Thursday, August 30, 2007

Correction

I was informed I had put the wrong date in for the unveiling and homecoming game. It will be the weekend of September 28. My visit to Iowa city has been fantastic. I am staying at the Mission House B&B and I would highly recommend staying with Ray and Shirley. The rooms are large and colorful. Ironically I am staying in the "Kinnick" room. Seems Ol' Nile himself slept in this room when his fraternity filled the house. The food and conversation are tremendous, each morning the table gets to looking like Thanksgiving, I only wish I found the Mission House on my first trip out in 04'.
Met up with several sculpture professors this morning and we are going to try'n set up an hour long presentation on the creation of the pieces on Friday morning, September 28. Slides and a Q & A.
Below is a shot of Jane Meyer watching the installation.
Regards,
LJN

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

The "Nile" has landed!!!

It has been a long ride but the Kinnick relief is at home now in Kinnick stadium. He and his boys arrived on a truck at 9am and was picked off the truck, transported and installed by the men of Knutson Construction Services. Meanwhile Jane Meyer (Senior Associate Director of Athletics), Kim McDonald (Archtect From Neuman Monson Architecture) and myself stood around and tried to look like we were doing something!!@#@! Its a great day for everyone involved in the Kinnick Stadium Project. I wish I could show more detailed pictures of the piece but I have to wait for the official unveiling ceremonies which have been moved to Homecoming weekend(September 28)
Regards, LJN



Sunday, August 26, 2007

Kinnick and the boys are ready to go!

This is the only photo I could show without giving away to much! The piece looks fantastic and I hope to make all of Iowa proud. When I arrived at the studio the piece was on its back getting some last minute chasing work done before the piece was put upright and the final figure (Nile Kinnick) was put into place. After that the entire piece was sandblasted the patina was applied. This process took over a week.
I do not have the details for the unveiling but as soon as I get them I will post 'em.
Regards,
LJN

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Off to the foundry....for the last time before....

Tomorrow I am heading to the foundry again to monitor the quality and progress of the Kinnick piece. The final chasing is finished and we'll be starting in on the patination work which on a piece of this magnitude will take at least a week with several people working on it.
Dr. Henry Duffy - Art Historian, Author and Curator of the Saint-Gaudens National Historic site will join me on the trip. He has been closely following the progress of the entire Kinnick project. As an art historian of great reknown his enthusiastic response to the sculptures has been a nice shot in the arm.

In other LJN news: The two pieces which will be dedicated in Dublin, Ire and Carrick, Ire are now at the foundry getting cast. Those dedications will take place during the last week of October.

Keep the visits coming, LJN

Friday, August 10, 2007

A few more shots....

A few more shots: The framework steel and the patina station at he foundry....


Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Kinnick Relief update

Wow, There have been alot of visitors to the site which is a great motivator to keep posting regularly. Yesterday I traveled down to the foundry and the piece is looking awesome. They have a week of metal work left and than a week for a patina. The owner of the foundry has said that visitors have been awed at the mere size and scope of the piece before it was even fully assembled.
Here are a couple of shots I took. A foundryman "chasing the metal", the supprt structure behind the sculpture which hopefully will not be seen again once it is installed, and a detail shot of some chasing work which has been completed.
Remember if you have any questions or comments please click on "comments" below and let me know what your thinking.
GO Hawkeyes!



Monday, August 06, 2007

Off to the Foundry....

Off to the foundry but wanted to post an article which was in the Iowa Press-Citizen this weekend. (note that the plaster and rubber figures refer to the mold of the piece, not the piece itself)
Regards, LJN

UI to unveil new Kinnick sculpture Sept. 8

Will immortalize winning touchdown versus Notre Dame


By Brian Morelli
Iowa City Press-Citizen

Nostalgic Iowa Hawkeye fans will have another reason to visit Kinnick Stadium this year.

For the second year in a row, the University of Iowa plans to unveil a sculpture that delves deep into Hawkeye lore. This year's masterpiece captures Nile Kinnick scoring the winning touchdown in the legendary 7-6 victory over Notre Dame in 1939.

