Encouraging the community to enjoy and appreciate the art around them.

WHO WE ARE

Board of Directors

Jeff Stodghill, AIA
Principal, PMA Planners and Architects
Chair

Sandy Bridgman
Community Volunteer
Vice Chair

Beth W. Moore, CPA
Community Volunteer
Treasurer

Robert L. Freeman, Jr.
President, Tower Park Corporation
Founding Chair emeritus

John C. Allen III
Community Volunteer

Eric Bailey
Landscapes by Eric Bailey

Mike Doucette
Vice President Support Services, Riverside Health System

Anne Noland Edwards
Arts Advocate and Patron

The Honorable John R. Eley III
Councilman, City of Newport News
Ex Officio

Irving B. “Chip” Goldstein, Esq.
Goldstein, Edgar, Reagan, Roberts & Saville

William “Bill” Grace
Community Volunteer

Jo Louise Harding
Community Volunteer

Professor Gregory Henry
Sculptor, Artist, Associate Professor, Christopher Newport University

Asa Jackson
Artist and Curator, Contemporary Arts Network

Holly Koons
Executive Director, Mary M. Torggler Fine Arts Center

Diana LoVecchio
Community Volunteer

Akshar Patel
Architectural Designer, PMA Architecture

Harold L. Roach, Jr.
Director, Code Compliance, City of Newport News

Katie SheehanSmith
Supervisor of Fine and Performing Arts, Newport News Public Schools

Karen Turner Ward, Ph.D.
Professor, Hampton University

Tom Wessells
Artist

Gina Fitzhugh Wilson
CRS, Broker/Owner, Fitzhugh-Wilson Real Estate

Staff

Becca Sidman
Executive Director

Suzanne Wiltgen
Interim Outreach and Development Coordinator
How We Work

The process of bringing a sculpture to life is a harmonious convergence of various elements—from the inception of an idea to the final installation. This intricate dance involves identifying opportunites, engaging an artist, securing funding, and ensuring a seamless integration of art into the cityscape.

High-visibility locations take precedence, ensuring that art becomes an integral part of daily life. However, some pieces, like the evocative Memory of Green, find solace in more intimate settings, nestled among trees outside an office complex.

The delicate art of pairing a site with a specific artwork involves a meticulous understanding of both. The bold lines of Elements and Spring Breeze can be appreciated with fleeting glances from passersby, strategically placed for optimal visibility. Izar’s soaring verticals find a fitting home at the airport’s entrance, while the industrial allure of Reinvented complements an office park. Spirit of Life‘s serene presence graces hospital grounds, and Build a Dream symbolizes community aspirations in a revitalization project.

The pivotal role of funding also emerges as a crucial step in bringing these artistic visions to fruition. Whether through community support or developer contributions, each sculpture finds its financial backing, creating a symbiotic relationship between art and its surroundings.

The grand finale of this artistic odyssey is the installation, a collaborative effort involving architects, engineers, and construction crews. Rigorous planning ensures the secure placement of sculptures, with crane and rigging specialists delicately lifting and positioning thousands of pounds of art. Collaboration with lighting designers adds a nocturnal dimension, illuminating the pieces in a carefully orchestrated dance of light and shadow. Tailored landscape designs and in some cases custom benches complete the tableau, inviting residents to pause and savor the artistic tapestry woven into the city of Newport News.

Our work doesn’t end with installation.  Through outreach and education, we engage the community with the collection so that it serves as part of Newport News’ ongoing cultural life.  We strive to stimulate deeper connections with the collection by encouraging people to notice, study, and find meaning in and inspiration from the art that is all around them.  This is achieved through educational and interpretive materials we develop and distribute as well as in-person engagement.

As with anything in the public realm, public art requires care and maintenance.  We strive to keep the sculptures, landscaping, and lighting in good condition so that they can continue to be a source of pride and enjoyment now and for years to come.

Who We Are

Board of Directors

Jeff Stodghill, AIA
Principal, PMA Planners and Architects
Chair

Sandy Bridgman
CEO, Waters & Bridgman Marketing Solutions
Vice Chair

Beth W. Moore, CPA
Managing Member, Beth W. Moore, CPA, PLLC
Treasurer

Martha Hightower
Community Volunteer
Secretary

Robert L. Freeman, Jr.
President, Tower Park Corporation
Founding Chair emeritus

John C. Allen III
Community Volunteer

Eric Bailey
Landscapes by Eric Bailey

Herbert H. Bateman, Jr.
Executive Vice President, TowneBank

Caitlin Blomstrom
Artist

Anne Noland Edwards
Community Volunteer

The Honorable John R. Eley III
Councilman, City of Newport News
Ex Officio

Irving B. “Chip” Goldstein, Esq.
Goldstein, Edgar, Reagan, Roberts & Saville

William “Bill” Grace
Community Volunteer

Jo Louise Harding
Community Volunteer

Susan Harris
Community Volunteer

Professor Gregory Henry
Sculptor, Artist, Associate Professor, Christopher Newport University

