The Dream: St. Helens, Lancashire.
The Dream is a 66 ft sculpture by Catalan artist Jaume Plesna, which stands on the site of the former colliery- now a forest- at Sutton Manor, near St Helens. It was commissioned by former miners- as a monument to their now vanished industry- and was completed in April 2009.
It has been compared to Anthony Gormley's iconic Angel of the North- but it's a very different experience. Where the Angel dominates its landscape, the Dream stands among trees- which by the time they are fully grown will all but hide it. You cannot drive up to it, but have to park at a distance and approach its clearing by foot-paths that curve around the hill. Unlike the Angel, which is assertive, masculine- built of girders- the Dream- made of a highly refelective mix of concrete and Spanish alabaster, seems hardly there- as if it had coalesced out of the clouds.
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The north west does seem to be doing big public art these days.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Let_It_Come_Down_(Spiritualized_album)
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I love that last photo of just the face against the clouds. It looks like a painting, not a photo of something real and solid.
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I think it's an astonishing achievement to make something so ethereal out of concrete.
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(Anonymous) 2009-06-30 12:32 pm (UTC)(link)Tom F
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I learn something new from you almost every day!
This is wonderful art - I'll be googling it soon.
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This reminds me of Andy Goldsworthy's work, Garden of Stones (http://www.mjhnyc.org/visit_gardenofstones.htm) at the Jewish Heritage Museum in Lower Manhattan. He envisioned what it might look like to persevere restraint in nature. He hollowed out giant boulders and planted saplings in them. Over time if they grow large enough, their roots will break the stones and grow around them.
Here's a great NY Times piece (http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/16/magazine/stone-diarist.html) about it, and here are two really good photos (http://www.flickr.com/photos/anatre/1866719379/in/photostream/) of it.
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We seem to be living in an age of great public art.
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There's always such a ridiculous debate about tax dollars and where they go in the States. People yell a lot about public art and how much they hate it. It's kind of tragic.
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There's a lot of opposition over here too, but it tends to go away once the art is in place. People love Gormley's Angel of the North.
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I really want to come see that angel some day!
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It also makes me think of Magritte.
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Alabaster and concrete is a curious mix... I like the idea of a very reflective surface.