22 December 2010

Bully_rock-life size statue horses-ropewalk-lobster-huntsman-steeplechase-jockey_horse_Lobster


The Residences at Bulle Rock in Northern Maryland make extensive use of art, sculpture and statues to link to the horse racing farm champion heritage of this fine property. Sculpture adds value and pleasurable environment. If your driving up I-95 get off at Havre De Grace Maryland and drive through,

14 December 2010

Philadelphia Rodin art-museum


Philadelphia has many museums within walking distance of each other. Along the main prominade between the Franklin Insitute, the Swan or 3 Rivers fountain and the Philadelphia museum of art is the Rodin museum.

13 December 2010

Doctor Bag


When art out sells signage
This giant doctors bag outside a medical office building in Stanton Delaware is so memorable you only have to drive by once to have your memory ingrained. Less can be said id these was a common sign reading "Doctors Office" Giant or monumental sculptures touch the deep inner child in us all.
That inner mind is impressed permanently and indelibly. This is why signage is not read or remembered and is unimpressive in todays over lettered world.

09 December 2010

Search results for "2010"


Traveling down Rt 27 in Bellmore area you see on the corner a prancing horse statue on a pedestal. The great thing about art or monumental statues is instant recognition and memorability. This interprets to making your business location a neighborhood icon or landmark. Sculpture not only has value for aesthetics but real value to marketing.

24 November 2010

BOY SLEEPING statue bronze sculpture


While on a trip to Italy I saw this marble sculpture of a boy happily sleeping. I liked it so much I made a few reproductions inspired by

Sleeping Child
Museo dell' Opera del Duomo, Siena, Tuscany, Italy
Duprè, Giovanni
I might also add to check the link in the header as one great place to research sculpture and art artandarchitecture.org. This is one of my favorite places to find who what and where classic art sculpture is made.This is a photo rich site so you can see the history in one place.

23 November 2010

Walking womans legs, click the link here Sag Narbor Long Island NY


So when is it art and when is it just a woman's parts statue? The answer is subjective or are their laws governing art?
We make many styles or nude statues so what belongs in public? Should these legs overbear a small Long Island resort town?
IMHO I have seen many statues including those on the lawns of Smithsonian Museums that just would not belong in a resort beach town. I say let the local public decide what works in the local neighborhood.Send the legs walking to SOHO or other artsy area.

University Mascot Griffin griphon gryphin GRIFFON_wax_mould


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Giant Bronze Statue of Liberty


A tribute to Freedom and Liberty our sacred heritage.
Seems the interpretation changes with time. Moods and public desires swing like a pendulum back and forth. It always has to swing too far one way before the mood swings back again. I like the classic interpretation set forth in the Constitution of United States in 1776. This is one document that fits all for the best of all citizens. So lets restore liberty once again.
The Statue of Freedom

The bronze Statue of Freedom by Thomas Crawford is the crowning feature of the dome of the United States Capitol. The statue is a classical female figure of Freedom wearing flowing draperies. Her right hand rests upon the hilt of a sheathed sword; her left holds a laurel wreath of victory and the shield of the United States with thirteen stripes. Her helmet is encircled by stars and features a crest composed of an eagle's head, feathers, and talons, a reference to the costume of Native Americans. A brooch inscribed "U.S." secures her fringed robes. She stands on a cast-iron globe encircled with the words E Pluribus Unum, the national motto at the time of her placement atop the dome.

The lower part of the base is decorated with fasces and wreaths. Ten bronze points tipped with platinum are attached to her headdress, shoulders, and shield for protection from lightning. The bronze statue stands 19 feet 6 inches tall and weighs approximately 15,000 pounds. Her crest rises 288 feet above the east front plaza.

A monumental statue for the top of the national Capitol appeared in Architect Thomas U. Walter's original drawing for the new cast-iron dome, which was authorized in 1855. Walter's drawing showed the outline of a statue representing Liberty; Crawford proposed an allegorical figure of "Freedom triumphant in War and Peace." After Secretary of War Jefferson Davis objected to the sculptor's intention to include a liberty cap, the symbol of freed slaves, Crawford replaced it with a crested Roman helmet.