Asa Jackson
Artist and Curator, Contemporary Arts Network

Holly Koons
Executive Director, Mary M. Torggler Fine Arts Center

Diana LoVecchio
Community Volunteer

Akshar Patel
Architectural Designer, PMA Architecture

Karen Turner Ward, Ph.D.
Professor, Hampton University

Tom Wessells
Artist

Gina Fitzhugh Wilson
CRS, Broker/Owner, Fitzhugh-Wilson Real Estate

Staff

Elizabeth Carriger
Interim Executive Director

The Case For Public Art

The Case For Public Art

A city isn’t livable just because it has good jobs and housing, a nice mix of entertainment and recreation. It’s also important to feed the spirit; the arts do that.

When news shows want to let viewers know they’re talking about Wall Street, they lead with a spot of the bronze bull that’s poised nearby, ready to charge into prosperity.

Charging Bull by Arturo Di Modica, photo by David Prior

Charging Bull by Arturo Di Modica, photo by David Prior

Generations have made pilgrimages to see the Vatican’s Pietá, and modern travelers document their visits to the City of Brotherly Love by snapping photographs in front of Philadelphia’s pop-art tribute to love.

 

Love by Robert Indiana

Love by Robert Indiana

Public sculpture memorializes what we think is important; it lifts our spirits, it centers our civic life, it makes our world more beautiful.

Public art does many things for a city:

  • It inspires pride.
  • It marks special places and adds a grace note to ordinary places.
  • It offers residents and visitors a source of enjoyment that’s always open, always accessible.
  • It defines a sense of place and identity. It creates landmarks, and even icons that come to stand for a city. An arch’s sweep says St. Louis, the Trevi Fountain is instantly identifiable as Rome, and with just a glimpse of a stone obelisk, you know the setting is Washington, D.C.
Great Art in Great Cities

Great Art in Great Cities

We expect to find great art in great cities. From ancient Athens where the Parthenon’s designers paid tribute to the goddess Athena, to the ever-changing outdoor exhibition in modern New York, one of the things that breathes life into beautiful cities is the art on display in streets, squares and parks.

Fortunate people don’t have to travel far to enjoy quality art. Their cities have made a decision to incorporate sculpture into public places for the enjoyment of residents and visitors. Here are some of them:

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The design of the Vietnam Memorial acknowledges our need to experience, at close hand, our connection to this part of our history. UP photo/Kevin Dietsch

We could scarcely imagine Washington, D.C. without its monumental sculptures. Lincoln in his chair has been the backdrop for some of the nation’s important moments, and the hush of the Jefferson Memorial connects visitors to the spirit of this man and the principles that framed this nation.

With the simple reverence and profoundly personal focus of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, Maya Lin changed the way the public interacts with memorial sculpture. In the slogging figures of the Korean War Veterans Memorial, and the blend of words and statues in the memorials to Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Martin Luther King, Jr., the nation has found new ways to reflect its evolving history and honor those who shaped it.

Learn more about Washington’s many memorials by clicking here.

New York City is home to a lot of people — and a lot of art that’s out in public for their enjoyment and that of the millions more who visit the city each year. See some of it here.

Albuquerque’s rich offering includes mosaics and murals as well as sculpture; see more here.

Seattle has made public art a priority. Even fire stations and manhole covers show off an artistic touch. Learn more by clicking here.


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Cloud Gate by Anish Kapoor, photo by Ermanec

You don’t have to enter a gallery to see the work of great artists in Chicago. Sculptures by Miro, Calder and Chagall are on display outdoors, and the ever-changing show in Millennium Park introduces tomorrow’s Picassos to today’s pedestrians. For more information on the City of Chicago’s art click here.

Portland, Oregon boasts of a rich offering of art, outdoors and in civic buildings; see more here.

Airports are full of people on the move, a ready audience for public art. The new Denver airport has a remarkable collection, some of it controversial. See examples here.

When Sacramento planned a new terminal at its airport, it set aside $6 million for a dozen pieces of permanent art.  The busy Philadelphia airport showcases both permanent and rotating art.

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Brick cladding for bridge supports by Andrew Leicester

Airports aren’t the only places with lots of travelers – and art for them to enjoy. When Charlotte, North Carolina, built a new light-rail system, it incorporated art into every station, much of it in functional forms such as benches , drinking fountains, lights, floors, elevator enclosures and columns. See more here about how Charlotte surrounds transit riders with art.

