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Take it outside

Have some fresh air with your art
By GREG COOK  |  June 14, 2006


IRRESISTIBLY EXTINCT: The handsome Suchomimus (crocodile-mimic) greets visitors to the Dinosaur Place in Connecticut.
Okay, you like art, but you also want to get out and enjoy the great outdoors. As it turns out, you can have your cake and eat it too at these outdoor sculpture parks.

Arts on the Point Sculpture Park, University of Massachusetts, Columbia Point, Boston
Mark di Suvero’s 1984–’85 Huro, a 30,000-pound abstract steel-beam assemblage, stands 30-feet-tall on the school’s front lawn and resembles a giant magnet atop a giant tripod. It might seem just a big, ugly brute, if not for the freely rotating top that teeters delicately in the harbor breeze. Also displayed on the 200-acre campus: abstract blocks, lumps, and bullets by Tony Smith, Sol Lewitt, Williem de Kooning, Dennis Oppenheim, and William Tucker — plus a fiberglass “Steel Worker” and leaping alligators by Luis Jimenez.

DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Garden, Lincoln, MA
The 79 pieces of modern and contemporary sculpture on display at the 35-acre museum grounds include: Jim Dine’s giant black hearts, Kitty Wales’s steel sharks flying through trees, Paul Matisse’s The Musical Fence chimes, and Gail Simpson and Aristotle Georgiades’s giant pink Trojan Piggybank. Also check out the museum’s “Annual Exhibition,” an indoor round-up of what’s interesting in New England art; it’s open through August 20.

Dr. Seuss National Memorial Sculpture Garden, Springfield, MA
“Life-size” bronze sculptures of Theodor Geisel, a/k/a Dr. Seuss, and his famous characters are on display at the hometown hero’s Springfield garden. Horton the Elephant, the Cat in the Hat, Thidwick the Big-Hearted Moose, Sam-I-Am, Thing 1 and Thing 2, the Lorax, a tower of turtles from Yertle the Turtle, the Grinch, and his dog Max are all here. The sculptures were designed and sculpted by the famous author’s step-daughter.

Forest Hills Cemetery, Jamaica Plain
This 250-acre 19th-century garden cemetery features magnificent examples of memorial sculpture and architecture by folks such as Daniel Chester French. In recent years, the cemetery has added contemporary sculpture — including a family of ghostly wire-mesh dresses and nightshirts hovering in a stand of trees. Fifteen artists and architects take on the theme of “Dwelling: Memory, Architecture and Place” in an outdoor exhibit from June 24 through October 31.

Augustus Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site, Cornish, NH
In the gardens of the 19th-century sculptor’s home and studio are three large sculptures — versions (in some cases, recent casts) of the Robert Gould Shaw monument at Boston Common; the monument to Civil War Admiral David Farragut in New York; and the cemetery monument to historian Henry Adams’s wife, Marion, in Washington, DC. Indoors, there are 100 works by Saint-Gaudens, as well as contemporary sculpture by others

David Hayes Sculpture Fields, Coventry, CT
The abstract steel sculptures of 75-year-old Connecticut artist David Hayes recall the work of David Smith, who taught Hayes how to weld in the 1950s, and Alexander Calder. Discover 200 of his works, spanning three decades, displayed in trees, orchards, and 15-acre pastures, and circling a pond. Visits by appointment only. Call 860.742.9687.

The Dinosaur Place, Montville, CT
Recognizable by the concrete-and-steel tyrannosaurus rex that stands 14-feet tall near the roadside, the Dinosaur Place is geared to visitors ages two to 14, but who can resist a 40-foot tall and 75-foot long brachiosaurus, a ceratosaurus threatening a stegosaurus, and a group of velociraptors stalking a protoceratops? Don’t forget the “active” volcano.

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ARTICLES BY GREG COOK
Share this entry with Delicious
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    One of the questions in fine art is how to address the big issues of today, from our wars to global warming.
  •   CLASSIC ROCK?  |  November 26, 2009
    If you're looking for meaning in the overly sanitized myth that is our national Thanksgiving celebration, a good place to start is southeastern Massachusetts, where nearly 400 years ago that band of hungry, ill-prepared religious zealots tried to colonize the middle of nowhere at the start of winter.  
  •   MAGPIE AND COPYIST  |  November 24, 2009
    If you were going to recount the evolution of hippie guy fashion, you might say that what began with psychedelic ruffled shirts and corduroy pants in 1968 has in late middle age split into two streams: collarless white button-down shirts, usually buttoned right up to the neck and worn with a black vest, and Hawaiian shirts.
  •   AIRING IT OUT  |  November 24, 2009
    New York painter Eve Aschheim has said that she uses geometry in her abstractions "to 'think about' the intersection of nature and cityscape. My works might suggest the chaotic geometry of the city, the expectant stillness of air, the tenuous balance of a wire line against a building."
  •   CHANNEL SURFING  |  November 17, 2009
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 See all articles by: GREG COOK

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