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The Mission of the Sculpture Program
The South Carolina
Botanical Garden Nature-based Sculpture Program Mission, Goals and Objectives.
The South
Carolina Botanical Garden Nature-based Sculpture Program is administered
through the Botanical Garden's Cultural Programs and is produced in partnership
with Clemson University's Landscape Architecture program. The mission
of this public art program is four-fold.
Part
1 of the Mission
First, the sculpture program exists to allow Nature-oriented sculptors
opportunity to create original works that:
1) are a response to a natural site selected by the artist
2) are constructed predominately of natural materials
3) incorporate living plant material
4) are intended to invoke an intrinsic connection with Nature (not to
make provocative social or political statements or commentary)
5) and create a "sacred" space where the viewer experiences him/herself
as an interactive, integral part of the invocation as well as the physical
creation.
The result of this program is a unique collection of living sculptures
that create sacred spaces that grow, transform and decline seasonally
with each passing year. Sculptures in most site-specific, Nature-based
programs have a life span of not more than six months to a year. The "extended
ephemeral" nature of this transformational art form allows a living landscape
feature to evolve as the original piece degrades, leaving an ever changing
impression of the artist's original proposition. The life expectancy of
the Garden's extant works range from 15 to 60 years.
go to Part 2 of the Mission
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