Percentage for the Arts

Percentage for the Arts

Great art has happened in many places because leaders made it happen. One of the most effective ways cities have found to do that is with “percent for the arts” programs. They decide, and pass legislation to ensure, that a portion of the money for every major publicly funded construction or renovation project is set aside for the acquisition and maintenance of permanent public art. Typically, the percentage is between .5% and 2%, with a maximum of, say, $600,000.

The city’s buildings benefit from the addition of art, inside and out, and the public benefits from having some of their tax dollars invested go to something they can enjoy, something that enhances the quality of life in their community.

Percent for the arts programs usually only apply to projects funded with public dollars, but they can create an environment that encourages private developers to make art a priority, too.

About half the states and many localities have adopted “percent for the arts” programs. Here are some of them:

Raleigh, North Carolina
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Chicago, Illinois
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Denver, Colorado
Martin County, Florida
New Haven, Connecticut
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Richmond, Virginia
Seattle, Washington
Spokane, Washington

At this time the City of Newport News has not adopted a “percent for the arts” program. Please be an arts advocate and request to City Council Members to adopt this program to further make art the fabric of our great city.

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Other Public Art

Other Public Art

The works of art commissioned and installed by the Newport News Public Art Foundation join a diverse body of public art that Newport News residents have enjoyed for many years. Here are some of the favorites among the pieces owned by museums, Christopher Newport University, the City of Newport News and private organizations. Take a driving tour of these favorites and the Foundation’s collection by downloading a brochure developed by the Newport News Tourism Development Department and Newport News Public Art Foundation.

  • Healing Christ  Timothy Duffield Polyester and Fiberglass Site: Bon Secours Mary Immaculate Hospital, 2 Bernardine Drive
    Healing Christ Timothy Duffield Polyester and Fiberglass Site: Bon Secours Mary Immaculate Hospital, 2 Bernardine Drive
  • The Hope  Sarah Aldouby Bronze Site: Virginia War Museum, 9285 Warwick Boulevard
    The Hope Sarah Aldouby Bronze Site: Virginia War Museum, 9285 Warwick Boulevard
  • Vietnam Veterans Memorial  Bob Holland Site: Virginia War Museum, 9285 Warwick Boulevard
    Vietnam Veterans Memorial Bob Holland Site: Virginia War Museum, 9285 Warwick Boulevard
  • Victory Arch  Ralph A. Preas Site: Intersection of West Avenue and 21st Street
    Victory Arch Ralph A. Preas Site: Intersection of West Avenue and 21st Street
  • Memorial to Fallen Police Officers and Firefighters  Bronze and stone Figures by Neil Brodin Site: City Hall, 2400 Washington Avenue
    Memorial to Fallen Police Officers and Firefighters Bronze and stone Figures by Neil Brodin Site: City Hall, 2400 Washington Avenue
  • The Winner  Glenna Goodacre Bronze Site: Virginia Living Museum, 524 J. Clyde Morris Boulevard
    The Winner Glenna Goodacre Bronze Site: Virginia Living Museum, 524 J. Clyde Morris Boulevard
  • Captain Christopher Newport  Bronze Jon Hair Site: Intersection of Warwick Boulevard and J. Clyde Morris Boulevard
    Captain Christopher Newport Bronze Jon Hair Site: Intersection of Warwick Boulevard and J. Clyde Morris Boulevard
  • Collis P. Huntington  Anna Hyatt Huntington Bronze Site: 26th Street and West Avenue
    Collis P. Huntington Anna Hyatt Huntington Bronze Site: 26th Street and West Avenue
  • Leifr Eiriksson, Son of Iceland  Bronze Alexander Stirling Calder Site: Entrance to The Mariners' Museum Park, 100 Museum Drive
    Leifr Eiriksson, Son of Iceland Bronze Alexander Stirling Calder Site: Entrance to The Mariners' Museum Park, 100 Museum Drive
  • Conquering the Wild  Stone Anna Hyatt Huntington Site: Intersection of Museum Drive and Museum Parkway
    Conquering the Wild Stone Anna Hyatt Huntington Site: Intersection of Museum Drive and Museum Parkway
  • Lion's Bridge  Stone Anna Hyatt Huntington Site: Intersection of Museum Drive and Museum Parkway
    Lion's Bridge Stone Anna Hyatt Huntington Site: Intersection of Museum Drive and Museum Parkway
  • Bronze Doors: Bronze Herbert C. Adams Site: Business entrance to The Mariners' Museum, 100 Museum Drive
    Bronze Doors: Bronze Herbert C. Adams Site: Business entrance to The Mariners' Museum, 100 Museum Drive

Newport News Television Video: Art Happens in Newport News


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