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Arts on the Line was the first program of its kind in the United States and became the model for similar drives for art across the country. [1] The first twenty artworks were completed in 1985 with a total cost of US$695,000, or one half of one percent of the total construction cost of the Red Line Northwest Extension, of which they were a part.
In an incident which became known as "The Thin Red Line", a two-deep line of around 500 red-coated Scottish infantry from the Highland Brigade – with support from around 1,000 Royal Marines and Turkish infantry along with six guns of field artillery – stood firm against a force of around 2,500 Russian cavalrymen. The incident was a small ...
The End of the Red Line is an abstract light sculpture by Alejandro and Moira Sina.. It is located at Alewife (MBTA station), in Cambridge, Massachusetts.Approximately 800 red neon tubes are suspended from a 320-foot (98 m) long section of the station ceiling, directly above the outbound train tracks.
Arts on the Line was finishing its work on the Northwest Extension of the Red Line when the non-profit group UrbanArts applied for, and won, a bid to site public artwork on Orange Line. Pamela Worden was the first director of the Cambridge Arts Council and helped to approach federal transportation authorities for Arts on the Line before ...
An idea first floated more than 50 years ago to extend the Chicago Transit Authority's Red Line to the Far South Side is closer to becoming a reality with nearly $2B in federal funding now secured.
The MBTA pioneered a "percentage for art" public art program called Arts on the Line during its Northwest Extension of the Red Line in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Arts on the Line was the first program of its kind in the United States and became the model for similar programs for art across the country.
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Yet much of the debate over Russia’s “red lines” has relied on a static framing of Russian military strategy that, paradoxically, both exaggerates and downplays Moscow’s willingness to ...