To Grandmother's House

To Grandmother's House is an outdoor wooden sculpture by Patrick Gracewood, installed near the Southeast Park Avenue station in Oak Grove, an unincorporated area neighboring Milwaukie in Clackamas County, Oregon, in the United States. It depicts an older woman holding a rabbit in her arms and was carved from a 75-year-old cedar tree, cut down for construction of the MAX Orange Line, over three years. The sculpture was installed on April 29, 2015.

To Grandmother's House
The sculpture in 2019
ArtistPatrick Gracewood
Year2015 (2015)
TypeSculpture
MediumAtlas cedar, paint, weathering steel
LocationOak Grove, Oregon, United States
Coordinates45.430691°N 122.635486°W / 45.430691; -122.635486

Description and history

Portland artist Patrick Gracewood's To Grandmother's House is installed near the MAX Orange Line's Southeast Park Avenue MAX Station. Carved from a 75-year-old Atlas cedar tree over three years, the sculpture depicts an older woman holding a rabbit in her arms.[1] Additional materials include paint and weathering steel.[2] It was inspired by a photograph Gracewood took years before of his friend's German grandmother. The sculpture was installed on April 29, 2015 as the last of six artworks commissioned by TriMet near the MAX station, each created from trees cleared for the Orange Line.[1] Engineers set the piece on a cement pedestal, then placed it under a metal "treehouse",[2] or a canopy shaped like a tree.[1] According to Gracewood, To Grandmother's House "honors women and how they often hold communities together".[1]

gollark: They control a lot.
gollark: And you can't have push notifications in the background on Android without using GCM; same on iOS, but you use APNS instead.
gollark: yes.
gollark: Google won't let apps constantly have persistent network connections for notifications and such; they have to use the Google Cloud Messaging thing to receive them.
gollark: No, not what I mean.

See also

References

  1. Bancud, Michaela (May 5, 2015). "'To Grandmother's House' on the Orange Line". Portland Tribune. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
  2. "Public Art on MAX Orange Line". TriMet. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
External video
Patrick Gracewood on YouTube (April 29, 2015), The Oregonian
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.