David Rauch lives near the glittery stone garden in front of an apartment complex in Queen Mary Park. “The world should know about this,” thought Rauch, an Edmonton newcomer who moved from DeKalb, Ill., in December 2013. “I shouldn’t be the only one.”
A strategic analyst in the City of Edmonton’s urban planning and environment branch, Rauch thought the same thing during conversations with colleagues in which he would learn about interesting art scattered throughout his new city. “People would say, ‘Oh, have you seen the house with a castle and turret on it, the one with knights and cannons?'”
He hadn’t.
Some people might simply sit and wonder what other art is out there. But with an interest in technology and citizen engagement, Rauch decided to go a few steps further and launch OpenArtYEG, a project to crowd-source and map public art in the Edmonton region, in September 2014.
It’s an initiative of Open Edmonton, a group Rauch co-founded that’s made up of civic-minded volunteers interested in using technology to improve the public good. The art-mapping project is based on the idea that residents know their neighbourhood gems best, just like Rauch knew about that mushroom garden. Why not spread that local knowledge?
After tapping into the wisdom of the crowd to locate the strange and beautiful, the pieces will be compiled on a map, which should be ready in early 2015. The map is expected to contain more than 700 pieces of art, a compilation of about 350 public submissions alongside existing lists of art from the Edmonton Arts Council, The Works, the University of Alberta, Strathcona County and the provincial government.
For Rauch, the project aligns with his core philosophy. “I won’t reinvent the wheel,” he says. “I take something that works really well elsewhere and adapt it to here. I love projects that are imminently actionable.”
That credo has served him well. After living in Edmonton for less than six months, Rauch launched OpenPianoYEG, following a project he had seen in other cities. He organized volunteers to paint and place seven pop-up pianos in public spaces throughout the city.