The Norman Transcript

Columns

December 2, 2012

Larry Walker’s public art wish list keeps growing

NORMAN — Art, in a way, is like hair styles. Lengths, colors, shapes and textures are always changing. A fad today may be passé next month.

Larry Walker hasn’t stopped appreciating art or hair styles since he came to Norman as a drama major in the 1960s. He wanted to be able to feed himself, so he got a license and began cutting hair on Campus Corner the day after Christmas in 1969. He and Joe Walden may be the longest-tenured, still actively working businessmen on the corner.

Walker beams with pride at the visual and performing arts available here but often wonders aloud why his neighbors are not as excited. They’ll go to New York City for a show but not across town. They’ll buy art in Santa Fe, made by Oklahomans, but won’t visit the artists’ Norman studio.

“I wish people just understood the impact of the arts already in the community. People don’t grasp the impact,” said Walker, chair of the city’s public arts board. “I would like to see a greater awareness of the arts.”

n n n

It’ll be hard to overlook the arts if the board goes through with the idea of artwork on the Main Street Interstate 35 bridge, something along the lines of the 197-foot SkyDance bridge sculpture on I-35 near Robinson Avenue in Oklahoma City.

“We’ve looked at it. For it to be large enough to be seen along I-35, you’re looking at a massive piece,” Walker said. “The scale and scope of the piece must be large.”

The price tag will be in the massive neighborhood, too, by our public art standards. He estimates it will take at least $250,000. A companion piece on the Lindsey Street bridge, perhaps with an OU theme, will be needed, too.

By comparison, the Indian Grasses sculpture commissioned by the public arts board costs $60,000 and is three stories tall.

“That’s at least the size and scale we would need on Main Street,” he said. “Our biggest issue is whether we can raise that kind of money and not jeopardize the overall arts community in the fundraising.”

n n n

Walker has chaired the public arts board since its city council creation in 2007. Norman is one of four cities to have such a board. He is proud of the handful of pieces the board has commissioned to date.

Over the next few months, three more $1,500 duck sculptures will be installed in city parks similar to the ones in Lions, Andrews and Colonial Estates parks. Twenty-six of the city’s 67 parks are designated as children’s parks.

By comparison, Edmond’s public arts board has championed 134 art pieces over the last 10 years. The city gets a dolar-for-dollar match with businesses and neighborhoods that support a piece of art.

Some cities, not including Norman, have ordinances requiring public building projects to include 1 percent of the budget be spent on art. A move in that direction tanked when the economy deteriorated about five years ago.

“At some point in the future, that’s definitely something we would like to see happen,” Walker said.

n n n

Walker said Norman has the talent and resources to be more active in art. In the 37 years of the governor’s arts awards, 49 honors have gone to Norman residents, businesses and organizations.

Many of those have OU connections. Earlier this month graduate students installed art in Lions Park. With the permission of OU, the arts board has documented and photographed all of the public art within the city. An upcoming strategic planning session will re-evaluate an arts master plan for the city.

“Those of us who have been involved in the arts have a wish list, and every few years, we cross something off of it. Either we finish it or we say there’s no way in hell that we can do that.”

Andy Rieger366-3543editor@normantranscript.com

For local news and more, subscribe to The Norman Transcript Smart Edition, or our print edition.

Text Only | Photo Reprints
Columns
  • “Free Kate” campaign missing the point

    Apparently, it is not enough to tolerate, accept or even endorse the gay agenda. Now, unless you tolerate and accept criminal behavior committed by gays, you are a hater....

    May 25, 2013

  • Misinformation clouds global warming

    Next spring I will again have to update my lecture on global warming. Atmospheric carbon dioxide is now rising above the 400 ppm level for the first time in perhaps 5 million years — a scenario humans have never experienced. In my Geology ...

    May 23, 2013

  • Crazy Kim and the Tippy Twos

    Kim Jong Un certainly seems crazy. But sound mind isn’t a requirement for predictable action. Tyrants often mask steady goals with wild behavior. One need only think of world pests like Fidel Castro and Saddam Hussein to realize entire ...

    May 21, 2013

  • U.S. must address shootings

    Editor, The Transcript: This is sent in reply to the letter from Earl Herfurth regarding Second Amendment rights. Certainly, the Second Amendment is an important part of America’s history, but the argument set forth in support of gun ...

    May 20, 2013

  • Gas stations used to command loyalty

    More than 50 years ago, Ed Ruscha set off on a road trip from California to Oklahoma City and back. The young artist was driving to see his mother, who still lived in Oklahoma....

    May 19, 2013

  • Mothers today aren’t like early mothers

    Early mothers were known for their ability and willingness to sew for family as well as friends and neighbors. When clothes needed mending or someone needed a dress or a jacket, many mothers could always come through. “You have to stand ...

    May 16, 2013

  • A few ‘tells’ predict who will blow their money

    During Kentucky Derby week, gambling was at the forefront of my life. Along with non-stop activities in my home state of Kentucky, I spoke at a dinner for the Society of Settlement Professionals in Las Vegas. A film crew flew in from Rome ...

    May 14, 2013

  • Remembering George Nigh

    George Nigh was sworn into office four times and served longer as Oklahoma’s chief executive officer than any other person in the state’s history....

    May 12, 2013

  • Cleveland County needs district judges

    Politics makes strange bedfellows. Rep. Bobby Cleveland and I have had our disagreements, and likely neither wishes to share a bed with the other. Perhaps we’ve forgiven but not forgotten, but on the issue of an additional district ...

    May 9, 2013

  • New budget is fiscally responsible

    Over the course of the legislative session, the crafting of the state budget is the biggest task we face each spring....

    May 7, 2013