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Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed & City of Atlanta Office of Cultural Affairs to Dedicate the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Mural During King Week

Post Date:01/12/2010
“Dreams Visions and Change,” commissioned by the City of Atlanta documents the heroic life of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Date: Sunday, January 17, 2010
Time: 2:00
Mural Location: Martin Luther King, Jr. Natatorium (back wall)
Reception Location: Peace Plaza facing the MLK National Historic Visitor’s Site, 450 Auburn
Avenue, Atlanta, GA 30312
Parking: John Wesley Dobbs Avenue between Boulevard and Jackson Street


Mayor Kasim Reed, Camille Russel Love, director of the City of Atlanta Office of Cultural Affairs, Isaac Farris, Chief Executive Officer of The King Center, June Dobbs Butts, youngest daughter of John Wesley Dobbs and other guest speakers will host the dedication of the Martin Luther King Memorial Mural on Sunday, January 17, 2010 at 2pm. The dedication marks the King Holiday celebration and the public ceremony. The City of Atlanta Office of Cultural Affairs, Artist Louis Delsarte, and the King family will dedicate a 125-foot mural installed along the rear wall of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Natatorium during the weeklong celebration of the King Holiday.


“The dedication of the Martin Luther King Memorial Mural marks the beginning of a mural program that the City of Atlanta Office of Cultural Affairs intends to bring to fruition in 2010. We couldn’t have selected

a more exemplary artist and subject to launch a city-wide program. We congratulate Louis for his outstanding work and the Department of Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs for funding this and other public art projects around the city,” said Camille Russell Love, director of the City of Atlanta Office of Cultural Affairs.


Atlanta’s Public Art Program is administered by the Office of Cultural Affairs, Department of Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs and is supported by one and one half percent of capital project funding set aside for the inclusion of public art in municipal projects. Delsarte’s mural is one of six commissions administrated by the Public Art Program for the Department of Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs 2005 Greenspace and Recreation Opportunity Bond program.



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About Artist Louis Delsarte

A native of Brooklyn New York, Delsarte has been creating murals since 1967. He earned a BFA from Pratt Institute in 1967 and an MFA from the University of Tucson in 1977. He has completed artist residencies at several institutions including Howard University, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Robert Blackburn Print Making Workshop in New York City, Experimental Printmaking Institute at Lafayette College in Easton, PA, Brandywine Printmaking Workshop in Philadelphia, PA and the Faculty Resource Network at New York University.

His work can be found in many public and private collections including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Cocoran Gallery of Art, Fort Lauderdale Museum, Kansas City Art Museum, the Camille Hanks Cosby Museum at Spelman College in Atlanta, GA, the Paul Jones Collection at University of Delaware, the Hammond House Museum in Atlanta, and The National Gallery of Art in Bermuda.

Since childhood, Louis Delsarte has been captivated by the life and work of Martin Luther King, Jr. Delsarte said of his commission to create the mural, “This is the most incredible honor that I have been given since the beginning of my career. I want this mural, entitled ‘Dreams, Visions and Change’ to reflect the magnitude of King’s sacrifices and his work as a Civil Rights Leader.”


About the Office of Cultural Affairs (OCA)

The OCA, a division of the Department of Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs, was established in 1974 to encourage and support Atlanta's cultural resources. The initial mission was to solidify the role that arts and other cultural resources play in defining and enhancing the social fabric and quality of life of Atlanta citizens and visitors. Today the OCA is working to enhance Atlanta's reputation as a cultural destination. The OCA supports programs that educate and expose the public to a rich and diverse range of cultural expressions through a variety of initiatives.


About The Opportunity Bond Municipal Art Projects

In 2005, Mayor Shirley Franklin challenged the Department of Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs (DPRCA) to invigorate parks and recreation facilities through the 2005 Greenspace and Recreation Opportunity Bond. The department took up the challenge and initiated an aggressive plan to install art in Atlanta’s parks. The Public Art Program team, led by Eddie Granderson, developed temporary art projects in 11 parks, managed the selection process, contracted artists to develop five gateways in neighborhood parks and commissioned a major mural for the Martin Luther King, Jr. Historic District. The “Community Gateway Project” represents the installation of public artworks in five distinct communities. New public art was installed in Adair I, Cleopas R. Johnson, Isabel Gates Webster, South Bend and Southside Parks. These public art installations serve as gateways to the parks and neighborhoods and are now a part of Atlanta’s landscape.




For more information about this and services of the City of Atlanta visit our website at www.atlantaga.gov or watch City Channel 26
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