Crawford was commissioned to design the Statue of Freedom in 1855 and executed the plaster model for the statue in his studio in Rome. He died in 1857 before the model left his studio. The model, packed into six crates, was shipped from Italy in a small sailing vessel in the spring of 1858. During the voyage the ship began to leak and stopped in Gibraltar for repairs. After leaving Gibraltar, the ship began leaking again to the point that it could go no farther than Bermuda, where the model was stored until other transportation could be arranged. Half of the crates finally arrived in New York in December, but all sections were not in Washington until late March of 1859.

Beginning in 1860, the statue was cast in five main sections by Clark Mills, whose bronze foundry was located on the outskirts of Washington. Work was halted in 1861 because of the Civil War, but by the end of 1862 the statue was finished and temporarily displayed on the Capitol grounds. The cost of the statue, exclusive of installation, was $23,796.82. Late in 1863, construction of the dome was sufficiently advanced for the installation of the statue, which was hoisted in sections and assembled atop the cast-iron pedestal. The final section, the figure's head and shoulders, was raised on December 2, 1863, to a salute of 35 guns answered by the guns of the 12 forts around Washington.

The plaster model of the statue, which had been in storage for 25 years, was reassembled and restored in the basement rotunda of the Russell Senate Office Building, where it was returned to public display in January 1993. In late 2008 the model was relocated to the new Capitol Visitor Center, where it is now a focal point of Emancipation Hall.

On May 9, 1993, after almost 130 years in place, the bronze statue was removed from its pedestal by helicopter for restoration. The work was needed because of extensive pitting and corrosion on the surface of the bronze and because of a crack and rusting on the cast-iron pedestal. The project was guided by the recommendations of a thorough conservation and engineering study conducted in 1991. The United States Capitol Preservation Commission provided $780,000 in privately raised funds, which covered all project costs.

The disfiguring caulk and much of the corrosion were removed by water blasted at medium pressure. Repairs to the statue included the insertion of over 700 bronze plugs in the most significant pits; bronze patches were also inserted where needed. Rusting original iron elements and the interior paint were removed. The bronze, which varied in composition and condition, was painstakingly repatinated to the "bronze green" noted in early records. Finally, layers of acrylic lacquer and wax were applied to protect the surface against further corrosion, and small gaps were sealed with caulk.

The cast-iron pedestal was restored in place atop the dome. The metal was stripped of paint, and the wreaths and fasces were removed to ensure that they were thoroughly cleaned and coated. The crack was permanently repaired, and the entire pedestal was primed and painted with a color specially mixed to match the statue.

Cigar Store Indians, What elese can you make with wood?



It is amazing what can be made with wood. From simple decorative items to entire buildings or bridges.Even early cars were made from wood. Wood has always been one of the strongest and versatile building materials.Still wood is king!
Let's build this thing
Wood is an amazing material — it's strong, malleable, and it literally grows on (or should I say, in?) trees. Depending on the type of tree, wood can be light and heavy, stiff and flexible, soft and hard. It can be carved, steamed, pressed and shaped in ways limited only by the technical prowess and imagination of its shaper. Humans have used it as a building material since the advent of tools, and contemporary designers often choose it in place of more modern substances like metal and plastic. Here are nine of the craziest things made of wood. (Text: Shea Gunther)

16 November 2010

Religious statue of Christian Monk

 
 
 
A new life size statue of religious catholic icon still in bronze unfinsihed.
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Humming bird bronze sculpture

 
 
 
 
Just a heads up on this new item. This is still unfinished as we will give this bird a very colorful finish to look life like. This life size Humming Bird is almost ready. We will soon paost it on our www.bigbronze.com site and our www.allclassics.com sita at discount to public.
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BP oil Pelican ltd edition

 
 
 
 
Final completion of the bronze sculpture titled " The BP Pelican"
This is the only one we made and sometimes when you try to make a timely sculpture time and interest passes. This one will be immediatly available so come early and get this statue.
This is a life size statue fo an oil soaked Pelican. A reminder of the great oil spill of 2010.
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11 November 2010

Box Turtle TK-94416


A bigger Box Turtle in bronze. Heck I always likes turtles for some reason. I had to make one just for myself. I have some extras if you like. Just call us at 302-738-2190 and we also sell some at steep discounts on Ebay.

Shanghai-Maglev


A beautiful Bronze Roman fountain in Shanghai China. This is at a new high line development in Shanghai China. All the urns, flower pots and fountain figures were cast bronze.

