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Public art in Chicago - Agora
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Nov 29, 2020 08:22:33   #
CHG_CANON Loc: the Windy City
 
joehel2 wrote:
Paul, thanks for sharing the photos and history. I would love to see it in person, it’s very dramatic. Being from Philadelphia, I have to ask if they are ever the target of graffiti.


Thanks Joe! Logically, they'd be open for tagging, but you'd be making your way out into an open park in an area with lights and no trees. I'm not at this L stop or this direction from the L stop often enough to comment on actual vandalism.

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Nov 29, 2020 08:22:36   #
CHG_CANON Loc: the Windy City
 
Thank you FStop12, Steve49, Joe! I've come by the Agora a few times trying to decide the best time of day / light and focal length. Humid summer mornings haven't worked as good as warm fall afternoons. Glad you enjoyed.

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Nov 29, 2020 08:37:29   #
Say Cheese Loc: Eastern PA
 
The photography is fine, I do not like the subject matter. Too strange for me.

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Nov 29, 2020 09:09:37   #
mizzee Loc: Boston,Ma
 
Fascinating story and well composed images, they really give the feel of this wonderful installation.

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Nov 29, 2020 10:53:21   #
Rab-Eye Loc: Indiana
 
πŸ‘πŸ»πŸ‘πŸ»πŸ‘πŸ»

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Nov 29, 2020 11:02:36   #
Wingpilot Loc: Wasilla. Ak
 
Thanks for sharing that, Paul. I was scratching my head trying to figure it out until I read the part of your narrative describing her feeling about crowds as related by the Soviet domination of Poland and her reaction to it. The whole headless thing snapped into focus. Great stuff, and very interesting.

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Nov 29, 2020 11:41:50   #
junglejim1949 Loc: Sacramento,CA
 
CHG_CANON wrote:
Agora is an installation of 106 headless cast-iron figures arranged in interesting groupings. Most of the figures are in monumental crowds, while several appear to be pulling away from the larger group. Agora is a Greek word, meaning: urban meeting place.

Installed: 2006
Sculptor: Magdalena Abakanowicz
Location: Grant Park, Chicago, IL

Agora by Paul Sager, on Flickr


Some figures are frozen in positions that suggest great movement, while others appear to be standing completely still.

Agora


Valued at more than $3 million, the 2006 installation is the work of internationally-acclaimed sculptor Magdalena Abakanowicz.

The Grant Park Conservancy is a 501c(3) not-for-profit with a mission to provide a permanent body that enables Chicago's Grant Park to respond and adapt to the changing needs of its users, as the park passes from generation to generation. Some of these needs relate to landscaping, infrastructure, design, cultural activities and public art.

Agora


The figures are 9 ft tall and weigh approximately 1,800 lb. Each is made from a hollow, seamless piece of weathered iron, giving the pieces a reddish appearance and rough bark-like texture.

Agora


Abakanowicz donated her time as did a group of dedicated Polish artists who helped her construct the pieces in Poznan, Poland.

Agora


Chicago, which has a large Polish American community, worked to obtain a major work by Abakanowicz for several years before Agora arrived. By 2006, private donors, including actor Robin Williams, contributed over $700,000 to bring the work to Chicago.

Agora


The name Agora refers to the urban meeting places of the Ancient Greek city-states. Born just outside of Warsaw, Magdalena Abakanowicz (b. 1930) was deeply affected by World War II and the forty-five years of Soviet domination that followed. Abakanowicz said that her art draws on her fear of crowds, which she once described as "brainless organisms acting on command, worshiping on command and hating on command". However, the work has inspired optimistic interpretations. Kevin Nance of the Chicago Sun-Times wrote, "If they had arms and hands (they don't), these would be clasped behind their backs as if in contemplation. They seem, somehow, to be thinking, not as a group but as individuals. It's possible, in fact, to interpret the piece as a representation of democracy."

Agora


Images shared in this post were captured using Kodak Gold 200 film and a digital Sony a7II, on different days in late October and early November 2020. All editing was performed in Adobe Lightroom v6.

These images are sized to fill your wide-screen display. Try using <F11> to maximize your browser window for the full effect. If the images overshoot your display, such as a laptop, just click on the image or the URL link and they'll resize to your screen from the host Flickr site. You can click a bit further into the image details on the Flickr page, if desired. EXIF data is available from the host Flickr pages as well. On the Flickr site, use your <L>key for Large and the <F11> for the full-screen.
i Agora /i is an installation of 106 headless ca... (show quote)


Very interesting and captured well.

