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Style Craft Lines and Dots Wall Plaque WI52-1007-DS
Style Craft Lines and Dots Wall Plaque WI52-1007-DS $104.99 - $264.99 0 Reviews
Style Craft WI52-1007-DS Features: -Wall plaque. -3-D square art. -Beautifully colored paper in blue tones mixed with soft earth tones. -Convenient attached hanging hooks.
Crestview Collection CVBWF029 - Abstract Metal Wall Art / Wall Decor ( Pack of 3)
Crestview Collection CVBWF029 - Abstract Metal Wall Art / Wall Decor ( Pack of 3) $384.90 - $384.90 0 Reviews

Benzara 34825 Abstract Metal Wall Decor
Benzara 34825 Abstract Metal Wall Decor $55.26 - $95.89 0 Reviews
Abstract Geometrical Shapes Metal Wall Sculpture Abstract metal wall sculpture features a design made of different geometrical shapes including the rectangle, square and circle tied together by a single large black grid. It is painted in suitable colors to give it a rustic look while also adding to the artistic value of the piece. Measuring thirty seven inches wide by twenty one inches in height and three inches in thickness this abstract sculpture will improve the artistic appeal of your home.
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Wall Art

Nehf: Public art worthy of SPLOST
I'm writing to address the Banner-Herald's April 23 editorial criticizing the SPLOST 2011 Citizen Advisory Committee's efforts at ensuring a well-rounded special-purpose, local-option sales tax initiative for 2011.

William Sapp: Public art isn't 'either-or' deal
The road to public art is paved with good intentions. In recent days, Banner-Herald Editorial Page Editor Jim Thompson, local artist Bob Clements and Athens Area Arts Council President Laura Nehf have offered perspectives on public art (Thompson column, "Authenticity demands organic 'public art,' Jan. 24; Clements letter, "Public art isn't impossible goal," Tuesday; Nehf letter, "Support SPLOST for public art," Thursday).

Laura Nehf: Support SPLOST for public art
The Athens Area Arts Council applauds Bob Clements' Tuesday response to Banner-Herald Editorial Page Editor Jim Thompson's Sunday column on how public art is installed (Letters, "Public art isn't impossible goal"; Column, "Authenticity demands organic 'public art' "). We also would note that the process we have used to create and install art in this city has worked extremely well over the past few years.

Robert D. Clements: Public art isn't impossible goal
Banner-Herald Editorial Page Editor Jim Thompson's Sunday column, "Authenticity demands organic 'public art'," advocates a strange approach to public art, i.e., allowing free art that appears in public spaces to remain so long as it does not present a health hazard.

Thompson: Authenticity demands organic 'public art'
On the desk in my office, within a couple of feet of the keyboard where this deathless prose is assembled each week, sits one of my prized possessions: an angel, cut out of plywood and painted in tones of aqua, purple, red, black and white by the renowned Georgia "outsider artist," the Rev. Howard Finster.

New bike racks practical, thoughtful public art
"BIKE," it spells out, in letters as tall as a 5-year-old. It's an instruction, maybe. A suggestion?




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