[MSN] Seattle artists help rebuild a New Orleans sculpture toppled by Hurricane Katrina
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Tue Sep 5 21:58:51 CEST 2006
Seattle artists help rebuild a New Orleans sculpture toppled by
Hurricane Katrina
By Charlotte Hsu
Seattle Times staff reporter
A New Orleans fixture of crisscrossed steel tubes and cables, "Virlane
Tower" once rose 45 feet in the Museum of Art's sculpture garden. A year
ago, Hurricane Katrina pummeled the sculpture to pieces.
Last week, beside a South Seattle warehouse, artists completed
restoration of the tower — 2,500 miles from its home. When it returns to
Louisiana this month, it will stand as a sign of resilience, a finished
work in a region that also is being rebuilt.
Of 53 pieces in the New Orleans Museum of Art sculpture garden, "Virlane
Tower" was the only one severely damaged by Katrina.
A Seattle art-fabrication company, pinwheel corp., has done most of the
work for the tower's artist, Kenneth Snelson, in the past few years. So
after Katrina, the pinwheel team brought "Virlane Tower" back to Seattle
for repairs.
They reassembled the sculpture last week for the first time,
transforming pieces and strands of nondescript metal into art.
The tower's structure seems to defy gravity with its layers of heavy
tubes suspended on cables — 900 pounds of metal that seem to float.
"It's rising again," Snelson said on the phone from New York, where he
lives. "Maybe New Orleans will rise again. I would like to think so.
"Virlane Tower" by the numbers
45 feet tall
900 pounds
"The question of how this little sculpture relates to that mammoth
catastrophe, I can't answer it. Because in a way, it's minuscule
compared to these big problems."
Patricia Chandler, curator for the collection of New Orleans businessman
and philanthropist Sydney Besthoff, who donated "Virlane Tower" and
other sculptures to the museum, said restoration is vital because art
offers solace in hardship. Admission to the garden is free.
"People go walk and have their eyes filled with peace and beauty, and it
makes them feel better," Chandler said. "They can go back to the
frustrations and the difficulties and the heartache of the rest of life
with more strength."
Complicated process
Philip Stewart Jr., pinwheel's founder, will travel to New Orleans this
month to reinstall the tower in a museum lagoon.
In the days after Katrina, Stewart flew to New Orleans to see the
sculpture. He found devastation everywhere, the tower a part of it.
Photographs on Stewart's laptop show the tower in the garden, hanging
limp, its top sunk in murky water.
The hurricane's winds had whipped the sculpture, breaking it. Saltwater
that poured in as levees gave way eroded the piece's steel, leaving
behind rust and barnacles.
Stewart recovered about two-thirds of the sculptures' tubes. Its cables
didn't survive. What was left of the tower rode cross-country to Seattle
in a truck.
Then the tedious business of ordering custom-made parts began. There was
a four-month wait for some tubes because suppliers can't quickly meet
the demand for high-quality metals, Stewart said.
Meanwhile, workers welded and polished original parts.
Delicate yet strong
Like many of Snelson's other pieces, "Virlane Tower" relies on tension
and compression — resistance to being pulled apart and resistance to
being pushed together — to maintain its form.
Snelson said that in creating the tower 25 years ago, he wanted to see
how high he could build. "Reaching for something" is a fundamental
desire, he said.
"Like a Jack and the Beanstalk," he said. "You make it tall enough, you
might be able to find a giant or something at the top."
One day last week the sculpture lay in pieces around the warehouse
studio, its parts dwarfed by high ceilings and tons of machinery for
shaping metal and glass.
Dozens of cables, each made from 19 wires pulled around one another,
were splayed in piles on sheets of wood on the floor. Short, cylindrical
pieces called hubs sat in rows of three on a table in a high-ceilinged
room filled with the clang of tools and the sound of grinding.
Stewart said the beauty in Snelson's art is not in its parts but in the
power of its design, in the amazement people feel at its delicate balance.
It didn't matter that wind knocked the tower down, or that floodwaters
corroded its parts, Stewart said.
The spirit of the sculpture, like that of a city, was what mattered, he
said.
It was what a hurricane couldn't take.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com
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