You've seen it โ the sculpture in the hotel lobby that stops you mid-stride. The light installation in a corporate atrium that makes everyone look up. The LED art piece outside a new development that becomes the landmark people use for directions. That's public art, and someone had to make it happen. If you're reading this, that someone might be you.
We've been on both sides of the commission process โ as the artists creating the work and as the integrators making it technically bulletproof. This guide is everything we wish clients knew before they started. Whether you're a developer, architect, property manager, or city planner, consider this your roadmap.
What Is a Public Art Commission?
A public art commission is a contract between a client and an artist (or studio) to create a site-specific artwork for a particular space. The key word is site-specific โ this isn't buying a piece off a gallery wall and putting it in your lobby. A commissioned work is designed from scratch for your space, your context, your story. It belongs there, and only there.
Commissions can range from a single sculptural piece to a multi-room experiential installation with integrated technology. The scale varies enormously, but the principle is the same: you're investing in something that will define the identity of a place.
Who Commissions Art?
More people than you'd think. The most common clients we work with include:
- Real estate developers looking to differentiate luxury properties and mixed-use projects
- Architects who want art integrated into the building design from day one, not bolted on after
- Cities and municipalities with percent-for-art programs or public beautification budgets
- Corporations investing in headquarters, campuses, and branded environments
- Hotels and hospitality brands creating signature moments that guests remember and share
The common thread? They all understand that a great space needs more than good architecture and nice furniture. It needs a soul. And art is how you give a space a soul.
Budget: What Does Public Art Cost?
Let's talk numbers honestly, because this is where most first-time commissioners get tripped up.
For a smaller installation โ a wall-mounted LED piece, a modest sculptural element, a single-room light experience โ you're typically looking at $50,000 and up. That covers design, fabrication, materials, installation, and basic technology integration.
For mid-scale commissions โ a lobby centerpiece, an outdoor sculpture, a multi-element installation โ budgets generally fall in the $200,000โ$500,000 range. This is where you start getting into custom fabrication, sophisticated lighting systems, and work that genuinely transforms a space.
For landmark pieces โ the kind that define a building, a campus, or a public plaza โ budgets run $500,000 to $1 million and beyond. These are the projects that become destinations, that appear in press coverage and architecture publications, that people travel to see.
A useful rule of thumb in commercial development: allocate 1-2% of total construction budget for art. Many cities with percent-for-art ordinances actually require this. Even without a mandate, it's a smart investment โ art increases property value, attracts tenants, and generates media attention that straight architecture rarely achieves on its own.
The Process: Concept to Installation
Every commission follows a general arc, though the details vary by scale and complexity:
1. Concept & Discovery. This is where it starts โ understanding the space, the client's vision, the audience, and the constraints. We visit the site (or review plans if it's still under construction), study the light, the materials, the flow of people through the space. We listen more than we talk at this stage.
2. Proposal & Design. We develop a concept โ sometimes two or three options โ with renderings, material samples, and a clear articulation of what the piece will be and how it will feel. This is where budgets get refined and expectations align.
3. Design Development. Once a direction is approved, we go deep โ engineering drawings, structural calculations, material sourcing, technology specifications. For pieces with LED, projection, or interactive elements, this phase includes programming and control system design.
4. Fabrication. Building the work. Depending on the piece, this might involve metalworking, acrylic fabrication, LED integration, custom electronics, or all of the above. For our studio, fabrication is where the art stops being a rendering and becomes real โ and it's always the most exciting phase.
5. Installation. Bringing the finished work to site, installing it, integrating it with building systems, and commissioning all technical elements. For complex pieces, this can take days to weeks.
Timeline Expectations
Commissions take longer than most people expect. A realistic timeline:
- Small installations (single piece, simple materials): 3โ4 months from concept to installed
- Mid-scale projects (custom fabrication, technology integration): 6โ8 months
- Large-scale or landmark commissions: 9โ12+ months, sometimes longer for complex engineering or permitting
The most important advice we can give: start the art conversation early. If you're building a new space and want integrated art, loop in the artist during schematic design โ not after the drywall is up. The earlier we're involved, the more seamlessly the art integrates with the architecture, and the fewer compromises everyone has to make.
Materials and Mediums
Public art has evolved far beyond bronze and marble (though those still have their place). The palette we work with today includes:
- LED โ direct-view panels, edge-lit elements, custom pixel configurations for dynamic, programmable visual experiences
- Dichroic materials โ acrylic and glass that split light into prismatic color, creating works that transform continuously with changing light
- Projection โ mapped onto architectural surfaces, sculptures, or purpose-built screens for immersive visual environments
- Kinetic elements โ motorized components that move, spin, or respond to environmental conditions like wind or sound
- Interactive technology โ sensors, cameras, and responsive systems that let the audience influence or activate the artwork
The medium should serve the concept, never the other way around. We've built pieces that use nothing but sunlight and geometry, and pieces that run on thousands of individually addressable LEDs. Both can be equally powerful.
Site-Specific Considerations
Every site has its own personality, and a good commission respects that. Key factors we evaluate:
Indoor vs. outdoor. Outdoor work needs to withstand weather, UV exposure, temperature swings, and sometimes vandalism. Materials, coatings, and enclosures all change. Indoor work has more freedom but different constraints โ HVAC, fire code, ceiling structure, ambient lighting.
Scale. A piece that looks stunning in a rendering can feel underwhelming in a triple-height atrium if the scale isn't right. We always design to the volume of the space, not just the wall it sits on.
Maintenance. Every installation needs a maintenance plan. LEDs need eventual replacement. Kinetic elements need servicing. Even static sculptures need cleaning and inspection. We design with maintenance access in mind from day one, because a beautiful piece that's impossible to service is a future headache.
Writing an RFP for Public Art
If you're issuing a formal Request for Proposal, here's what helps artists give you their best response:
- Site photos, floor plans, and architectural drawings
- Clear budget range (even a broad one helps enormously)
- The intended audience and how they'll interact with the space
- Any technical constraints โ power availability, structural loads, outdoor exposure
- Your timeline and key milestones
- What "success" looks like to you โ the feeling, not just the specs
The best RFPs leave room for creative interpretation. Tell us what you want to feel, not exactly what you want to see. That's where the magic happens.
Working with the Artist
A commission is a collaboration, not a transaction. The best outcomes happen when the client brings the vision and the constraints, and the artist brings the creative problem-solving and the craft. Expect regular check-ins, design reviews, and honest conversations about what's working and what isn't.
Trust the process โ and trust the artist. You hired them for their vision. Give them room to surprise you. Some of the most powerful moments in our commissions have come from ideas that emerged during the process, not from the original brief.
Our Approach
"We don't just install art. We create experiences that give spaces their identity."
At 42 Audio Visual, we bring something unusual to the commission process: we're both the artists and the technologists. We design the concept, fabricate the work, engineer the technology, and handle the integration. That means one team, one vision, no translation loss between the artist's intent and the technical execution.
We've built dichroic light sculptures that transform homes into living prisms. We've created immersive LED environments that make entire rooms disappear into content. Every project starts with the same question: how should this space make people feel?
If you're considering a commission โ whether it's a hotel lobby, a corporate campus, a public plaza, or a private residence โ we'd love to hear about it. The best projects start with a conversation, and we're always happy to talk through what's possible.