Philadelphia, PA – April 13, 2015— Monument Lab: Creative Speculations for Philadelphia is pleased to announce partnerships with the City of Philadelphia, as well as with three of Philadelphia’s major arts and culture organizations: Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, the Philadelphia Center for Architecture, and RAIR (Recycled Artist in Residency). Monument Lab is a large public art and urban research project, supported by The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage, that will be on exhibit from May 15- June 7, 2015 at Philadelphia’s City Hall

“We are pleased to be partnering with the Monument Lab team and to host this project at the city’s geographic and symbolic center,” says Helen Haynes, Chief Cultural Officer of the City Philadelphia. “The project will engage visitors in multiple ways and advances our goal to enliven the City Hall Courtyard with temporary public art projects.”

Led by co-curators Ken Lum, Paul Farber, and A. Will Brown and based at the Penn Institute for Urban Research, the project seeks to encourage dialogue about 21st century Philadelphia by way of exploring its diverse historical identity. The centerpiece of the project will be a temporary prototype monument designed by the late, award-winning artist and University of Pennsylvania professor Terry Adkins, to be installed in City Hall’s central courtyard.

Adkins’ monument addresses Philadelphia’s history of educational innovation and loss, featuring a minimalist representation of a classroom that people can sit on and gather around. A public engagement “lab” will also be located at City Hall and serve as the project headquarters, where participating artists and curators will brainstorm ideas with the city’s citizens for the kinds of monuments that are appropriate for 21st century Philadelphia.

RAIR (Recycled Artist in Residency), is an artist studio and workshop focused on sustainability, art, and design located within Revolution Recovery, a recycling center in Northeast Philadelphia. RAIR, along with several of Adkins’ former students and colleagues, will help construct the monument with wood salvaged from area demolition sites, reflecting the conceptual spirit of Adkins’ original design. Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts will be involved with hosting public events and speakers associated with the project in conjunction with their Art in Process series, including monumental “creative speculations” for Philadelphia’s four public squares by artists Zoe Strauss (Logan Square), Kara Crombie (Franklin Square), Alexander Rosenberg (Rittenhouse Square), and WE THE WEEDS (Washington Square).

“We are thrilled to team up with the City of Philadelphia and with institutions deeply committed to this city’s cultural visions and civic needs,” says co-curator Ken Lum of Monument Lab. “As key partners in Monument Lab, these organizations will add their voices to what we hope will be a rich and dynamic conversation about the City of Philadelphia, its history, and its identity going forward.”

The Center for Architecture will host a special Monument Lab preview panel and party that is free and open to the public on Friday, May 8 from 5:30-7:00pm at their Arch Street location near City Hall. The full schedule for Monument Lab, including free daily public and educational programs will be announced in the coming weeks.

Monument Lab: Creative Speculations for Philadelphia is supported through a Discovery grant by The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage. To learn more about Monument Lab, visit www.monumentlab.com. To register for the Preview Panel and party, visit www.philadelphiacfa.org/events/monument-lab-preview-party-talk.

About Penn IUR

The Penn Institute for Urban Research (Penn IUR) is dedicated to advancing cross-disciplinary urban-focused research, instruction, and civic engagement on issues relevant to cities around the world. As the global population becomes increasingly urban, understanding cities is vital to informed decision-making and public policy at the local, national, and international levels. Penn IUR focuses on research that informs the sustainable and inclusive twenty-first-century city. By providing a forum for collaborative scholarship and instruction at Penn and beyond, Penn IUR stimulates research and engages with urban practitioners and policymakers to inform urban policy.

About The Pew Center for Arts and Heritage

The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage is a multidisciplinary grantmaker and hub for knowledge sharing, funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts, and dedicated to fostering a vibrant cultural community in Greater Philadelphia. The Center fulfills this mission by investing in ambitious, imaginative arts and heritage projects that showcase the region’s cultural vitality and enhance public life, and by engaging in an exchange of ideas concerning artistic and interpretive practice with a broad network of cultural practitioners and leaders. The Center awards project grants in Performance and Exhibitions & Public Interpretation, no-strings attached Pew Fellowship grants to individual artists working in all disciplines, and multi-year Advancement grants to high-performing institutions undertaking bold, innovative organizational initiatives.