I wrote about it last year here @ R W Norton Art Gallery.
And here's some of the pictures I this year.
Azaleas blooming at the Norton Art Gallery |
Norton Art Gallery backside of it with the azaleas |
While I'm there I like to look and see if there are any new acquisitions that the place has gotten.
I notice this new one and went looking for its name
"Ring of Bright Water (Otters)" by Kent Ullberg@ Norton Art Gallery |
'
"Ring of Bright Water (Otters)" by Kent Ullberg
Kent Ullberg states in a 1985 article from Southwest Art: An artist
needs to reflect his environment and the concerns of his
time...Artistic images from nature, for instance, in this day of ecology
and concern about the environment are very much a statement of our time
and could also make an artistic statement to generations to come. He
believes that sculpting in a realistic style makes his work accessible
to everyone and communicates a universal language of art when using
public space for [his] work. The darling sea otters he has sculpted in
Ring of Bright Water not only exude the hallmark playfulness of these
clowns of the sea, but also calls attention to these endangered animals
plight.'
"Ring of Bright Water (Otters)" by Kent Ullberg@ Norton Art Gallery |
"Ring of Bright Water (Otters)" by Kent Ullberg @ Norton Art Gallery |
"Ring of Bright Water (Otters)" by Kent Ullberg @ Norton Art Gallery |
"Ring of Bright Water (Otters)" by Kent Ullberg@ Norton Art Gallery |
The name plat for the Waiting for Sockeye sculpture |
Waiting for Sockeye by Ken Ullberg @ Norton Art Gallery |
Again I liked this piece because you come upon it so unexpectedly and you can just imagine a bear sitting there waiting for his Sockeye. I must admit the more of Ken Ullberg I see the more I like his works. Heres what the Norton Art Gallery has to say about this restful piece.
"Waiting for Sockeye (Grizzly Bear)" by Ken Ullberg
While Ullberg has done hundreds of works on a small scale, he is
perhaps best known for his monumental works he has done for museums and
municipalities from Omaha, Nebraska to Cape Town, South Africa. His
Fort Lauderdale, Florida and Omaha, Nebraska installations are the
largest wildlife bronze compositions ever done, spanning several city
blocks.
Here's some other views of it.
Waiting for Sockeye by Ken Ullberg @ Norton Art Gallery |
Waiting for Sockeye by Ken Ullberg @ Norton Art Gallery |
The thing I must ask you if you came upon this in the wilderness wouldn't you do a double take? Wouldn't you start backing up and not suspect this as a piece of art work? That's what my reaction was the first time I saw this.
Waiting for Sockeye by Ken Ullberg @ Norton Art Gallery |
I muse: I wonder what they will acquire this year so I can see it the next time I come?
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