Grossenhain,
Germany 3 x 5 x 9"
2001
This biosculpture was commisioned by the
town of Grossenhain, near Dresden, Germany. Water, as a symbol of
renewal, figured prominently in the town plan to build a remarkable new
public swimming complex, where the water is filtered entirely by wetland
plants, without the use of chlorine or any other chemicals.
The Gift of Water functions as a part of this
constructed wetland filtration system. Two mossy cupped hands reach from
the bank into the pond. As water flows into the hands a misting fountain
aerates it and moistens the mosses, which in turn, purify the water. The
intimacy of the mosses growing over the hands exemplifies how all life
is interconnected. The gift of water, the breath of life. We must nurture it as it nurtures us.
The sculpture is built of a lightweight, highly
durable textile reinforced concrete developed at the Technical
University in Dresden, and was made with their assistance.
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