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Edina city officials have developed a set of criteria to evaluate the diversity shown in city-owned artwork and decor in municipal buildings, parks and outdoor areas.

The criteria — what they call a rubric — evolved out of the city's 2018 task force report on race and equity and aims to provide a standardized way to judge how genders and ethnic groups are represented in art. The City Council signed off on it last month.

The task force report revealed that some community members felt the city's art and decor didn't represent all residents, said Heidi Lee, Edina's race and equity coordinator.

"To be able to represent who is actually living in Edina, who has had a hand in creating what Edina is … it's important to be able to do that," Lee said.

The criteria will be used in coming months to evaluate the decor in the mayor's conference room and atrium at City Hall. The conference room features portraits of past City Council members and mayors, but "needs to be a representation of the history of who [else] has been involved in creating what Edina is," Lee said.

Three city commissions were involved in designing the art criteria: the Human Rights and Relations Commission, Arts and Culture Commission and Heritage Preservation Commission (HPC).

They began meeting earlier this year to discuss what the city's art represents now and could represent, said Annie Schilling, HPC chairwoman. Commission members brainstormed ideas such as painting "Welcome" in several languages in the City Hall atrium and adding art to the mayor's conference room. She said there's been no conversation yet about using the rubric to eliminate artwork.

The rubric comes at a time when cities, counties and states are assessing what messages are sent by their statues, paintings and other images, and who they represent.

In August, St. Paul and Ramsey County leaders unveiled four new multicultural murals to cover 1930s-era murals at their joint City Hall-Courthouse that feature white men towering over Native Americans and laborers.

St. Louis Park recently finished creating an arts and culture road map, said Jacque Smith, the city's spokeswoman. One of its guiding principles is to use art and culture to create a more inclusive city, she said, which ties into St. Louis Park's larger equity goals.

The nonprofit Forecast Public Art also has done an equity audit of St. Louis Park's public art, Smith said, which offers recommendations for art processes and locations.

Edina will employ five criteria — including historical accuracy, cultures and gender identities represented, the welcome that a picture offers visitors — and score them from 1 to 4.

Lee said evaluating the art and decor of the city's many buildings will take time. Edina has its own art center, with a gallery and classes. The rubric provides a "baseline of what to consider," she said.

The city's population is slowly becoming more diverse, Lee said, though Edina was about 87% white when she started in her position 18 months ago.

"One expression of community is public art," Schilling said. "I think it's a smart approach to create a rubric so … it's not subjective."

Erin Adler • 612-673-1781