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Topiary Sphere
for Remodeling of Soldier’s Field
2002
Stainless steel / 16′ Diameter
Location: Museum Campus
Installation by Area Erectors.
Far left: Bill Sattler
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Topiary Sphere
for Remodeling of Soldier’s Field
2002
Stainless steel / 16′ Diameter
Location: Museum Campus
Installation by Area Erectors.
Far left: Bill Sattler
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2000 Millennium – by Bruce White
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Millennium – by Bruce White
2000 /stainless steel and granite/ 36’ x 5’ x 5’ x 5’.
Location: The Woodlands, Texas.
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2000 Millennium – by Bruce White
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Equilibrium – by Barry Hehemann
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Concurrence – by Terrence Karpowicz
1999 / 23′ x 16′ x 8′
Location: Paul V. Galvin Library at the Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago.
This was selected from a Navy Pier exhibition, “Pier Walk”, in 1999 by a group of IIT professors, administrators and students.
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1999: Concurrence – by Terrence Karpowicz
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1999: Concurrence – by Terrence Karpowicz.
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Everyone’s Everest
1999
Steel and granite / 11’4″ x 9′ x 11’H
Location: Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, Illinois.
The title refers to the mountains that are made in everyday life. Consideration of our ‘Everest’ suggests folly, fantasy, and the absurdity of self reflexive endeavors. Texts have been laser-cut into the threads of the stair. Each word has been selected from texts referring to mountain climbing especially ascents to Mt. Everest, that has been transcendent experience for some, tragedies for others.
The words are: Beyond, Attempt, Yield, Doubt, Demand, Amusement, Condition, Fantasy, Interpret, Solace, Claim, Discovery, Beyond.
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Right Angles # 11 – by Gunnar Theel
1999
Steel / 9′-6″H
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The sculpture is part of Gunnar Theel’s Right Angles Series, which includes:
Three L-shaped units, Nereid and the Structure
THREE L-SHAPED UNITS, each composed of two steel plates joined at right angles, lean against and into each other, and create an assemblage of angled planes and spaces articulated by light and shadow, and put in motion by the viewer drawn around the sculptures.
NEREID sculptures are part of the Right Angles series. They are inspired by the marble Nereid statues and their “wind swept drapery” at The British Museum, London.
The STRUCTURE sculptures are inspired by architecture, in particular the house as vessel, container, body. Again, the angled planes diffuse the border between the exterior and interior surfaces, and the viewer drawn around the oxidized steel sculptures discovers openings like doors, windows, and solid walls.
In the words of Gunnar Theel…
MY ART is influenced by architecture. The right angle in the physical world, and its inherent sensations of equilibrium and quiet are my reference points as I work towards the finished sculpture by “simplification of design and refinement of proportions”. (Mies van der Rohe).
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Breaking Bonds – by Stephen Luecking
1998 / Stainless Steel and Copper.
Commissioned by the Illinois CBD Art in Architecture Program
Location: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (Material Science Building).
“One of the rewards of my landing a public commission is the opportunity to once again work with Vector. The level of craft and art knowledge and their superb problem solving skills make them as much the sculptors’ colleagues and collaborators as their fabricator.”
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Breaking Bonds – This three-part sculpture rests in a central courtyard among three chemistry buildings dedicated to materials science, physical chemistry and organic chemistry. It incorporates the forms of carbon molecules characteristic to each field. Most prominent is a large “soccer ball” representing the geometry of a man-made carbon atom, called the buckminsterfullerene or bucky ball. Two shapes have broken free and left a rupture in the ball. One is a single hexagon, reminiscent of a graphite platelet; the other suggests an organic molecule.
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Fourth of Firth of Forth
1998
Steel and cast concrete
18′ x 8’2″ x 13’6″ / 13,000 lbs.
Location: White River State Park, Indianapolis, Indiana.
Fourth of Firth of Forth – The name is derived from the Forth Bridge across the Firth of Forth in the east of Scotland. it is constructed to suggest the double-cantilevered bridge characterized by its massive size and peculiarity of line. The sculpture weighs approximately 13,000 pounds with metal supports almost fourteen feet in height. The suspended curved concrete element seems to be drawn and twisted in tension between the supporting structures, making an oblique reference to a self-reflexive crossing between opposite parts. The title involves a series of word plays. ‘Fourth’ refers to one-fourth of the bridge from which the major forms are generated. A ‘Firth’ is a Scottish term meaning a narrow inlet of the sea. The sculpture alludes to a crossing as in the crossing of water.
In year 2000, Hehemann made “2nd 4th,” to complements the “Fourth of Firth of Forth.”
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2nd 4th
2000 / Steel and cast concrete
20′ x 8’2″ x 13’6″ / 11,000 lbs.
Location: High Lake Sculpture Garden, West Chicago, Illinois.
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Symbiotic Parralax – by Terrence Karpowicz
1997
21’H x 12’W x 12’D
Location: University of Illinois at Chicago, in front of Molecular Biology Building
Commissioned by Art-in-Architecture program of Illinois Capital Development Board.
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Rising Rings – by Stephen Luecking
1994
Cast iron band / 8′ x 12′ x 18′
The sundial has a hole that casts a beam of light into the central ring monument on the equinoxes.
Momorail of Ambika Paul. Commissioned by Lord Swaraj Paul, founder of Caparo Steel.
Location: Caparo Steel, Farrell, Pennsylvanis.
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The”Rising Rings” sundial was commissioned by Dr. Swraj Paul, a steel mill owner, to honor his daughter Ambika who died in 1968 of leukemia at age four. This monument honors the inspiration her joy of life instilled in her father. At the central of the dial is a cast iron ring that holds a bronze image of her that is illuminated for several days twice a year. On two dates, Ambika’s birthday and the anniversary of the mill’s re-opening the noon sunlight passes through the circular opening in the larger ring and strikes markers on the inner ring. Miklos Simon created the portrait of Ambika mounted on the smaller ring.
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