Float (sculpture)

Float is a public artwork by American artist Peter Flanary[1] located on the campus of the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee in front of Sandburg Hall,[2] which is in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States.

Float
ArtistPeter Flanary
Year1990 (1990)
Dimensions460 cm × 89 cm × 190 cm (180 in × 35 in × 75 in)
LocationMilwaukee
Coordinates43°04′45″N 87°52′57.21″W

Description

The sculpture is nestled into a deep ravine and takes advantage of the topography of the land. "Float" plays with the weight of materials and combines a bronze structure of a canoe with the heavy granite stone. The piece is approximately 15 feet high and barely rises to the level of the sidewalk leading to Sandburg Hall.[3]

Float was purchased with $25,000 that was set aside for artwork during the building of Sandburg Hall. The artist originally meant for the piece to feature a cart with an anvil on top and a star reigning over. Sandburg Hall's architect thought that this design demonstrated a communist ideal and forced Flanary to come up with something else.

Float is currently property of the University of Wisconsin Milwaukee and its students.

Artist

Peter Flanary grew up in the Milwaukee area, and currently has a studio in Mineral Point, Wisconsin.[4] Peter Flanary created Float in his studio.[4] He was a part-time lecturer in the art department at the University of Wisconsin-Madison[5] His work frequently incorporates rocks and other environmental objects. His creation process is rarely direct in that "He tries to grasp the space in its complexity and wants to create something that can be remarked on by people."[5] "He likes material and form and works to have his piece support and work in its environment, growing out of, rather than intruding into the landscape."[5]

gollark: If you want the thing on the left, then that has cubes in it, see.
gollark: Also, it would be *worse*, since you can't see the interior.
gollark: The thing on the left is technically possible, I just don't really want to have to actually render cubes.
gollark: Well, I was very lazy, so the 3D mode just takes the 2D grids, stacks them vertically and not horizontally, and rotates them around certain axes.
gollark: Surprisingly, no.

References

  1. http://peterflanary.com/Welcome.html
  2. http://www4.uwm.edu Archived 2010-11-30 at the Wayback Machine
  3. http://www.merchantcircle.com/business/Peter.Flanary.Studio.608-987-460%5B%5D
  4. , Flanary website.
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-06-10. Retrieved 2010-11-15.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link), UW Madison.
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