Putting The Public Back In Public Art

Chicago artists have long complained that the city’s public art program is unnecessarily secretive and unresponsive to public concerns. A corporate lawyer named Scott Hodes has been fighting to get the program’s inner workings open to scrutiny for years, and now, he appears to have won. Among other accusations of impropriety, Hodes “alleged that $20,600 in program funds were improperly channeled to artists and apprentices through a charity directed by [Chicago’s First Lady Maggie] Daley.” The city, which has always maintained that the program operates completely above board, has now agreed to meet with Hodes and, presumably, to satisfy his demands for a more transparent process.