LYNN CHAPPY ARTSPARK: SCULPTURES & DESIGN
Inspired by geological history and the natural flow of water, ArtsPark features works of art integrated into the beautiful park surrounding the Wilson Center, taking our mission to be a catalyst for lifelong learning outdoors.
ArtsPark was designed by a multi-disciplinary team of artists, architects, and members of the community. Phase I began with the installation of our inaugural ArtsPark sculpture, Flit by Nizar Schaller, in Soerens Circle Drive, and continues as more sculptures and design elements are added.
FRONT YARD - MASTER GARDENS
The Strohmaier Sculpture Garden, which surrounds the Wilson Center and is located adjacent to the new Burke Colonnade, is created by the Southeast Wisconsin Master Gardeners, Inc. (SEWMG) to enhance the visual appeal of the immediate grounds through the botanical arts. In June 2009, the Wilson Center became an SEWMG-approved garden to provide an appealing educational experience for the community. Approximately 30 gardens in SE Wisconsin have gained approval including hospital healing gardens, local school projects, and gardens in other major attractions such as the Milwaukee County Zoo, Ten Chimneys, and Old World Wisconsin.
Two beds have already been transformed at the Wilson Center by Master Gardeners and community volunteers. One bed was dedicated to native perennials in 2009, and a butterfly garden was established in the following year. In 2012, the butterfly garden was registered as a Monarch Way Station providing a habitat conducive to Monarch preservation. The garden contains several types of milkweed and many nectar plants. Plants are identified by markers labeled with both scientific name and common names.
Numerous plein air classes have already taken place in the gardens, including a family nature photography class led by SEWMG volunteers which provided exploration and learning opportunities to students of all ages.
Community support is encouraged. For more information about the garden or volunteer opportunities, contact the Wilson Center Facilities Manager.
FRONT YARD - THE BURKE COLONNADE
One of the first visual impressions of the Wilson Center has become an eye-catching landscape that greatly enhances the arts-rich environment. Combining the beauty of nature with state-of-the-art sustainable technology, the Wilson Center unveiled its newest building enhancement at our annual arts education fundraiser, The Big Event, on June 3, 2017: The Burke Colonnade.
Combining the beauty of whole trees from nature with state-of-the-art technology, The Burke Colonnade is a breathtaking structure designed by WholeTrees Architecture and Structures that reimagines the area adjacent to the Kuttemperoor Grand Hall.
Long-term plans surrounding the Colonnade include collecting rainwater from the roof into an integrated system of artfully designed downspouts, woven throughout the pathways, and through a “seep wall” to gently infiltrate and become part of the water system in a more environmentally responsible way.
FRONT YARD - FLIT
Wisconsin artist Nizar Schaller drew his inspiration for Flit while watching a sparrow on the campus of the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture that was building its nest. “The sculpture is a tribute to nature. Growth in nature happens over extended periods of time; when you go out into the garden to observe a plant, it doesn’t seem to change, but if you go a week later and then another week later, it is completely transformed,” said Schaller. “There’s an underlying geometry, but the unfolding is never the same.”
Selected by jury and public vote as the winner of the Circle Drive Sculpture Contest and unveiled at the Wilson Center's premier arts education fundraiser, The Big Event, on June 4, 2016, Flit stands 15 feet tall in the Soerens Circle Drive outside the Wilson Center main entrance. Flit's graceful presence creates interesting shadows by day and a lighted presence by night. A programmable 122-LED light array offers opportunities for connection art and technology.
About the Artist: Nizar Schaller is an artist and designer, with training in both the United Kingdom and South Africa. Exploring relationships between natural and built environments, Schaller takes a philosophical approach to his creative processes and design principles. Structural interventions are used to echo the natural environment, creating a place for open discourse and social exchange. His work exists in its natural state, combining raw materials with manmade to question the perception of natural environments. Schaller holds a Bachelor’s of Architectural Studies from the University of Cape Town, South Africa, and is a Master of Architectural Studies candidate from the Taliesin, Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture. He has worked as a designer and architect contributing to both residential and commercial projects; most recently, he designed and built an architectural folly on the Frank Lloyd Wright School of Architecture Campus in Spring Green, Wisconsin. Recent awards include the Taliesin Fellows Scholarship Award.
