Windsor Sculpture Park
The Windsor Sculpture Park, formerly known as the Odette Sculpture Park, is an open space in Windsor, Ontario, Canada, that shows 35 large-scale contemporary sculptures by world-renowned artists including Elisabeth Frink, Gerald Gladstone, and Sorel Etrog.
The park is located on the shore of the Detroit River, spanning from Assumption Park to Centennial Park, between the Ambassador Bridge (Huron Church Road) and the Art Gallery of Windsor (Church Street).
The Sculpture Park was funded by Mr and Mrs Louis Odette and the P & L Odette Foundation. The park is maintained by the city's Parks and Recreation Department, while the sculptures are cared for by the Cultural Affair Department.
Works
- Apatosaurus
- Audio Corridor, Ian Lazarus
- Bell Measure, Stephen Cruise
- Chicken and Egg, Morton Katz
- Business Man on a Horse, William McElcheran
- Claim Post, Scott McKay
- The Columns, Ronald Zerafa
- Composition with Five Elements, Haydn Llewellyn Davies
- Consophia, Ian Lazarus
- Cordella, Maryon Kantaroff
- Ground to Ask the Sky, Royden Mills
- Consolation, Joe Rosenthal
- Dancing Bear, Pauta Saila
- Eve's Apple, Edwina Sandys
- Flying Men, Elisabeth Frink
- The Garden, Maryon Kantaroff
- King and Queen, Sorel Etrog
- Morning Flight, Gerald Gladstone
- Obelisk, Sigmund Reszetnik
- Penguins on a Waterfall, Yolanda Vandergaast
- Racing Horses, Derrick Stephan Hudson
- Rinterzo, Joseph DeAngelis
- Salutation, Ralph Hicks
- Sisters 2, Morton Katz
- Space Plough 2, Sorel Etrog
- Tembo, Derrick Stephan Hudson
- Tiger
- * Tohawah, Anne Harris
- Tower Song, Ted Bieler
- Triceratops
- Union Six, Bruce Watson
- Voyageur Canoe, Ralph Ireland
- Anne, Leo Mol
- Trees, Toni Putnam
Tembo Day
Each year, the citizens of Windsor are invited to participate in washing Tembo. Tembo, a large bronze sculpture located in the Windsor Sculpture Park was created by Derrick Stephan Hudson. The sculpture features a mother elephant as well as two young babies.
Each year, the citizens of Windsor are invited by the City of Windsor to help wash the elephants on Tembo Day. After a bath of gentle clean of warm water and soap using toothbrushes, Sculpture Conservation Assistants spend a couple of days applying wax to protect the sculpture in preparation for the winter[1]
The goal of Tembo Day is to create a better understanding of the importance of maintaining and preserving the care for bronze sculptures along the Windsor Sculpture Park.
Tembo Day has gained recognition throughout Windsor for its engagement with the community and has been featured in the Windsor Star [1] and CBC Windsor.[2]
See also
References
- 1 2 "Daunting tusk: Windsorites come together to give Tembo its yearly bath". 2016-06-30. Retrieved 2016-08-31.
- ↑ "Tembo the elephant gets a bath on Windsor's riverfront". Retrieved 2016-08-31.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Windsor Sculpture Park. |
- Windsor Sculpture Park - City of Windsor
- Windsor Ontario Riverside Tour (July 2004) - "Google Video" (0:21:12)
- Local tourism information about Odette Sculpture Park
Coordinates: 42°18′54″N 83°3′36″W / 42.31500°N 83.06000°W