Roman Soldiers TK-52748-79



Copper metals, the predominate metal in bronze hits new highs of $4. a pound. This along with a lower US dollar in the international market will cause price increases of about 25% to retail customers of bronze castings.Buy your favorite sculpture now while prices are still low due to soft demand.
See charts below
http://www.kitcometals.com/charts/copper_historical_large.html

04 November 2010

Landmark status for your business


 


Make your local business a landmark location.
Placing a large life size statue or sculpture outside your business can make your place a landmark known to all who pass.People do not remember signs or what they say or where they saw them. Humans have an instinctual memory foe living figures or sculpture. Perhaps it just stands out in their inner child's mind set. Sculpture often costs less then signage and has much higher memory retention.This monumental Bull is at a historic pub in Huntington NY 11743 on Southdown rd. called The Valencia
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11 October 2010

Iconic Statue Makes a Business Stand Out


Adding a Statue can make Your Business Stand Out

If you're looking to add signage to the front of your business, a large bronze statue, sculpture, or fountain could be the way to go. In today's world of constant visual stimulus our attention spans are shorter than ever. We've become blind to standard billboards and other signage. Imagine a horse with blinders on, this has become the way we see the world. With so much visual stimulation, our brain has begun to tune these things out. What does this mean for a business? It means you have an even smaller chance of getting someones attention with a standard flat, lettered sign. Being creative in your approach at getting the attention you want and need for your business is more crucial than ever.

Placing a large, 3 dimensional bronze statue, sculpture, or fountain in front of your business is a great way to get people to stop and look rather than just move past without a second thought. You've now positioned yourself as a landmark rather than just another store or business craving attention. People love statues, they take pictures with them, connect with them, REMEMBER them. By adding a unique work of bronze art to your landscape they're likely to remember your business as well.

To see all of our monumental statues visit us here.

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08 October 2010

Georgia Gerber Sculpture to memorialize Terry Reim



Georgia Gerber Sculpture
The News Tribune
by CHRISTIAN HILL

University Place leader's spirit lives on in sculpture

The spirit that led Terry Reim to become one of University Place's biggest supporters is imbued in a bronze duck sculpture that will soon be dedicated in his honor at a place that was still a civic dream when he died.

Reim and his friend Dixie Harris founded the Duck Parade about a decade ago to generate foot traffic for a farmers market, another of their initiatives from the same period. While the farmers market is gone for now, the Duck Daze event continues each June, with participants dressing up like ducks to celebrate the end of the rainy season.

The affinity between Reim and the waterfowl doesn't end there. Like a duck paddling in water, those who knew him say he worked tirelessly while yielding results that looked effortless.

Reim's widow, Ruthann Reim McCaffree, said his mantra was to "move ahead and get things done."

"He was intense and complicated," she said. "He loved this community."

Reim was a strong proponent of University Place's incorporation and wanted to grow the tax base of the fledgling city - a goal officials aim to realize when their Town Center project finally opens on Bridgeport Way.

Plans for Town Center were just starting to take shape when Reim died at age 61 in April 2003. He fell off a ladder while remodeling his home.

Reim couldn't have anticipated that a sculpture built in his honor would be one of the first completed pieces of the development.

The first major tenant arrives in February, when The Pierce County Library System plans to open its new 15,000-square-foot library inside a civic building.

Meanwhile, construction continues on that building, which also will feature the future City Hall, ground-floor retail space and underground parking. The city also plans to sell about a dozen lots slated for mixed-use development around the building.

Drawing on his background as a developer and home builder, Reim led the city's economic development task force and its local chamber of commerce.

Councilman Ken Grassi recalled that Reim once promised cherries at the farmers market. When the vendor couldn't make it, Reim drove to Eastern Washington to pick up the cherries, drove back and ran the booth himself.

"He was a man of his word," Grassi said. "If he said it, he would do it, no matter what it took."

The sculpture captures Reim's deliberative manner, featuring a 41/2-foot-high male duck marching forward with a young duck on his back, its wings held out to keep balance. Walking beside the male duck is another duckling.

The nonprofit group UP for Art, working with Reim's widow and the city, commissioned sculptor Georgia Gerber to create the piece after an open competition.

The sculpture's cost is $30,000. UP for Art and the Terry Reim Memorial Fund donated $15,000. The city is contributing the remaining half from a state grant dedicated for the market square development.

Gerber, a sculptor from Whidbey Island, said the statue symbolizes Reim's drive and the whimsy of the events he helped create. She said her work also touches on themes of family and is "for the public to enjoy forever and embrace as a part of their community."

