John Kearney (artist)

John Kearney (August 31, 1924 – August 10, 2014[1]) was a Chicago- and Provincetown-based American artist famous for making figurative sculptures, often of animals, using multiple, found metal objects, specifically bumpers from automobiles.

Life

Moose, Chicago, Illinois, USA

Kearney received his artistic education at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, and the Universita per Stranieri in Perugia, Italy. In 1950, he co-founded the Contemporary Art Workshop in Chicago. Subsequently, he has lived and worked in Italy many times, most notably in Rome in 1963 and 1964 while on a Fulbright Award and again in 1985 and 1992 while serving as a visiting artist at the American Academy in Rome.

Kearney learned his welding skills as a World War II U.S. Navy sailor while performing underwater repair of naval vessels.[2]

Awards

  • Fulbright Award to Rome in 1963–64
  • Italian Government Grant in 1963–64
  • Visiting Artists at America Academy in Rome, 1985 and 1992

Collections that own Kearney's work

  • Aon (Standard Oil Building) in Chicago
  • Detroit Children's Museum
  • Illinois State Capitol Visitors Center, Springfield, Illinois
  • Springfield Art Association, Springfield, Illinois
  • Mitchell Museum, Mt. Vernon, Illinois
  • Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago
  • Ulrich Museum, Wichita, Kansas
  • Rockford Art Museum, Rockford, Illinois
  • Canton Museum of Art, Canton, Ohio

Solo exhibitions

  • New York City at A.C.A. Gallery, 1964 to 1979
  • Berta Walker Gallery, Provincetown, Massachusetts, 1992 to 1997

Outdoor sculpture

In Chicago area

  • Academy of Science (T. rex)
  • Aon (formerly the Amoco Building and the Standard Oil Building) (three deer)
  • Chicago Park District (two life size Horses)
  • Clark and Deming intersection (two goats)
  • Roscoe and Elaine Place intersection (two giraffes)(removed)
  • Cornelia and Elaine Place intersection ("Nanny Goat") (removed)
  • Field Museum, South Entrance (two bronzes)
  • Field Museum, penguin and deer inside an exhibit.
  • Francis Parker School
  • Goudy School (double life-size cougar – the School Mascot)
  • Lincoln Park Zoo (chromium-plated bull elephant) – the zoo did not take proper care of these sculptures, and they were removed due to damage.
  • McCormick Seminary, Hyde Park, on University Avenue north of 55th Street (a large ram, named "Herald", pun referring to the Hyde Park Herald newspaper)[3]
  • Michigan Avenue Magnificent Mile (moose)
  • Museum of Science and Industry (life-size gorilla)
  • Oakton Community College
  • Oz Park (the Tin Man (1995), Cowardly Lion (2001), Scarecrow (2005), and Dorothy and Toto (2007) from The Wizard of Oz)
  • Sedgwick, 1800 block (two horses)
  • Uptown Hull House (gorilla)
  • Andersonville Residence (life-size Kodiak bear)

Elsewhere

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gollark: There *are* laser microphone things, but you need to bounce them off windows or something, not just arbitrary surfaces.
gollark: * slightly tweaked spike proteins, but the Moderna/Pfizer-BioNTech ones use that too
gollark: Presumably it is, because Novavax's vaccine uses actual spike proteins + adjuvant.
gollark: I thought so, but it turns out that in some age groups it is actually seemingly a net negative to be vaccinated with some of the vaccines, and the non-adenovirus ones don't seem to have this problem so there's a fairly usable solution.

References

  1. "John Kearney Obituary". cremation-society.com/. Cremation Society of Illinois. Retrieved November 7, 2014.
  2. Descriptive plaque on Moose (W-02-03)
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on August 18, 2005. Retrieved July 1, 2006.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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