the online magazine about life as a creative process

 

Wild Life Sculpture Search

 

By Leslie Fry

   

 

     
 

Pining, a young woman made of painted plaster leaning into a pine tree.
Her hair is a mass of real pine cones.

I created six sculpture installations integrated into a nature trail at Boca Ciega Millennium Park, in Seminole, Florida. The imagery and placement of the sculptures are designed to raise awareness about the effects of human impact on the natural environment. The sculptures are made mostly of plaster, and will gradually change and erode over time. A book and video are being made to document these changes, and to give the entire project an “afterlife.” The sculptures were completed for the park’s annual Discovery Day and Nature Festival on March 3, 2007. As the park’s “Artist-in-Residence,” I am further involving the community by giving guided walks and sculpture workshops throughout the year. This project was commissioned by Pinellas County Cultural Affairs, with a budget of $30,000.

The sculptures are visible from the boardwalk trail, but not obviously. Park visitors have fun searching for the art, and during that process they are looking more carefully at everything around them. The accessibility and contrast of seeing art in a natural setting, rather than in a museum or gallery, is a draw in itself – a mystery in the forest that one can walk up to and touch. Printed maps indicating the sculpture locations with information about the project are available at the trail. The sculptures represent imaginary beings that reflect and integrate two worlds – the constructed world that humans live in, and the natural world inhabited by the flora and fauna of the park. Already these art sightings have instigated discussion and reflection on our connection to the precious natural life around us.

Another evocation is the idea of metamorphosis and the power of change. Much of the imagery in my work has origins in ancient art, as well as myths and tales of different cultures, such as Ovid’s Metamorphoses or Native American legends of talking animals and earth spirits. Now this 3/4 mile trail is simultaneously a land of imagination within the real land of native Florida plant and wild life.

 
     

 

     
 

Leslie Fry divides her time between Winooski, VT, and St. Petersburg, FL. Her art connects the natural world with the human-made world, and its imagery melds reality and fantasy. The forms are derived from the human body, human artifacts and architecture, and vegetable and animal life. She often uses traditional methods and materials – such as modeling and casting – to achieve nontraditional results. Her art has appeared in solo and group exhibitions in museums and galleries throughout the United States and abroad, including the Herbert F. Johnson Museum at Cornell University (Ithaca, NY); the Tampa Museum of Art (FL); the Kunsthaus (Hamburg); the Centre des Arts Visuels (Montréal); the Couvent des Cordeliers (Paris); and Exit Art and Artists Space (New York City). See her website.

 
     

 

     
   
     

 

© all work on this site is copyrighted