and a location where the work would have a wrap-around effect on spectators, she also understands why commission members are concerned about public visibility.

The artwork is not expected to be in place in time for the Convention Center's grand opening Jan. 16, which will celebrate the completion of the addition and the new finishes for the former structure. But the goal is to have it done as soon as possible.

Arts Commission Chairman Ken Busy said Morris was in the pool of artists considered for the BOK Center, but it seemed her work would be a better fit for the Convention Center revamp.

"She's a very exciting and unique artist, and we will be proud to showcase her work here in Tulsa," he said.

Morris has done site-specific projects around the globe and has public collections at London's Tate Modern, New York's Museum of Modern Art and the Dallas Museum of Fine Art, among many other institutions.


Brian Barber 581-8322
brian.barber@tulsaworld.com
By BRIAN BARBER World Staff Writer

Newspaper View Newspaper View      Print this story Print      Email this story Email      Comment Comment      RSS RSS     
Share      Bookmark Bookmark

Reader Comments
       Add your comment

8 comments have been made on this story so far. Tell us what you think below!

Report Comment Reporting Comments

If you see a comment that violates our terms and conditions, please help us by clicking the "Report this Comment" link next to a comment. That will alert the web staff to review the comment. Thank you.  -- Web Editor Jason Collington
 
 
Report Comment
Tony G, Tulsa (10/23/2009 6:25:15 AM)
I believe a local artist would have been a better idea.
Report Comment
RDUN, (10/23/2009 7:42:53 AM)
I've been watching the renovation of the Convention Center, and I really admire the dramatic new addition on the north side. It seems to me that putting this artwork on a north exterior wall would compete with and detract from the beauty of the building itself. I hope the more secluded courtyard location is chosen instead.

And BTW, "Morris said she created the design of the Tulsa work, using brilliant colors and geometries that she associates with the city's 'unique aesthetic vocabulary and palette.'" Brilliant colors? Tulsa? Really?
Report Comment
WilliamTheArtist, (10/23/2009 7:49:34 AM)
Beautiful, I like it.
Report Comment
Daven, Tulsa (10/23/2009 8:08:17 AM)
Hope it looks better then the picture. Im sure it will.
Report Comment
nucleardad, Tulsa (10/23/2009 8:54:40 AM)
RDUN

What's your problem with Tulsa?
Report Comment
truth fairy, (10/23/2009 2:22:03 PM)
I looked up "Sarah Morris artist" on the web, and found some nice examples of her work.
I think this installation will compliment the convention center's architecture, and Ms. Morris has well expressed her appreciation for Tulsa's unique palette of Art Deco and American Indian color and design.
Report Comment
true2form, Grand Lake (10/23/2009 3:47:27 PM)
Good thing these guys ain't trying to figure out where to put a commandments monument!
Report Comment
tbf1428, (10/24/2009 4:04:50 PM)
3,000 square feet of tiling for $360,000. By my math that works out to be $120/foot. We are tiling a room for $4 a square foot. If we had a professional install it, the price would be doubled to $8 a square foot. How is it that no one in our government has a problem with that kind of price for tiling the building?
 

 
Add Your Comment 
In order to post a comment on this article, you must sign in to Tulsaworld.com. If you do not have a site account, you can create an account for free.

 
  
Post Your Comment
 


Most Popular Stories
Comments made yesterday 1,932
Total Comments 897,257
Register to make reader comments

Most Popular Stories




Tulsa World

Home | About Tulsa World | Advertise With Us | Privacy | Usage Agreement | FAQ and Help | Contact Us | Today's Headlines
Copyright © 2009, World Publishing Co. All rights reserved.




Advanced Search