Organizers hope to raise $49,000 for Bozeman library Sculpture Park - Bozeman, MT
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 45° 40.557 W 111° 01.691
12T E 497805 N 5058044
The Bozeman Sculpture Park is a fairly open area of park land stretching out behind the Bozeman Public Library.
Waymark Code: WM17EK1
Location: Montana, United States
Date Posted: 02/07/2023
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member saopaulo1
Views: 1

The city of Bozeman is a college town, with a large School of Art, hence scads of resident artists. This lead to a sincere dedication to the arts by the City of Bozeman, resulting in dozens and dozens of works on display throughout the city. Certainly the largest gathering of art works is at the Bozeman Public Library, the majority of the works located in an art park behind (south of) the library, Bozeman Sculpture Park.

Found in the park are sculptures of all manners, from purely figurative to totally abstract, with sculptures which manage to fit somewhere between the two. Each year the Gallatin Art Crossing holds a competition for new sculptures, which are presented in the park. Some remain, some are purchased and moved away, while some, remaining unpurchased, are moved to other locations in downtown Bozeman. One may visit the park annually, revisiting familiar sculptures, while also discovering a plethora of new and exciting artwork each time.

Featured here is Egghead, the 2016 People's Choice Award Winner, which has remained in the park. One of the more whimsical sculptures in Bozeman Sculpture Park, Egghead is the product of sculptor Kimber Fiebiger, someone, unsurprisingly, known for her occasional flights of sculptural fantasy. Egghead himself is an intricately carved bronze sculpture, an anthropomorphized Egg in blue and white striped suit and blue and white polka dot bow tie. Apparently a true Egghead, he is seen to be reading a book.

When fundraising for the Sculpture Park began the Bozeman Daily Chronicle ran the following article on the subject.
Organizers hope to raise $49,000 for Bozeman library Sculpture Park

AMANDA RICKER | May 20, 2010
Brit Fontenot, assistant to the Bozeman city manager, said the Bozeman City Commission and Library Board have given the project the go-ahead.

Now that plans for a rotating sculpture exhibit outside the Bozeman Public Library have been approved by the city, organizers are trying to raise $49,000 to get it started.

"The first construction phase will be to build nine viewing areas and pedestals for the sculptures," Zak Zakovi, a local sculptor and director of the Bozeman Sculpture Park project, said this week. "Eventually, it will fill out at 24 viewing areas and pedestals."

The Bozeman Sculpture Park will be set up along the asphalt stretch of the Bozeman Trail behind the library that leads to Peets Hill.

"It provides another reason for artists and art lovers to come to the community of Bozeman," Fontenot said. "It's a great accent for the library and it utilizes a very well traveled pathway."

The library already has several sculptures out front and the park project will continue that theme, Library Director Alice Meister said.

"I'm just very excited that we've gotten to the point to be able to move ahead with fundraising so that we could have an exhibit out there next year," Meister said.

Zakovi, who helped create the Emerson Center for the Arts and Culture, said the park will be the first in Montana to feature rotating exhibits of outdoor sculpture.

"There will be work by local, regional, even international artists," he said.

Zakovi said schoolchildren and university students will be invited to take field trips to the exhibit and hear the artists talk about their work.

The Bozeman Sculpture Park project received its nonprofit status last month. Organizers plan to send out about 80 fundraising letters to key contributors in the coming weeks. They are hoping other people who hear about the effort will donate, too.

In addition to paying for the viewing areas, the $49,000 will fund a curator to organize the first exhibit, stipends for the selected artists and an opening event, Zakovi said.

Organizers hope to open the first exhibit in the summer of 2011.
From the Bozeman Daily Chronicle

Photo goes Here
Type of publication: Newspaper

When was the article reported?: 05/20/2010

Publication: Bozeman Daily Chronicle

Article Url: [Web Link]

Is Registration Required?: yes

How widespread was the article reported?: regional

News Category: Arts/Culture

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