The contemporary British city is in a constant state of metamorphosis. It shifts and changes, sharp shards of glass and metal push up through the pavements, forcing the surrounding structures to shuffle aside and cower in awe of their growth. Architectural cast-offs are gradually abandoned as the city sheds its skin.
Amongst these remnants of transformation, hundreds of spaces remain unused, holding the potential to reconnect and re-communicate with the people and the city, through their own kind of regeneration: regeneration through art.
Eleanor Shipman explores the challenges and successes of how creative interventions can connect people to place, suggesting what really makes ‘ideal public art’ in today’s urban environment.