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Nov 29, 2020 13:56:57   #
rmalarz Loc: Tempe, Arizona
 
Wonderful series, Paul.
--Bob

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Nov 29, 2020 14:36:38   #
DocDav Loc: IN
 
Beautiful perspective. Haven't been up to the "City" since the virus, then i had to go and get this damned pesky lung cancer.

Thanks for reminding me how much I love Chi-Town

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Nov 29, 2020 15:49:21   #
CHG_CANON Loc: the Windy City
 
DocDav wrote:
Beautiful perspective. Haven't been up to the "City" since the virus, then i had to go and get this damned pesky lung cancer.

Thanks for reminding me how much I love Chi-Town


Thank you DocDav! I was downtown today, as far south as the Bean and then around the river. Not the 100% mask compliance I'd expect at this stage of the pandemic. Stay safe and strong. Order some Portillo's for that taste of Chicago in the meantime.

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Nov 29, 2020 15:49:33   #
CHG_CANON Loc: the Windy City
 
Thank you Say Cheese, mizzee, Ben, Greg, Jim, Bob, DocDav! Certainly these legs are something different. Glad you enjoyed.

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Nov 29, 2020 16:50:55   #
Susan yamakawa
 
They are so interesting β£οΈπŸ‘πŸ€—God blessed Robin Williams for getting them here

Reply
Nov 29, 2020 19:30:48   #
John from gpwmi Loc: Michigan
 
Thanks for sharing the photos, Paul. Interesting storyline too.

Reply
Nov 29, 2020 23:02:41   #
Ben's nana Loc: Chesterland, Ohio
 
CHG_CANON wrote:
Agora is an installation of 106 headless cast-iron figures arranged in interesting groupings. Most of the figures are in monumental crowds, while several appear to be pulling away from the larger group. Agora is a Greek word, meaning: urban meeting place.

Installed: 2006
Sculptor: Magdalena Abakanowicz
Location: Grant Park, Chicago, IL

Agora by Paul Sager, on Flickr


Some figures are frozen in positions that suggest great movement, while others appear to be standing completely still.

Agora


Valued at more than $3 million, the 2006 installation is the work of internationally-acclaimed sculptor Magdalena Abakanowicz.

The Grant Park Conservancy is a 501c(3) not-for-profit with a mission to provide a permanent body that enables Chicago's Grant Park to respond and adapt to the changing needs of its users, as the park passes from generation to generation. Some of these needs relate to landscaping, infrastructure, design, cultural activities and public art.

Agora


The figures are 9 ft tall and weigh approximately 1,800 lb. Each is made from a hollow, seamless piece of weathered iron, giving the pieces a reddish appearance and rough bark-like texture.

Agora


Abakanowicz donated her time as did a group of dedicated Polish artists who helped her construct the pieces in Poznan, Poland.

Agora


Chicago, which has a large Polish American community, worked to obtain a major work by Abakanowicz for several years before Agora arrived. By 2006, private donors, including actor Robin Williams, contributed over $700,000 to bring the work to Chicago.

Agora


The name Agora refers to the urban meeting places of the Ancient Greek city-states. Born just outside of Warsaw, Magdalena Abakanowicz (b. 1930) was deeply affected by World War II and the forty-five years of Soviet domination that followed. Abakanowicz said that her art draws on her fear of crowds, which she once described as "brainless organisms acting on command, worshiping on command and hating on command". However, the work has inspired optimistic interpretations. Kevin Nance of the Chicago Sun-Times wrote, "If they had arms and hands (they don't), these would be clasped behind their backs as if in contemplation. They seem, somehow, to be thinking, not as a group but as individuals. It's possible, in fact, to interpret the piece as a representation of democracy."

Agora


Images shared in this post were captured using Kodak Gold 200 film and a digital Sony a7II, on different days in late October and early November 2020. All editing was performed in Adobe Lightroom v6.

These images are sized to fill your wide-screen display. Try using <F11> to maximize your browser window for the full effect. If the images overshoot your display, such as a laptop, just click on the image or the URL link and they'll resize to your screen from the host Flickr site. You can click a bit further into the image details on the Flickr page, if desired. EXIF data is available from the host Flickr pages as well. On the Flickr site, use your <L>key for Large and the <F11> for the full-screen.
i Agora /i is an installation of 106 headless ca... (show quote)


Very cool and thank you for the narrative
Fran

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Nov 30, 2020 05:30:27   #
CHG_CANON Loc: the Windy City
 
Thank you Susan, John, Fran! I've found some other art in Chicago too.

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