
Gravitational Pull - Jones House - Boone, North Carolina
Posted by:
macleod1
N 36° 13.103 W 081° 40.973
17S E 438623 N 4008386
Quick Description: This sculpture was installed on the lawn of the Jones House Community Center. It is the work of nationally known sculptor Wayne Trapp.
Location: North Carolina, United States
Date Posted: 6/6/2008 11:43:39 AM
Waymark Code: WM3YGA
Views: 21
Long Description:Information below from a newspaper article in the Mountaintimes
("http://mountaintimes.com/mtweekly/2007/1213/trapp.php3"
target="_blank">visit link)
With the able help of town crews, the 16-foot high structure was
installed by both crane and sheer manpower on the freezing cold
morning of Dec. 7.
Originally a rusted steel, the sculpture was prepared for its
tenure at the Jones House by being sandblasted and powder-coated a
bright, striking red gloss.
It was carefully hauled in by the artist and a helper on a
trailer pulled by a modest mini-van. Straps were wrapped around the
main trunk-line of the piece, and then these were hooked to a
crane. It was hoisted by crane up over the hillside until it was
near the concrete sculpture pad. Then town crewmen, Trapp and his
helper all joined together to push it upright. Finally, the brass
pendulum was hung from the uppermost point, hence the naming of the
piece.
Since the late 1980s, the Watauga Arts Council has displayed a new
piece of outdoor sculpture each year on the pad located on the
front lawn of the Jones House Community Center. This annual program
is designed to give regional sculptors an opportunity to display a
large-scale work in a local setting and to create an atmosphere and
opportunity for area artists to show their work celebrating and
sharing their diverse visions and talent with friends, neighbors
and visitors to our area. By providing a place to exhibit, the arts
council hopes to encourage and develop existing and potential arts
activity in the community. The Watauga County Arts Council sponsors
this program in keeping with its mission, which is “to sponsor and
encourage cultural and educational activities in the creative and
performing arts in Watauga County and its surrounding areas.”
In 1999, the arts council’s board of directors agreed to rename
these annual sculpture exhibitions in memory of a local sculptor,
Sherry Ann Edwards, who had made significant contributions to the
advancement of sculpture in the region and even nationally.