Click here to watch a WISN 12 NEWS interview between Nizar Schaller and WISN co-anchor Melinda Davenport.
CENTRAL ENTRY & ALLEÉ - SHIFTING PERSPECTIVE
Originally proposed as an integrated sculpture for the Lynn Chappy ArtsPark Circle Drive Sculpture Contest in 2016, Milwaukee artist and educator Ray Chi has been commissioned by the Wilson Center to reimagine Shifting Perspective as a decentralized sculpture installed at five locations along the existing ArtsPark perimeter path. Shifting Perspective is a field of colorful abstract shapes reaching upward on stainless steel stems, like a field of wildflowers, and is intended to be experienced both close-up and at a distance. At specific locations, the jumble of shapes coalesces into crisp and clearly legible text—five words that invite us to discover and celebrate our relationship with the arts: inspire, play, connect, explore, and dream.
Shifting Perspective is designed to embrace the natural serenity and openness of each of the sites throughout ArtsPark while encouraging viewers to become active participants in discovering the artwork and create a unique sculptural experience that can be enjoyed by all, 365 days a year.
About the Artist: Ray Chi is a multi-disciplinary artist based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He holds a Master’s Degree in Architecture from the Southern California Institute of Architecture and a Bachelor of Science degree in Architecture from the University of Michigan. Recently, he was awarded a public art commission for the East Milwaukee Public Library and is currently focused on researching and rethinking playscape design as a viable site for abstract and interactive sculpture. Chi’s work has been exhibited in galleries and theaters in New York, Los Angeles, and throughout the Midwest. He has been awarded grant funding through the Wisconsin Arts Board and the Mary L. Nohl Fund for Individual Artists, and was named “Artist of the Year” by the Milwaukee Arts Board in 2005. He currently works as an associate lecturer in the Department of Art and Design at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee.
BACKYARD - SCULPTURE
Designed to act as benches or simply to artistically enhance the landscape on the east lawn of the Wilson Center, Terese Agnew’s Varied Recurrence already proves that art can be admired and functional. Starry Nights patrons vie for its use and Arts Campers adore it for seating and art tables. Varied Recurrence is a series of cast concrete sculptures resembling the stumps of native Wisconsin trees. Recalling the origin of theatre, Agnew’s design concept emulates the custom of the early Greeks in gathering for a theatrical performance. In the year 2050, students from the School District of Elmbrook will open “time capsules” that they buried under the sculptures. The hope is that future musicians, artists, and actors from Elmbrook Schools will return to see where their artistic careers began.
BACKYARD - SCULPTURE
The path of water, as it flows over our land, filling our lakes,
rivers and streams is the path of life. Created by artist Susan Falkman, who also created Streaming located in the Wilson Center's Kuttemperoor Grand Hall, Water’s Way is a visual representation of one aspect of that journey. Carved from red granite, the sculpture is virtually indestructible. Rain falls, filling a polished basin at the top that overflows and runs down the face of the granite through cut grooves that represent a river. The river starts from a narrow point at basin and widens as it flows toward the bottom. From the hillside above the sculpture, the river cut into the face of the red granite suggests the graceful shape of a feminine form, a drawing in the stone. The drawing is echoed in two granite benches set at angles just near the opening of the river and opposite from the basin. From one side of each bench, a rain garden can be seen, where native plants create a home for butterflies, birds, and other native life forms. From the other side of either bench is the view of the sculpture and the parkway beyond.
Thank you to our ArtsPark Donors: Lynn Chappy, Andrea and Tony Bryant, Murph and John Burke, Bill and Sandy Haack, The Honkamp Family, Mary Ann and Llody Gerlach, The Strohmaier Family, Southeast Wisconsin Master Gardeners, National Endowment for the Arts, and Greater Milwaukee Foundation - Mary L. Nohl Fund.
Thank you to our Contributing Artists and Partners: Ray Chi, Shifting Perspective; Peter Flanary, 22 Steps; George Lundeen, Joy of Music; John Rawlins, Dancing Cranes; Terese Agnew, Varied Recurrence; Nizar Schaller, Flit; Gail Simpson and Aristotle Georgiades, Host; Joel Pfeiffer, Bridging the Arts; Caerulean Design, ArtsPark Master Site Plan; Whole Trees and VJS Construction Services, The Burke Colonnade; Susan Falkmann, Water's Way.
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