GOAT(desic) Domes: Exploring our Connections
Artists: David Bibelhauser and Lauren Argo
Saturday, October 22, 2011
10 AM - 4 PM
Billy Goat Hill Community Garden Payne Street (across from the Clifton Center)
Gather with neighbors, Neighborhood Institute Alumni and other community partners to assist in the construction of our 3rd P.A.I.N.T. Project in a Community Build Day.
The domes will be built on site with YOUR help and the guidance of the artists. At the Billy Goat Hill Community Garden, the geodesic domes will create an idea space in the for its members, neighbors and community to socialize, meditate, learn and relax.
*The artwork has been given a Certificate of Appropriateness by the Historic Landmarks and Preservation Districts Commission.
Celebration of a Community Garden Experience and learn more about Louisville's most educational community garden (and a Neighborhood Institute project) with informative on-site workshops! Workshop Schedule: (each workshop is 30 minutes. approx. plus Q & A session)
4 PM - GOAT(desic) DOMES Dedication with Councilwoman Tina Ward-Pugh.
Public Art! Community-building! Family Fun! Refreshments!
More information on the Clifton/Crescent Hill PAINT project... Project: GOAT(desic) DOMES: Exploring our Connections
Artists: David Bibelhauser and Lauren Argo Neighborhood: Clifton/Crescent Hill
GOAT(desic) DOMES: Exploring our Connections is the creation of David Bibelhauser and Lauren Argo. This unique, community-oriented, interactive public project includes the construction and installation of two geodesic dome structures at the Billy Goat Hill Community Garden.
The geometry of the dome creates a space that allows for proper circulation of ambient air with least amount of energy input. The domes will create the largest usable space with the most efficient use of land and materials. Each piece of the dome supports a part of the whole structure's weight. If just one piece were to weaken or be removed, the entire structure would become unstable. It is metaphorical commentary on working together. By studying the domes, we can find we are all connected.
When you think about standing inside something, you think about being away for nature. The opposite is true is true when you are inside these geodesic domes. You will feel the outside - you will feel the air...you will hear the birds chirping and the wind rustling through the trees. You will remain a part of nature...and you will still be connected to the community around you.
The Upper Dome will provide partial shade with its painted canvas coverings and can be used as a place of rest and fellowship. It will serve the community in similar ways the hoop house does now.
The lower Dome will eventually be covered with living, climbing vines that will add a natural element to the sculpture over time. Uses could include: a meditation or reflection hut, a storytelling nook and a gathering place to learn from your neighbors and fellow gardeners.
The domes are sculptures that will visually become a part of the community and will bring the community together through limitless environmental and educational programs that could take place "within" them. Also, the two domes will visually link the upper and lower fields and utilize the path in the woods that connects them. All of the garden members, partners and neighbors are asked to be involved in the installation of the sculptures. When you involve the community in creating a piece of public art, its members are more connected to the work and are more likely to make it part of their lives.
GOAT(desic) DOMES: Exploring our Connections is supported by an Arts and Culture grant from Louisville Metro.
To learn more about the PAINT program, please visit: www.centerforneighborhoods.org |
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