2023 Exhibit Columbus to Open August 25 and 26

Public by Design, Exhibit Columbus fourth exhibition, will celebrate with a community-led dance party at the heart of downtown Columbus.

Columbus, IndianaPublic by Design the fourth Exhibit Columbus exhibition, will open the weekend of Friday, August 25 and Saturday, August 26 in downtown Columbus. Featuring thirteen outdoor, site-responsive installations that derive inspiration and context from Columbus’s architectural heritage, while responding to the needs of the citizens and highlighting the visionary community's role in creating a vibrant, sustainable, and equitable city.

This two-day opening weekend will enliven the city’s downtown, and will be the only opportunity during the exhibition’s three-month run to see the designs alongside the curators, architects, landscape architects, artists, and designers who created the installations, as well as Columbus residents and visitors from around the world.

This is the fourth cycle of Exhibit Columbus, which was first launched in 2016 as a program of the nonprofit organization Landmark Columbus Foundation, and an internationally recognized exploration of community, architecture, art, and design.

This year’s theme, Public by Design, explores how collaborations between communities and designers can revitalize and reimagine historic downtowns as equitable, beautiful, healthy, and joyful places. There is a belief that this collaborative effort and the process of co-creation will resonate far beyond the city limits of Columbus, and that the installations can serve as prototypes for permanent change in the urban core of this city as well as for other communities to consider.

This exhibition features designs by the four J. Irwin and Xenia S. Miller Prizerecipients, seven University Design Research Fellows, High School Design Team, and Communication Designer. Each has an extraordinary background and represents a tremendous depth of experience in many areas, and has worked with diverse sets of communities to bring meaningful work to life.

Throughout the entirety of the 2022–2023 program, many areas of Columbus have been at the center of every conversation and event–from the Kickoff to the Symposium to the Design Presentations. The designers were responsive to the needs and desires of the local community, while still connecting to a global audience with their installations. Public by Design represents an opportunity for each designer and community member to play a new and transformative role in shaping a public life that is more connected to public places and public institutions.

“We are building on the legacy of Columbus, Indiana with this fourth cycle of Exhibit Columbus, Public by Design, by exploring how collaborations between communities and designers can revitalize and reimagine historic downtowns as equitable, beautiful, and joyful places. We also recognize that Columbus is more than one community—it is many vibrant communities—and Public by Design serves as a platform for all of the city’s citizens to connect around the values of inclusivity, care, and generosity. This cycle celebrates creative methods of collaboration that communities and designers can use to grow a sense of belonging and connection in public spaces,” said the six Curatorial Partners.

This year, for the first time since Exhibit Columbus began, the organization has appointed a group of Community Curators. Each Miller Prize site has an associated Community Curator who is responsible for being the liaison between the designer, the site, and the community.

“It has been so interesting to work with the Miller Prize recipients to create designs that activate the space around our town’s public institutions. We are celebrating the artists, this year’s theme, and the community’s own buildings. In this way, our role as Community Curators speaks to the overarching theme of Public by Design and how it prioritizes the engagement we are seeing from the citizens of Columbus and in turn, the community’s commitment to Exhibit Columbus,” explained the Community Curators.

“I am thrilled that people are starting to see that Exhibit Columbus extends way beyond the traditional art festival or biennial structure to deeply engage our community to create a more meaningful place where people feel they belong. We are interested in a society that grows through art and design, while also preserving and advancing the city’s iconic modern legacy. This year’s cycle is doing this more than ever, as our diverse communities have been a key part of the conversations and design plans from the start of this cycle of Exhibit Columbus. We have such a thoughtful local connection in each of this year’s installations because of this close and respectful collaboration. We hope that this community engagement and experimentation can act as a blueprint for connection and advancement for other communities across the globe,” said Landmark Columbus Foundation Executive Director Richard McCoy.

J. Irwin and Xenia S. Miller Prize Recipients

Awarded to renowned national and international design practices who share J. Irwin and Xenia S. Miller’s commitment to the transformative power of designing with public spaces, four J. Irwin and Xenia S. Miller Prize Recipientswere commissioned to activate the public spaces of popular downtown Columbus sites and create the most highly anticipated installations of the exhibition.


University Design Research Fellowship

Awarded to leading professors of architecture, landscape architecture, and design from North American universities, seven University Design Research Fellows were selected to respond to recommendations from the 2021 Downtown Activation Study developed by James Lima Planning and Development (JLP+D) that looked at ways to activate the historic core of downtown Columbus. JLP+D’s work is supported by the City of Columbus and a National Endowment for the Arts “Our Town Grant”.

  • Joseph Altshuler, School of Architecture at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, IL and Zack Morrison, Chicago, IL
    Carousel for Columbus

  • Esteban Garcia Bravo and Maria Clara Morales, Department of Computer Graphics Technology at Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN
    PRISMA

  • Jessica Colangelo and Charles Sharpless, University of Arkansas Fay Jones School of Architecture and Design, Fayetteville, AR
    Ground Rules

  • Deborah Garcia, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Department of Architecture, Cambridge, MA
    RECORDAR

  • Molly Hunker and Greg Corso, Syracuse University School of Architecture, Syracuse, NY
    Side Effects

  • Katie MacDonald and Kyle Schumann, University of Virginia School of Architecture, Charlottesville, VA
    Sylvan Scrapple

  • Halina Steiner, Tameka Baba, Forbes Lipschitz, Austin E. Knowlton School at The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, and Shelby Doyle, Iowa State University College of Design, Ames, IA
    PIPE UP!

High School Design Team
街 Machi

Communication Design
Signals, Chris Grimley
Public by Design

Curatorial Partners

  • Paola Aguirre, Urban Designer, BORDERLESS

  • Chris Merritt, Landscape Architect, Merritt Chase 

  • Lauren M. Pacheco, Civic and Cultural Artist, Steel Studio Foundation 

  • Bryony Roberts, Designer, Writer, Educator, Bryony Roberts Studio

  • Raymund Ryan, Curator at Large, The Heinz Architectural Center at Carnegie Museum of Art

  • Holly Warren, Assistant Director for the Arts, Economic and Sustainable Development Department, City of Bloomington

Community Curators 

  • Jason Hatton, Bartholomew County Public Library

  • Dave Hayward, City of Columbus

  • Mark Jones, Parks and Recreation Department

  • Dan Mustard, Mill Race Center

UDRF Site Representatives

  • Bartholomew County Public Library Staff

  • Chris Chandler, Ovation Technology Group

  • Ashleigh Fisher, Hotel Indigo

  • Erin Hawkins, Columbus Area Visitors Center

  • Shanda Sasse, The Commons

  • Jim Schacht, Cummins Inc.

  • Cindy Waddle, Hotel Indigo


Media Contact
Jamie Goldsborough
jamie@landmarkcolumbus.org

About Exhibit Columbus
Exhibit Columbus is a program of Landmark Columbus Foundation and an exploration of community, architecture, art, and design that activates the modern legacy of Columbus, Indiana. It creates a cycle of programming that uses this context to convene conversations around innovative ideas and commissions site-responsive installations in a free, public exhibition. exhibitcolumbus.org

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