Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Buckingham Fountain's $25 million restoration project



The Buckingham Fountain ... is undergoing a $25 million restoration project [starting Sep 2, 2008].. The goal is to finish the project by April 1, 2009 .. when the Olympic Committee is coming into town.

The restoration includes:
# Plan to produce an even more spectacular water and lighting show ...
# Mend the leaky outer basin, which will be taken apart, repaired and reassembled ...



Click on the image for enlarged view ...

# Treating the fountain's bronze sea horses and fencing ..
# Replacing the loose pink gravel at the site with precast stone and concrete pavers.
# Also, landscaping and the planting of trees will more closely mirror the original plans by Edward H. Bennett.

Read more in my earlier post on the Buckingham Fountain .. click here .. ...



Click on the image for enlarged view ...

Buckingham Fountain has been one major attraction for tourists, health conscious joggers, enviormentally friendly cyclists ... and newly weds looking for great photo-opt ...



Monday, September 1, 2008

Chicago - Grant Park / Eagle Fountains - by Frederick C. Hibbard



Eagle Fountains - by Frederick Cleveland Hubbard


Eagle Fountains

Sculptor: Frederick Cleveland Hibbard

Installed: 1931

Location: Grant Park - Congress Plaza Gardens
South Michigan Ave. (100 E) and E. Congress Pkwy. (500 S) , 
Chicago, IL 60604 




Grant Park : Chicago's open frontyard



I have put many posts on Grant Park ..
# Public Art in the Grant Park .. click here ....
# Gardens in the Grant Park .. click here ..
# Often overlooked but remarkable features like pedestrian crossings, the railway lines underneath, the street lamp posts, balustrade, corbels, the Y-symbols .. click here ..
# For a brief history of Grant Park .. click here ..

This post is about the history of Grant Park ..

Grant Park [originally named Lake Park] is proudly referred to as Chicago's "open front yard" ... This large park [319 acres] located between Michigan Avenue and Lake Michigan, is free of any skyscrapers .. and is one of the reasons of Chicago's beautiful lakeside view ...

The history of Grant Park begins from 1835, when foresighted citizens of Chicago, fearing commercial lakefront development, lobbied to protect the open space. As a result, the park's original area east of Michigan Avenue was designated "public ground forever to remain vacant of buildings." It was officially named as Lake Park in 1847.



However, being next to Lake Michigan, had it's own set of challenges ... This site soon suffered from huge lakefront erosion. To solve this problem, The Illinois Central Railroad agreed to build a breakwater to protect the area in exchange for permission for an offshore train trestle.
# In the left image, we can see the breakwater ...
# In the image below, we see the railway lines which still crosses through the Grant Park compound ... A series of bridges cross the railway tracks and lead to lawns and monuments ...



After the Great Fire of 1871, the area between the shore and trestle became a dump site for piles of charred rubble, creating the fill for what is now the actual Grant Park ...

In 1901, the city transferred the park to the South Park Commission They renamed Lake Park as Grant Park, after Ulysses S. Grant, the 18th President of the United States. Renowned architect Daniel H. Burnham envisioned Grant Park as a formal landscape with museums and civic buildings. However, construction was stalled by lawsuits launched by mail-order magnate Aaron Montgomery Ward, who sought to protect the park's open character. After almost 20 years of battle in court, Ward won the case in 1911... Eventually, Ward's ideas were adopted by Daniel Burnham in his Plan of Chicago, which called for "insured light, air, and an agreeable outlook" along the Grant Park street frontage ... As a result, the Grant Park remains an open space ... proudly called Chicago's open front yard ... The preservation of open space along the lakefront offers a great view of buildings on the Michigan Avenue .. The one exception Ward consented to was for the Art Institute of Chicago, constructed in 1892 ...

The Park's structure is based on the French parks with geometric designs. It consists of a series of bridges which cross the Railway tracks that are still on the park's compound. ...



I love these concrete balustrade and bridges ..



After the bridges, the park is divided in sections with lawns, trees and monuments.. In the heart of the city, Grant Park provides open space for Chicagonas and tourists to enjoy green space to relax and rejuvinate ...

A large number of Public Art pieces are scattered over the Grant Park area ....
For Public Art in the Grant Park .. click here ...

Chicago - Grant Park / Reading Cones - by Richard Serra


Reading Cones  - by Richard Serra



Reading Cones - by Richard Serra

1988 / Installed: 1990

Description: Two freestanding 17-foot tall curved steel walls 

Location: Grant Park 
 South of E. Monroe Dr. (100 S.) and east of S. Columbus Dr. (301 E.)
 Chicago, IL 60603

Donated by Leo Burnett Company in 1990


Chicago - Grant Park / General John Logan Memorial (1897) - by Auguste Saint-Gaudens

General John Logan Memorial




General John Logan Memorial 

Sculptor: August Saint-Gaudens (portrait) 
with the assistance of Alexander Phimster Proctor (horse)

Unveiled: 1897

Location: 337 East Randolph Street,
Grant Park (Michigan Avenue at 9th Street)

Saint-Gaudens sculpted the bronze figure of General Logan, and Alexander Phimister Proctor, an observer of American wilderness and sculptor who made enormous animal sculptures for the World’s Columbian Exposition, created Logan’s horse.



