Walking to the Sky
Artist | Jonathan Borofsky |
---|---|
Year | 2004 |
Type | Sculpture |
Location | Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas, Texas |
Walking to the Sky is a public sculpture by Jonathan Borofsky. The original was installed at Rockefeller Center in the fall of 2004 before being moved to the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas, Texas in 2005. A copy is installed on the campus of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. [1] Another copy is installed in front of the Kiturami Homsys Co. building in Hwagok-dong, Gangseo-gu, Seoul, South Korea.[2]
The seven-ton work depicts a little girl, a businesswoman, a young man, and several others scaling a soaring 100-foot-tall stainless steel pole. Three people are looking upward from the base of the pole, which points to the east at a 75-degree angle.
The piece was inspired by a story that Borofsky's father used to tell him when he was a child about a friendly giant who lived in the sky. In each tale, father and son would travel up to the sky to talk to the giant about what needed to be done for everyone back on earth. The artist says the sculpture is "a celebration of the human potential for discovering who we are and where we need to go."[3]
Carnegie Mellon University replica
Carnegie Mellon installed "Walking to the Sky" in May 2006 on its campus in front of Warner Hall just off Forbes Avenue. The sculpture was a gift from CMU Trustee Jill Gansman Kraus (A'74) and her husband, Peter Kraus, of New York City. The sculpture generated controversy among the student body for its appearance, the choice of location, and the lack of campus involvement in selecting and siting the piece. The campus newspaper described it as "an eyesore" and "a huge phallus" while others have expressed displeasure at its location as one of the first things seen of the campus from Forbes Avenue. Due to apparent structural instability, the sculpture had to be replaced with a more structurally stable version in October 2009.[4]
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Walking to the Sky. |
- ↑ Lowry, Patricia (March 15, 2006). "CMU crafts a compromise on artist's controversial sculpture". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved October 14, 2009.
- ↑ "Official Seoul City Tourism Art Exhibition Calendar". Retrieved October 14, 2009.
- ↑ Garcia, Cathy Rose A. (October 31, 2009). "Walk to the Sky With Jonathan Borofsky". Retrieved October 14, 2009.
- ↑ Jones, Aliesha (September 28, 2009). "Walking to the Sky Art Excavated". Retrieved October 14, 2009.