City, Identity and Art: An Investigation on the Anafartalar Bazaar and the Public Art

<p class="Moment-Normal"><span lang="TR">Anafartalar Bazaar is one of the buildings which will be demolished within the scope of the Ulus Historical City Project in Ankara as a part of the widespread urban transformation projects in recent years. This article examines...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Özge Güven Akdoğan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hacettepe University 2018-12-01
Series:Momentdergi
Subjects:
ken
Online Access:http://www.momentjournal.org/index.php/momentdergi/article/view/326
id doaj-45bf9876ca6744179bd618d353ef48bb
record_format Article
spelling doaj-45bf9876ca6744179bd618d353ef48bb2021-01-03T10:23:23ZengHacettepe UniversityMomentdergi2148-970X2018-12-0152205City, Identity and Art: An Investigation on the Anafartalar Bazaar and the Public ArtÖzge Güven Akdoğan0Gazi Üniversitesi İletişim Fakültesi Radyo Televizyon ve Sinema Bölümü<p class="Moment-Normal"><span lang="TR">Anafartalar Bazaar is one of the buildings which will be demolished within the scope of the Ulus Historical City Project in Ankara as a part of the widespread urban transformation projects in recent years. This article examines primarily the historical transformation of the publicness of the Ulus region and the Anafartalar Bazaar. The bazaar is the product of a period in Ankara when commercial publicness is desired to take the place of political publicness. It is the home for many works of public art belonging to the leading artists of the time. In this sense, the bazaar was designed under the influence of the public art movement that emerged in the 1960s, aiming interaction with all classes of society. The bazaar hosts ceramic art works of the leading Turkish artists. The demolishment of the Anafartalar Bazaar, which is designed as a trade area for especially middle-income and low-income individuals in this framework, will cause one of the rare areas of public art to be abolished. In this sense, this study suggests the urban transformation projects to be planned with a inclusive approach taking into account the urban memory and the public art.</span></p>http://www.momentjournal.org/index.php/momentdergi/article/view/326anafartalar çarşısıken, kamusal sanatkentsel dönüşüm
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Özge Güven Akdoğan
spellingShingle Özge Güven Akdoğan
City, Identity and Art: An Investigation on the Anafartalar Bazaar and the Public Art
Momentdergi
anafartalar çarşısı
ken
, kamusal sanat
kentsel dönüşüm
author_facet Özge Güven Akdoğan
author_sort Özge Güven Akdoğan
title City, Identity and Art: An Investigation on the Anafartalar Bazaar and the Public Art
title_short City, Identity and Art: An Investigation on the Anafartalar Bazaar and the Public Art
title_full City, Identity and Art: An Investigation on the Anafartalar Bazaar and the Public Art
title_fullStr City, Identity and Art: An Investigation on the Anafartalar Bazaar and the Public Art
title_full_unstemmed City, Identity and Art: An Investigation on the Anafartalar Bazaar and the Public Art
title_sort city, identity and art: an investigation on the anafartalar bazaar and the public art
publisher Hacettepe University
series Momentdergi
issn 2148-970X
publishDate 2018-12-01
description <p class="Moment-Normal"><span lang="TR">Anafartalar Bazaar is one of the buildings which will be demolished within the scope of the Ulus Historical City Project in Ankara as a part of the widespread urban transformation projects in recent years. This article examines primarily the historical transformation of the publicness of the Ulus region and the Anafartalar Bazaar. The bazaar is the product of a period in Ankara when commercial publicness is desired to take the place of political publicness. It is the home for many works of public art belonging to the leading artists of the time. In this sense, the bazaar was designed under the influence of the public art movement that emerged in the 1960s, aiming interaction with all classes of society. The bazaar hosts ceramic art works of the leading Turkish artists. The demolishment of the Anafartalar Bazaar, which is designed as a trade area for especially middle-income and low-income individuals in this framework, will cause one of the rare areas of public art to be abolished. In this sense, this study suggests the urban transformation projects to be planned with a inclusive approach taking into account the urban memory and the public art.</span></p>
topic anafartalar çarşısı
ken
, kamusal sanat
kentsel dönüşüm
url http://www.momentjournal.org/index.php/momentdergi/article/view/326
work_keys_str_mv AT ozgeguvenakdogan cityidentityandartaninvestigationontheanafartalarbazaarandthepublicart
_version_ 1724350940270559232