In a statement to Cambridge Day, the MBTA wrote, “We continue to evaluate every station element, including art, through the lens of safety, durability, and operational impact… Art should complement — not compromise — the function and longevity of our infrastructure so that we can always give riders what they deserve.”
But restoring its artwork is not exactly a budget priority for the transit agency, which expects to end its fiscal year in June with a $239 million budget deficit. That amount is forecast to more than double or even triple without new revenue sources.
Complicating matters is that the T no longer has a position or program solely dedicated to public art. Internal staff restructuring and cutbacks to federal funding for arts suggests that the agency that was once so proud of its pioneering art collection has moved on.
“I fear very much that, if we don’t solve this, the MBTA will take [Gift of the Wind] down, look at it, decide they can’t afford it, and put it on their ‘lost art’ shelf,” said Ryals.