Here's a photograph of a wonderful mid-century modern structure in Florissant that will be coming up for sale soon.
It was photographed and described by my friend Toby Weiss on her blog B.E.L.T. (Built Environment in Layman's Terms). Check out her blog posting to see more photographs and get the full story behind this unique structure.
Saint Louis architecture and related ruminations including pioneer modern architect Harris Armstrong
28 July 2009
24 July 2009
Noguchi's Momo Taro
sculpture: Momo Taro.
location: Storm King Art Center, Mountainville, New York.
sculptor: Isamu Noguchi.
commissioned: by Storm King Art Center.
date: 1977-78.
condition: waiting patiently to be touched and enjoyed.
I love this photograph of a young couple inside the egg shaped void of Noguchi's Momo Taro located at Storm King Art Center in New York. The name Momo Taro comes from a traditional Japanese folk tale told to children about a boy born from a peach.
In a 1997 documentary film Noguchi is shown working on this sculpture in a documentary film in which he discusses the origins of the work. He explains that he was commissioned to do an outdoor sculpture in the landscape for Storm King. He sought out massive boulder to use and found one in a remote stream. The stone was so huge it had to be split before it could be moved.
Splitting a white rounded form was a theme in Noguchi's work going back at least to his proposal entitled Play Mountain where a band shell was to be formed from two sections of an egg shaped mass. You can see the work as it was constructed following Noguchi's death at Moerenuma Park in Sapporo.

Uploaded to Flickr by ellen's attic.
You can read an interesting comment by a recent visitor to Momo Taro who had been warned not to touch any of the sculptures on display and my response to his visceral reaction to Noguchi's powerful design.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)