My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
6.5. EDSR 01-20-2015
ElkRiver
>
City Government
>
Boards and Commissions
>
Economic Development Authority
>
EDA Packets
>
2014-2020
>
2015
>
01-20-2015
>
6.5. EDSR 01-20-2015
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
1/16/2015 3:18:38 PM
Creation date
1/16/2015 2:04:39 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
City Government
type
EDSR
date
1/15/2015
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
14
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
Project Approach <br />The overall look and movement of my piece is reminiscent of the windmills <br />used on farms to pump water. I have chosen the spoke patterns, shapes, colors, and <br />accents for my proposed piece for very specific reasons. A pattern from a vintage <br />coffee grinder, found in general stores just like those that would have been in the <br />early town of Elk River while it was growing, plays nicely with the hardworking <br />patterns drawn from early American agricultural and industrial designs. The <br />governor with its steel balls, used by water mills and steam engines to govern and <br />regulate their speed, gets a new life as artistic accent in my piece. The spherical <br />weights will rise and fall, interacting with the wind as its speeds change. <br />The shape of the curved pole that the whole piece sits atop is taken from the <br />City of Elk River's logo and is representative of the waterpower that built the city <br />and gave it its name. The lines are tipped vertically. The same curve of the pole's <br />lines is echoed in the falling, diminishing size of the vertical gears in the piece. The <br />tail of the piece has a vintage design, inspired by those found on old farm windmills. <br />The gears in my piece are handmade, drafted from patterns found through <br />years of documentation and research. They will be cut from sheets of self - <br />weathering steel using a plasma torch before being layered and welded together in a <br />method that mimics the casting process of period originals. The gears will be <br />painted and then distressed to give them a vintage appearance before being <br />arranged in the final composition. <br />The colors of the piece are important: The large dark blue gears on either <br />side of the piece represent the mighty Mississippi with the train of lighter blue gears <br />representing the Elk River as it flows into the Mississippi. The red gear is <br />representative of the city of Elk River on the banks at the confluence of both rivers. <br />The last two gears located on opposite sides of the sculpture represent the nature <br />that the city was built on, around, through, and with. To one side there is a green <br />cog, symbolizing the forest and lumber that helped build Elk River. To the other <br />side, a rich yellow gear serves as a reminder that the city is not just water and <br />woods, but also on the edge of the prairie that helped the area's agriculture to <br />flourish, causing Elk River to further grow into the modern city it is today. <br />Some more specifics on the piece that will give insight into my methods are <br />as follows: <br />The wind sculpture will be self- furling like those found on old farms, so that <br />the piece will take itself out of strong winds, increasing the longevity of the piece. <br />The piece will use standard replaceable off -the -shelf sealed stainless steel <br />bearings, with all the shafting and bearing sleeves also being constructed from <br />stainless steel to ensure that years from now, any future maintenance will be <br />smooth and easy. <br />A galvanized tail and wind veins will give the piece a vintage appearance, <br />resist corrosion, and contrast with the other colors, textures, and metals in the <br />sculpture. Made from self - weathering steel, the frame and base will take on a rusty <br />vintage appearance but not deteriorate as normal steel would. All painted parts, <br />such as the gears, will be painted with a durable automotive -type paint that is then <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.