Chicago - Grant Park / The Bowman and The Spearman by Ivan Mestrovic


Bowman - by Ivan Mestrovic




The Bowman and The Spearman

Sculptor: Ivan Mestrovic

Installed: 1928

Description: Bronze figures /  H 17 ft. (each)


Location: Congress Plaza Gardens 
S. Michigan Ave. (100 E) & E. Congress Pkwy. (500 S) 
Chicago, IL 60604


Commissioned by the B.F. Ferguson Monument Fund, 
to commemorate Native Americans.



Chicago - Grant Park / Figure Fountains: Crane Girl, Fisher Boy, Dove Girl and Turtle Boy - by Leonard Crunelle





Dove Girl


Four Figure Fountains: 
Dove Girl, Turtle Boy, Crane Girl, Fisher Boy 
- by Leonard Crunelle


On the north and south of the Clarence Buckingham Memorial Fountain are the rose gardens. These rose gardens have four circular fountains with bronze figures installed in the center of each
The South Rose Garden has Dove Girl and Turtle Boy 
The North Rose Garden has Crane Girl and Fisher Boy

Location: Grant Park Rose Gardens
East of S. Columbus Dr. (301 E) north and south of E. Congress Pkwy. (500 S)
Chicago, IL 60605


Grant Park - South President's Court [Artists And Automobiles - Various Artists]


Artists And Automobiles
A series of sculptures by 5 Chicago artists...Mary Brogger, Ted Garner, Dessa Kirk, John Mason and Lucy Slivinski.
Location: South President's Court in Grant Park, located at Columbus Drive and Congress Avenue across from Buckingham Fountain ...

"Artists and Automobiles" was organized by the Public Art Program of the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs. It was presented by Allstate, in celebration of its 75th anniversary, and the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs ...

The artists were allowed to select automobile parts at Tech-Cor, [Allstate's state-of-the-art research and training facility in Wheeling, Ill.]..which was delivered to their respective studios. The artists used the discarded car parts like windshields, tailpipes, mufflers, sidewalls, springs and bumpers, and made them into pieces of art, like..
- Lilies [by Dessa Kirk],
- Glass Bench [by Ted Garner],
- Hedgerow [by Lucy Slivinski],
- Arise 2 [by John Mason] ...


Arise 2 : by John Mason...
made by metal quarter panels ...




Lilies - by Dessa Kirk ...
made by doors, hood, trunk and roof from five separate cars ..


Glass Bench - by Ted Garner ...
made from front and rear car windows, and the sides of a mini-van ...


Hedgerow - by Lucy Slivinski ...
made from car mufflers, metal bumpers, springs, tailpipes, headlights, taillights and rotors ...

# I did not see the art work of Mary Brogger is in the garden ... I am not too sure if it's on display ir not. However an exceptional piece of sculpture by Mary Brogger, the "Heymarket Memorial .. click here ... can be found in the Near North District on the DesPlaines Street between Lake and Randolph streets ...

# More sculptures made with automobile parts:
A lifesize sculpture named the "Moose" by John Kearney is on display at 401 N Michigan Avenue ... in the Pioneer Court .. click here ...

# Another sculpture using automobile parts by John Kearney, named the "Tin Park" can be found in the Oz Park .. click here ...

For more on Grant Park ..
# Public Art in the Grant Park .. click here ....
# Gardens in the Grant Park .. click here ..
# Often overlooked but remarkable features like pedestrian crossings, the railway lines underneath, the street lamp posts, balustrade, corbels, the Y-symbols .. click here ..
# For a brief history of Grant Park .. click here ..

Chicago - Grant Park / Magdalene - by Dessa Kirk

Magdalene - by Dessa Kirk




Magdalene - by  Dessa Kirk

Installed: 2005

Location: Congress Triangle Garden 
Congress Parkway, Grant Park


Dessa Kirk created the Magdalene sculpture specifically for its Congress Parkway site. In the summertime, the sculpture becomes part of the surrounding garden with vines and flowers that fill up the skirt of her dress.



Chicago - Grant Park / Clarence Buckingham Memorial Fountain


Clarence Buckingham Memorial Fountain



Clarence Buckingham Memorial Fountain 

Completed: 1927 

Architect: Edward Bennett designed the fountain 
in conjunction with French sculptor Marcel Loyau and 
engineer, Jacques H. Lambert


Location: Columbus Dr. (301 E.) & Congress Pkwy. (500 S.)
Chicago, IL 60605 


Kate Sturges Buckingham, philanthropist and art patron 
donated one million dollars for the fountain 
which was dedicated to the memory of her brother, Clarence Buckingham




Chicago - Museum Campus / Balbo Monument


Balbo Monument



Balbo was a fascist and the monument was a gift from Mussolini to the people of Chicago for their generosity in naming a street in honor of Balbo after the 1933 worlds fair held at Chicago.