Reim McCaffree is pleased with Gerber's work. "I can't say enough about her. She took it to the whole next level."

The Reims were fixtures in University Place for the better part of their 40-year marriage, well before UP became a city in 1995.

The couple rented a home there in 1965, after Terry was drafted and ordered to report to Fort Lewis. After he completed his military service, the couple returned in 1968 to raise their family.

Reim McCaffree said the sculpture can be a metaphor for the city of nearly 31,000 residents.

"We're scrambling ... We're working hard to become a top-notch city for the people who live here and come here," she said. "I think the duck symbolizes that spirit, as well."




If you like ducks or other waterfowl we can help. At bigbronze.com we have a great selection of wild bird sculptures and fountains at wholesale pricing. We can also do custom pieces upon request if you'd like something bigger, like the piece by Ms. Gerber. You can see all our available pieces here!


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22 September 2010

Bronze Bust Sculpture of Frank Zappa Unveiled in Baltimore


Baltimore honors late rocker Frank Zappa with bust
BEN NUCKOLS

The Associated Press

BALTIMORE - Rocker Frank Zappa was born in Baltimore but gained greater popular acclaim in Europe than in the United States. On Sunday, devout European fans of the late musician brought his mustachioed likeness back home in the form of a bronze bust.

Several hundred fans gathered on a sweltering afternoon as city officials dedicated the bust of the ponytailed rocker outside an east Baltimore library. The bust is a replica of another in a public square in Vilnius, Lithuania, and was donated to the city by Zappa enthusiasts in the small Baltic nation.

"The spirit of Frank Zappa is alive and well in Baltimore," Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake said.

The mayor joined Zappa's widow, Gail, and three of his grown children in watching as a curtain was drawn back to reveal the bust set atop a 12-foot steel pole. Later, Zappa's son, Dweezil, took the stage with his tribute band, Zappa Plays Zappa.

Zappa was known for everything from novelty rock songs to elaborate classical compositions. He died of prostate cancer in 1993 at 52.

Sunday's ceremony marked the 25th anniversary of Zappa's testimony before Congress on freedom of expression for recording artists, though the scheduling was coincidental. Zappa had testified against proposed warning labels about lyrical content, calling them a path to censorshiop.

Libraries were a vital resource for Zappa, who had no formal music education, Gail Zappa told The Associated Press in a recent interview.

Zappa would have appreciated the bizarre way he came to be honored in his birthplace, his widow said. Zappa's songs were known for their quirky, humorous lyrics: One of his biggest hits was "Don't Eat the Yellow Snow." Yet his music was also a favorite of the avant-garde.

"He'd be wildly amused by this, because of the absurdity of these guys in Lithuania coming up with this phenomenal sculptor who normally does busts of Stalin," Gail Zappa said.

Zappa's daughter, Diva, choked up while addressing a throng that chanted Zappa's name.

"Thank you so much for just loving my dad," she said.

Also at the ceremony were the mayor of Vilnius and Saulius Paukstys, the longtime president of a Lithuanian Zappa fan club who commissioned the original statue.

He has described the effort to erect the bust in Vilnius in the early 1990s as a test of the former Soviet republic's fledgling independence. The Baltimore dedication, he said, was a great day "for art, the human mind and democracy."

Helen Urban, 61, of Silver Spring, was among the Zappa fans in the crowd and saw the original bust during a trip to Lithuania last year. The replica is in a better location, Urban said.

"They have it sitting in the parking lot of a hospital," she said. "It's ugly as sin, but it's cool."

Gail Zappa, on the other hand, finds it beautiful.

"The guy was inspired," she said of sculptor Konstantinas Bogdanas. "It's more than a likeness. It captured the force of his personality and his will in terms of being an artist."



If you'd like a custom bronze bust made, like the veiled Madonna pictured above, we can work with you and make your vision into a reality. We'll take images of the person you'd like memorialized and create a bronze bust that will last many generations, and, we'll do it at a price you can afford.


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21 September 2010

WHEN MASCOTS ATTACK!! Ohio's Mascot exacts justice on Brutus the Buckeye

OHIO STATE BUCKEYE MASCOT GETS TACKLED BY RIVAL MASCOT



In what was easily the best tackle of the day for the Ohio U. Bobcats, their mascot, Rufus laid a lick on Brutus the Buckeye of Ohio State that A.J. Hawk would be proud of. The motivation? Just to do what was done, tackle Brutus. In a strange twist, the young man that donned the Bobcat suit made it his life's ambition to tackle Brutus. Enjoy your 15 seconds of fame pal.

If you'd like your mascot done in bronze, we're here to help. We can custom make any style or size you'd like. Like the Iowa Herky below!



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15 September 2010

Copper Pricing Continues to Rise Bronze Prices Affected

COPPER PRICES CONTINUE TO TREND UPWARD

Over the last 2 months the price of copper has steadily climbed back above $3/lb. That price is reflective of the raw price, with the price of refined, workable copper being close to, if not more than, triple that $3 mark. As the main componenent of bronze, this greatly affects the pricing of statuary created in bronze. Taking advantage of prices based on the old market value of copper would be wise as once the current crop of merchandise is sold the new pieces are likely to increase greatly in cost.

For great deals on bronze statues, fountains, and sculptures visit bigbronze.com.

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14 September 2010

Bart Walter Sculpture of Lion and Boy


Carroll County sculptor brings wild imagination to Westminster Library
By Jay R. Thompson

Drivers on Main Street in Westminster will soon notice an addition to the downtown decor.

A life-size bronze lion will be sitting like a majestic sentinel atop a granite pedestal near the entrance of the Westminster Library.

"It really was a library-inspired piece," said Lisa Back, a spokeswoman for the Carroll County Public Library system.

"At the base of the lion is a young boy who is reading a book," she said. "It's a physical representation of books transporting us to other worlds."

The sculpture "Wild Imaginings" was created by Westminster artist Bart Walter, who's been a full-time professional sculptor for three decades, during which time he's done about a dozen pieces of this scale.

"We thought it was important to use local artists to keep it tied to the community," Back said.

The lion will sit atop a polished, black granite pedestal that's about 3 feet tall. The top of the lion will be about 8 feet above ground level.

"I'm sure visitors will notice the lion first, and I hope it will communicate a real lion to them," said Walter, who has created works for The Smithsonian National Zoo, in Washington, the National Museum of Wildlife Art, in Jackson Hole, Wyo., the Maryland Zoo, in Baltimore, and Northwest Middle School, in Taneytown.

"But then they'll notice the boy and wonder about the boy in the context of a lion, and hopefully think about reading and how it can transport you to anywhere you want to be," he said.

"For children, hopefully it will open up their imagination," he said.

Walter knows what it's like to be transported by books.

"I grew up in Baltimore," he said. "I was stuck in the city all week and I became a mental traveler through books."

Walter's sculpture will be unveiled Friday, Sept. 17, at 3 p.m. at a ribbon cutting ceremony celebrating the completion of the library's renovation.

The Westminster branch is 30 years old, Back said.

"It was showing its age inside as well as outside," she said. Over the course of about three years, the library's roof has been replaced, lighting was improved, accessibility and walkways were improved, and the public spaces inside were renovated, including the children's area.

"You go through a tunnel to go into the children's area," Back said.

The cost of the renovation, not including the sculpture, was around $1.6 million, paid for with a state grant and with matching funds from the county.

"The final stage is the re-landscaping of the park in front of the branch," Back said.

The sculpture was paid for with private donations -- with a healthy discount from the artist himself, who said normally, a piece this size can run hundreds of thousands of dollars.

"We did it as a favor to a local institution that we enjoy and have enjoyed for a long time," Walter said. "I was just trying to help them make it happen."

The sculpture echoes a tradition of putting lion statues at the entrances of buildings.

"Sculptures have been used as guardians of libraries and art museums for well over 100 years," Walter said.

Some notable examples of lion statues as guardians are at the New York Public Library and at the Baltimore Museum of Art, putting the Westminster branch among grand company.

"Coming to the library should be more of an event than an errand," Back said.

"Wild Imaginings" is the first of four sculptures the Westminster branch library hopes to purchase from local artists.

The next piece will be carved on site next summer from limestone contributed by the Lehigh Cement Company in Union Bridge. The library is still searching for an artist and an artwork for that block of stone, Back said.



If your entrance needs a lion, or two, we have what you're looking for. Like our "Majestic Lions" pictured above, we can make your entranceway, public area, park, or landscape really stand out. Check out our website for all our beautiful lions and other animals.

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10 September 2010

As Sculptures Proliferate in College Football, the Bar for Legends Dips; Casting Danny Wuerffel


Enough With the Statues, Already

By DARREN EVERSON

There's nothing wrong with commissioning a statue in honor of the late Alabama football coach Paul "Bear" Bryant, who is universally regarded as one of the icons of college football.

Anyone who doesn't have a heart of stone would have supported Marshall's decision to display a memorial to the members of the 1970 football team who died in a plane crash.

But when a conversation about football statuary starts to veer toward the likes of Nick Saban, Danny Wuerffel and Tim Tebow, it's probably time to stop, locate the nearest paper bag and breathe into it.

If you need any more evidence that college football is in the midst of a new era of blind extravagance and euphoric self-congratulation, all you have to do is start counting statues.

A growing number of schools across the nation have decided they aren't content to reward winning coaches by paying them millions of dollars—or to honor their recent star players by retiring jersey numbers. The latest technique is to send a few still photos to the neighborhood sculptor.

By the end of the season, Alabama hopes to honor its current football coach of three seasons, Mr. Saban, with a statue outside Bryant-Denny Stadium in Tuscaloosa. This is something the school has done for its other national-title-winning coaches. It was initially thought the statue might be up already, but it's still being molded because earlier renderings weren't quite right. "It looked like Robert De Niro," a school official said.

Florida, Alabama's top competition in the Southeastern Conference in recent years, is close to completing statues of the school's three Heisman Trophy winners—Steve Spurrier (1966), Mr. Wuerffel (1996) and Mr. Tebow (2007).

Oklahoma, meanwhile, is becoming statue central. Four of the Sooners' Heisman winners have gotten them since 2005; a fifth, of 2008 winner Sam Bradford, is on the way. Oklahoma also plans statues of four of its coaches over the next year, including Bob Stoops, the current coach.

The schools say the statues dress up stadiums, giving them a formal "front door" that celebrates their history. They say fans delight in snapping photos of the statues. They also note that these artworks are paid for in an appropriate manner: Mr. Saban's statue, which will cost about $50,000, is being funded by the Crimson Tide Foundation via private donations. So it's not like tuition increases are supporting this. "I'd just say that, right or wrong, the thing that brings a lot of immediate attention to a university is its athletic programs," says Alabama athletic director Mal Moore. "It's a way of recognizing that success."

It's obviously debatable, of course—especially in the case of Mr. Saban, who was coaching at rival LSU just a few seasons ago. "Saban statue is too much, too soon," said the headline of a Birmingham News column earlier this year.

"It's a dangerous precedent about the statement of football over academics," says author Chris Warner, an LSU alumnus and SEC football fan who wrote a book about conference tailgating. "We're building monuments to coaches. It's a pretty good indicator of where we are."

Traditionally, statues have been erected for football legends long after their playing careers or after decades of service, like the late Grambling coach Eddie Robinson, who had a museum opened in his memory in February on the school's Louisiana campus. Penn State's 83-year-old coach Joe Paterno, whose 18th-ranked Nittany Lions visit Mr. Saban's top-ranked Tide in a highly anticipated game on Saturday, had a statue unveiled in his honor in 2001.

Others have been immortalized in bronze or stone after a tragic death. Nebraska found a way to honor a revered former coach in tandem with a fallen former player: A 2006 statue depicts Tom Osborne, the school's all-time winningest coach, instructing quarterback Brook Berringer, who died in a 1996 plane crash at age 22.

Two years ago, Syracuse unveiled a statue of star running back Ernie Davis, the first black Heisman winner, who died of leukemia less than two years after winning the 1961 award. It was a fine subject, but there was just one problem: The statue depicted Davis wearing modern football equipment, including Nike shoes. (Nike didn't exist when Davis played.) The mistake was later corrected.

In 2003, Washington honored former coach Jim Owens with a statue, an event that spurred an NAACP protest. Mr. Owens had been accused of racism in 1969 for suspending four black players for a perceived lack of loyalty. Mr. Owens, who died last year, apologized at the unveiling.

Some subjects have approached these honors with humility. Mr. Wuerffel, the former Florida star, now works with Desire Street Ministries, a group that works to transform inner-city neighborhoods through what it calls "spiritual development." He says statues on campus shouldn't be limited to football players like him. "There are countless unsung heroes in our world that don't get the public attention that athletes and entertainers do."

"You don't have the statue there to idolize," says ESPN analyst and former Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz, who received one in 2008. "You have it to remind people of the tradition."

Mr. Saban's planned statue is a symbol of changing times. It used to be that no Alabama coach was worthy of mention in the same breath as Bryant, an Alabama player who returned and won six national titles there. But Bryant has been gone so long—he died in 1983—that Mr. Saban is all many Alabama students know, says Paul Finebaum, a Birmingham radio host and columnist.

And so public opinion about the Saban statue, which Mr. Finebaum says is mostly in favor, is somewhat split by age. "People 50 or above say, 'I don't have a problem with it, but don't you think we ought to wait?' " says Mr. Finebaum. "The young people wonder: Why doesn't he have a statue already?"




If you'd like to memorialize a sports figure, local hero, or mascot and you want a quality piece at an affordable price, we're the solution! We have done many custom pieces, like the one pictured above, and we can work with you to make your vision a reality. Even if it's another sports figure! Check out our website to see all of our great pieces and to check out more of our custom work.


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01 September 2010

NEW SCULPTURES IN-STOCK!




We just got our summer load in with all sorts of beautiful statues, sculptures, and fountains including three pieces we feel will really be a hit! The first is a pair of 7 foot tall Roman or Greek centurion's. They're a perfect piece for a school as mascots or to guard the entrance of a home or office. The second, our exclusive design, is a statue of two children, or brother and sister if you will, with the older boy giving the younger girl a piggyback ride. This makes a great addition to a park, schoolyard, or public space. And, finally we have our box turtle piece, also our design, which is a great little piece for a garden, landscape, or inside your home. Check them all out at our website for pricing!

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27 August 2010

Philadelphia Museum of Art gets a giant plug


Claes Oldenburg Sculpture
philly.com
By Stephan Salisbury

Philadelphia Museum of Art gets a giant plug

It dangled high in the air, a connector seeking a connection, before slowly being lowered into the waiting earth.

At 11:45 this morning, the Philadelphia Museum of Art was at last plugged in.

After hours of maneuvering and digging and pondering, the museum installed the latest addition to its outdoor sculpture garden, a gift from collector and philanthropist David Pincus - Claes Oldenburg's Giant Three-Way Plug, Scale A, a nearly 10-foot long electric plug, a cube tap grown to monstrous proportions, now protruding from a grassy knob outside the museum's west entrance.

Dating from 1970, the plug is the second colossal outdoor sculpture fashioned by Oldenburg using everyday objects as inspiration. (The first was his Lipstick, installed at Yale University in 1969.)

Pincus, 83, who watched Wednesday's installation for hours, acquired one of three big plugs (the other two are at the St. Louis Art Museum and the Allen Art Museum, Oberlin College), early in the 1970s and, with the artist's assistance, installed it in his Wynnewood backyard.

He remembers Oldenburg coming down from New York to help install the piece so many years ago.

"We had a wonderful time," Pincus said. "We were digging in the backyard. Even Oldenburg. He loved fresh fruit and my wife went out to get him some. He did some drawings in a little book."

Now Pincus has given the piece to the art museum in honor of Anne d'Harnoncourt, the museum's late director. The sculpture garden, which began with a sheaf of works by Isamu Noguchi, will be named in d'Harnoncourt's honor at a Sept. 7 ceremony.

"I'm sure Anne would be delighted with what they've done with the garden," said Pincus, now 83. "She was something special."

Will he miss seeing the plug as he strolls behind his home?

"My kids will," Pincus said, as he watched the crew of workers from Atelier Art Services, the Philadelphia firm that stored and moved the piece prior to its installation.

"'Dad, don't do that!'" Pincus said his grown children urged. "But art is for enjoyment. You have it in a lifetime. It doesn't belong to you."

Oldenburg, who couldn't make it down from New York for the Wednesday dig and drop, said the concept for the plug, made of Cor-Ten steel and bronze, was actually architectural.

"The plug looks very much like a building," he said, describing the form. It is actually set into the earth, like a building rising from a subterranean foundation.

"There was also the idea that this might have fallen from outer space," said Oldenburg. "It has no base, no platform." In fact, he said, it appears to have "fallen and created its own hole in the ground."

With the addition of the plug to the art museum's sculpture garden, there will be three high-visibility outdoor Oldenburgs in Philadelphia. A fourth is coming next year, a 50-plus foot paint brush rising from a plaza - yet to be constructed - next to the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, across North Broad Street from the new convention center extension.

There is no question that Philadelphia is now the center of public work by Oldenburg, who is known for creating mammoth renderings of everyday objects. The first two works installed in the city were Clothespin, erected at the Centre Square office development, 15th and Market Streets, in 1976; it was followed in 1981 by the University of Pennsylvania's Split Button.



If you need a large bronze statue, sculpture or fountain for your museum, school, park, or workplace, we've got you covered! Check out our website http://www.bigbronze.com for all of our great pieces, all at wholesale pricing.

25 August 2010

Salvador Dalí Sculpture Stolen from Belfortmuseum in Belgium


The bronze statue 'La Femme aux tiroirs' (Lady with drawers) by Spanish artist Salvador Dali, at the permanent exhibition of Dali art pieces in the Belfortmuseum in Brugge, Belgium. On 18 August 2010, the work was stolen from the exhibition room of the Belfort tower in broad daylight. EPA/JAN DHARTET - DALI-INTERART

BRUGES.- The sculpture "Woman with Drawers" by Salvador Dali, valued at 100,000 euros, was stolen from an exhibition hall in Bruges (NW Belgium), the Belgian press said today.

A security camera filmed how the thieves hid the statue in a bag and left the show shortly after noon Wednesday, images that are being analyzed by police, according to several newspapers.

The theft has not been confirmed yet by the company hosting the exhibition, Interart.

The work, a bronze of about 50 centimeters wide and 30 tall, weighs about ten kilos.

InterArt has been organising successful exhibitions with work of the Spanish surrealist painter Salvador Dalí since 1991. Inter Art exhibited a large collection of Dalí's paintings, watercolours, drawings and objects at the Bruges arts centre Oud Sint-Jan in 1997. After years of collecting and research, Inter Art opened the permanent Museum-Gallery Xpo: Salvador Dalí, Marquis de Púbol in the belfry of Bruges. The outstanding collection of watercolours, drawings, sculptures and famous works of graphic art are on display in a unique and exclusive building, which has been decorated by Barron Saint Mythelfinger, the 360° artist designer of Grand Opera Decor. He transformed the medieval hall into a Dalínian showroom, a work of art on itself. Its colours are gold, mother-of-pearl and shocking pink.



If you'd like to own a Dali inspired bronze you don't have to steal one, you can purchase our original piece pictured above. It's inspired by Dali's Venus painting and is sure to add a great artistic presence to your home, garden, or landscape. If you'd like to see more pictures and get pricing info, please check out our website.

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20 August 2010

SAVE BIG for AUGUST Bronze Sculpture & Fountain Sale


Save even more! For the final 2 weeks of August we're offering an extra 10% off our already low low prices! Just mention you saw our blog and you'll save hundreds, maybe thousands of dollars on your purchase! We have the largest in-stock selection of bronze sculpture, statues and fountains on the east coast. We can also order any piece we may not have in-stock or do a custom piece that fits your exact need. Call us weekdays 9-4p EST at 302.738.2190. Add the perfect piece to your landscape, entrance, park, pool, or garden. You won't believe our selection! Children, animals, nautical, equestrian, classical and western are just some of the styles we have in-stock. Our prices can't be beat. Go to our site to see all our pieces!

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18 August 2010

Brand New Sculpture added to our HUGE In-stock collection



Pictured above is the final version of our brand new design! Our "piggyback" bronze sculpture is a great way to add to an otherwise boring landscape, courtyard, or public space. great for parks, schools, hospitals, or your home. This piece was designed by our very own Broge Kilrain. You won't find this wonderful statue anywhere else. Especially at the great price we're offering it at!

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11 August 2010

Bronze Horse Statues & Sculptures Delivered Free






If you're close by to our TAX FREE Newark, DE warehouse and need a bronze statue, sculpture, or fountain delivered fast we can help. Just stop by, pick out your piece and we'll arrange for your piece to be delivered. We can have pieces within a 50 mile radius of our location. The pictures above are of a recent delivery we made to a prominant lawyer here in Delaware. The bronze horse statues were delivered very nearly to the spot he planned on installing them. If you're interested in a bronze horse statue or fountain, we have the largest selection on the east coast, by far. Check out our website for all our beautiful bronze sculptures and fountains, at wholesale prices.

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