Why Public Art?
Public art is a visual representation of the unique qualities of a town; it colors the experiences and memories made within it. Visitors come to Lafayette and they remember taking pictures in front of this or that mural and, looking back on those pictures, they remember all the great food and music and people that they experienced here as well.
But public art isn’t just for tourists. In an increasingly expensive world it remains one of the last truly accessible ways to experience art. The building walls you drive by on your way to work become galleries. The open lot becomes an exhibition space. You, an ordinary citizen, are suddenly reminded that beauty can exist in even the most mundane places, and that perhaps the very idea of a mundane place is one that should be questioned.
Put simply, public art makes a place better to be in, and what better goal for a city could there be than that?
A perfect example of the value of public art, and the efficacy of this new Network, is one of our first major projects: a 5,000 square foot mural on the park side of the Children’s Museum of Acadiana (CMA), located on Congress Street in Downtown Lafayette.

The Project
However, this canvas is not only the wall of a beloved downtown organization but also a backdrop to one of its most trafficked cultural event spaces: Parc San Souci. Memories of watching a concert at Downtown Rising, buying a snack at one of Festival International’s many food tents, or enjoying a pub crawl through Gulf Brew, would all include this new mural in the background, its design and colors backdropping the culture of Lafayette as it happens in real time. Community pride and placemaking would clearly be another important part of this mural’s design.
The Process
In June of 2025, we sent out a Request for Qualifications (RFQ) to the artists of Louisiana, asking them to provide examples of their previous work as well as a description of what the Children’s Museum meant to them, whether through personal experience or through their connection to its theme of childlike wonder and community. At this stage, we were looking for four things: has the artist demonstrated the ability to tackle a project of this size; does the artist have an evocative and distinct style; do they understand and connect to the themes we were looking to represent, and finally, can this artist accurately grasp and capture the spirit of this community, whether as a member themselves or as an outside collaborator.
Our panel, made up of representatives from the four entities involved (CMA, DLU, AcA, and the city of Lafayette), scored each RFQ based on these criteria and met on August 8 to discuss the results. The stakeholder group had initially planned on picking the top five submissions to discuss, but scores were so close that the top nine were up for discussion.
The Finalists






Next Steps