"There is not a larger, more comprehensive sculpture in any football stadium in the country," sculptor Larry Nowlan, of LJN Sculptures based in Windsor, Vt., said of his 20-foot-long by 10-foot-tall by four-foot-deep sculpture relief that includes 11 players.

The piece, to be set into the wall inside the main Kinnick Stadium entrance, is due to be unveiled before the Sept. 8 opener against Syracuse.

Nowlan also created the bronze replica of Nile Kinnick in layman's clothes that stands just outside the main gate to the stadium. That was unveiled last year.

UI commissioned the pieces in October 2004. This satisfied a state law that requires 0.5 percent of building costs in a state building be devoted to art. Last year, UI completed a nearly $90 million renovation to Kinnick Stadium, meaning $435,000 had to be set aside for art work.

"We were looking for someone who could do a statue of Nile Kinnick and ultimately it got expanded to include this relief as well," said Howard Collinson, the UI Museum of Art director and chairman of the arts of campus committee. "Kinnick (renovations were) very expensive, enough to afford the relief. We said, 'Could you please do a standing statue,' and he said, 'that is enough money to do that and a relief.'"

Collinson said he has been pleased with the response to the 12-foot-tall Nile Kinnick statue and is pleased in what he has seen of the relief.

"I think the whole stadium is intended to invoke the feel of tradition. I think it invokes (Kinnick) very well. It is the aspiration of college athletics. He was a student athlete, who was a model person," Collinson said. "I think it gives nobility to football that's appropriate to the place."

Nowlan started the sculptures early in 2005 and alternated between the works. However, the second sculpture is a larger undertaking. It has taken more than 1,010 man hours, 2,500 pounds of plaster and 60 gallons of rubber.

Work on the relief is in its final stages. It is being cast and bronzed by a company in Philadelphia and then shipped to Iowa City. Nowlan will be traveling back and forth to Iowa to get everything ready for the unveiling next month.

"At this point, you are managing the scheduling of the foundry. You have to plan the installation of the piece. When it's in place, then I'll start to be a little relaxed. Until that time, there is still a little work to be done," Nowlan said.

Not an Iowan, Nowlan said the projects have made him a Hawkeye. He said he wants the people of Iowa to take ownership of his work.

"Nile is such a great example and hero, not just to the people of Iowa, but to anyone that knows his story," Nowlan said. "In this case, you are hired to pay tribute to the person. It will be a great feeling seeing the people of Iowa take ownership of it and be proud."

Friday, August 03, 2007

Closing in on Kinnick

We are getting down to crunch time with Nile and the boys. Here are some shots from my last visit to the foundry. One is of Jack "chasing" the bronze. "Chasing" is the term used for grinding down the metal welds on a sculpture so that when it is complete you cannot see where the chasing took place. The other shot is of the patination process. You use a torch to heat the metal and stipple different mixtures of acid on the bronze to get different colors. With a piece the magnitude of the Kinnick you would use a spray bottle or maybe a hose!!
Best,
LJN
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Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Boise WWII Aviator Sculpture

As a finalist for the Boise WWII Aviator Memorial I flew out early this week to review the site and materials. The site is in front of the Boise International Airport across from The pulaski figure of mine who pays tribute to the Wildland Firefighters. This cast was created and dedicated at the airport in 2003. It was a nice feeling to visit a site where one of your pieces already stands.
Along with the site visit Boise Public Arts exec. Karen Bubb took me over to the Warhawk Aviator Museum.
http://www.warhawkairmuseum.org/
Where I was able to study the uniforms of the aviators and also spend a few hours with Chet Bowers who shared some of his experiences as a co-pilot in the war.
Pics:1) A shot of the site with the Pulaski figure
2) Group of Aviators
3) Does that pilot look familiar??
4) C.A. Bowers tag and jumpsuit
5) Mr. Chet Bowers in the flesh! (holding up a survivor vest)