By Insider Staff - Oct 18, 2016 | 0 comments
![Tim Goodwin—Insider staffA bronze boy holding a turtle, created by Beverly Benson Seamans, was installed on South Main Street last week as the first piece of public art for the city.](https://www.theconcordinsider.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/DowntownArt1-CI-101816-1024x683.jpg)
Tim Goodwin—Insider staffA bronze boy holding a turtle, created by Beverly Benson Seamans, was installed on South Main Street last week as the first piece of public art for the city.
![Tim Goodwin / Insider staffA bronze boy holding a turtle is the first piece of public art installed under a new initiative. Created by Beverly Benson Seamans, the piece titled “A Moment in Time” sits on a granite squares near the corner of South Main and Pleasant streets. Top left: An up-close look at Concord’s new outdoor art. Above: City Manager Tom Aspell and members of General Services help move the 300-plus pound statue. There’s no job too small for our city manager. Bottom left: Seamans’s son, John, and grandson, Daniel, guide it onto the South Main Street sidewalk.](https://www.theconcordinsider.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/DowntownArt2-CI-101816-1024x683.jpg)
Tim Goodwin / Insider staffA bronze boy holding a turtle is the first piece of public art installed under a new initiative. Created by Beverly Benson Seamans, the piece titled “A Moment in Time” sits on a granite squares near the corner of South Main and Pleasant streets. Top left: An up-close look at Concord’s new outdoor art. Above: City Manager Tom Aspell and members of General Services help move the 300-plus pound statue. There’s no job too small for our city manager. Bottom left: Seamans’s son, John, and grandson, Daniel, guide it onto the South Main Street sidewalk.
![Tim Goodwin—Insider staffA bronze boy holding a turtle, created by Beverly Benson Seamans, was installed on South Main Street last week as the first piece of public art for the city.](https://www.theconcordinsider.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/DowntownArt3-CI-101816-683x1024.jpg)
Tim Goodwin—Insider staffA bronze boy holding a turtle, created by Beverly Benson Seamans, was installed on South Main Street last week as the first piece of public art for the city.