A million-dollar stone sculpture, intended to remind future generations of Earth’s fragility, made its point a bit early — just three months after its unveiling, it collapsed.
The 175-ton “Spaceship Earth” lay in ruins at Kennesaw State University after mysteriously falling to pieces last week.
The engraved phrase “our fragile craft” was still visible amid the debris.
“Kind of ironic,” said Mary-Elizabeth Watson, a university employee. “I had no idea it was made up of so many pieces.”
University officials say they suspect water damage or glue failure, but agents with the Georgia Bureau of Investigation are also looking into the possibility of vandalism, said Frances Weyand, a spokeswoman for Kennesaw State.
The Finnish-born sculptor who goes by one name, Eino, had called the work “Spaceship Earth” to honor environmentalist David Brower, a leader of the Sierra Club. It depicted a bronze figure of Brower standing atop the globe. The founders of California-based PowerBar had paid for it.
“How can stone collapse by itself?” Eino asked. “I’m devastated.”
He said he used a resin made specially for stone, worked with an engineer and was assured the globe would stay in one piece.
Eino, who lived in Georgia in the late 1990s and now lives outside Las Vegas, vowed to restore “Spaceship Earth” to its former glory, with structural modifications. Rebuilding will start as early as next month, he said.
“I want to rebuild it and build it stronger than ever,” he said. “It has to be made safe.”
Sunday, April 15, 2007
Sculpture of ‘our fragile craft’ lives up to its phrase
Posted by mine at 10:51 PM
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment