Showing posts with label library. Show all posts
Showing posts with label library. Show all posts

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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31 March 2010

Creating a new sculpture design, "The Piggyback Ride"




We're constantly trying to come up with new and imaginative designs to keep our inventory fresh and give people a wide range of styles to choose from. Our latest piece, entitled "The Piggyback Ride" is a design we think celebrates the love of family and the bond between siblings. It portrays an older boy giving his younger sister a piggyback ride. We think this would be a great piece for a schoolyard, park, library courtyard, or playground. It really captures those playful days of youth and the love between a brother and sister. It's set to be completed this spring and due in our warehouse in the fall. If you'd like to pre-order one please e-mail us at sales@allclassics.com or call us weekdays at 302.738.2190

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08 January 2010

Custom Ronald Reagan for the USS Ronald Reagan and Library


A few years back we did a custom bronze sculpture for the USS Ronald Reagan of the president. The life-size bronze statue is situated in the welcome center as you come on board. The ship is docked in the harbor in San Diego. This piece was donated as a show of our patriotism and support of the Reagan memory. Another model was donated to the ranch the family had by Nancy herself. A third was placed in Reagan's boyhood hometown. And another is in the state house in Maryland. The final piece in the series was to be sold to a private collector, however it was never picked up. It is now available for sale at our ebay store at a significant discounted price. It would be a great addition to a library, museum exibit, or private collection. You can see it here.

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