Mid Summer's Night Fountain - Abingdon, Virginia
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member macleod1
N 36° 42.631 W 081° 58.472
17S E 412961 N 4063202
This amazing fountain was still under construction when we visited but you could already see how beautiful it was going to be. It is located across from the Barter Theater in Abingdon in the main downtown area.
Waymark Code: WM4B92
Location: Virginia, United States
Date Posted: 08/01/2008
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member saopaulo1
Views: 36

Below are excerpts from a news story done on the fountain's creation.

The fountain will be finished shortly and has been a labor of love for a long time.

Okay, we’re only a few months away from the official unveiling of the sculptural fountain based on ‘A Midsummer Nights Dream’ that I designed quite some time ago and have been talking about on this blog ever since. The concept started as a drawing that my co-sculptor, David Spence and I worked out over several weeks time.

The prototype figures were submitted for approval to both the institution that commissioned the piece, The Barter Theater Foundation and the Architectural Review Board of the town of Abingdon VA where it will be built.

About two years ago we began the long process that leads to a finished bronze. David decided rather than cut granite being used for the various boulders around the structure that we would use real boulders and make casts of those, to later be poured in bronze.

A great idea that later became both a blessing and a curse. Here’s assistant Bill Thompson with the chosen boulders. He and David then covered these stones with rubber molds from which, at a later date, wax forms were poured. Once in the wax, the shapes were adjusted to suite our needs, then cast into bronze replicas of those same rocks.

Back in the studio David and I started on the two foxes, first molding their forms in clay. He would work on one end, while I worked on the other. When either of us ran into a dead end of “this doesn’t look quite right” we would shift around and a fresh eye and hand would take over. Oh, the conversations that we had…

Slowly the figures would emerge from the plasticine clay. A fox one day… a hare the next. For reference, the studio space was blanketed in downloaded printouts, most of them found during long sessions on Google image searches of the animals we needed. A hare, for instance, is quite different in form than the more common bunny rabbit.

Then there was that grinning trickster, Puck.

From this point the clay figure was cut into several sections. These sections were painted with many, many layers of rubber mold solution, from which a wax replica was poured. Any adjustments that are needed are executed in that malleable wax. The wax replica was dipped multiple times into ceramic material to form a hard mold. The wax was burned out and later bronze poured into the mold. What is left is various sections of your intended piece that will have to be welded back together. After those weld marks were ground down and smoothed out the reassembled figure was painted with layers of patina (liquid acids that produce various colors on the surface of the bronze).

As well as all of his animal companions and the boulders that they sit on.

That column in the middle of the fountain space is where, eventually, the tree and figure of Titania will be placed. That central part of the fountain will rise to 16 feet in height.

While the tree section is being cast into bronze we have been given a space at the Barter Theater’s scene shop, courtesy of Rick Rose and Mark DeVol, to construct the 9 ft. figure of the Fairy Queen has made many demands of us so far. As you can imagine, a figure that large demands quite a bit of infrastructure underneath to support the hundreds of pounds of clay used to articulate her features.

An elaborate structure of steel pipe, copper tubing and wire mesh is used to articulate her skeleton. Sometimes The Queen got unruly and a few further adjustments needed to be made.

But after offering a certain amount of ceremonial blood letting (cuts and slices from the very sharp ends of all that wire) she began to take a bit of shape.

We were, perhaps, a little more than a week away from completion when the faeries began to laugh at us mere mortals. I was working below the face you see above and heard a series of small cracks. I looked up and Queen Titania slowly leaned forward, bending over as if to kiss me perhaps? But that’s 300 or so pounds of clay we’re talking about. A central steel pipe had snapped and down she came, to rest gently on a scaffolding that I quickly swung under her form.

Now, two days later, the clay has been stripped off and a new, and much, much sturdier structure of steel rebar has been welded into place.

This afternoon I’ll start over again.

In the meantime, one of her fairy attendants has been completed and is wending her way into her final bronze form, soon to be joined by another two such companions. The purple wings that you see here are just place holders.

The completed sculpture is slated to unveiled this June.

Visit for pictures of work in progress:http://greenmanpress.com/news/archives/246
Web Link: [Web Link]

Visit Instructions:
Please post another photo of the fountain and tell us your opinion about the fountain.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Fountains
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log User Rating  
Sneakin Deacon visited Mid Summer's Night Fountain - Abingdon, Virginia 08/23/2015 Sneakin Deacon visited it
fatcat161 visited Mid Summer's Night Fountain - Abingdon, Virginia 10/19/2009 fatcat161 visited it
Buglady1 visited Mid Summer's Night Fountain - Abingdon, Virginia 07/12/2009 Buglady1 visited it
macleod1 visited Mid Summer's Night Fountain - Abingdon, Virginia 08/01/2008 macleod1 visited it

View all visits/logs