Millennium Bookball
The Northport Public Library commissioned me to create a unique
Millennium Bookball sculpture for its newly expanded Laurel Avenue
building. The work is a spherical assemblage of wooden "books," five feet
in diameter, hanging in the two-story catalog area of the library. The books
are made of various hard woods, with the titles and authors carved and gold
leafed. The sculpture was assembled at a
community assembly event something like a barn-raising, but for art.
Geometrical Structure
The Millennium Bookball is constructed of sixty "books," carefully arranged
in precise geometric relationships. Some patterns to look for are:
There are ten books in each of six different woods. The walnut
books are the darkest; they form an "equator" which encircles the sculpture
in a horizontal plane. Looking straight up from below the sculpture,
those ten books can be seen to outline a type of 5-pointed star. The maple
books are the lightest, they can be seen to outline a 5-pointed star of the
same shape, but tilted. The other four woods---cherry, sapele, bubinga,
and purpleheart---also each form a 5-pointed star tilted from the horizontal.
Books of the same wood have their spines parallel.
There are 32 bronze "donuts" connecting the books. The books
which meet at any donut form a type of "propellor" There are twenty
3-waypropellors and twelve 5-way propellors. Each book is part of two
propellors :a 3-way propellor above the title and a 5-way one below the author.
The same book is perceived as going clockwise in one propellor but counterclockwise
in its other propellor.
The books outline thirty rhombic windows into the sculpture's interior.
The mathematical name for this pattern of rhombi is the "rhombic triacontahedron."
The donuts are the corners of the rhombi. Each donut is directly opposite
another of the same type (3-way or 5-way). If you align yourself so
you can look straight through the holes of any two opposite donuts, you will
be positioned to discover a number of other geometric patterns in the sculpture.

Community Art Project
This is a community project in three different ways:
-
-
It is funded in large part by contributions from
individual community members, through a fundraiser arranged by the library.
The initial funding was through a New York State Council for the Arts individual
artist's grant, administered through the Huntington Arts council.
-
In addition, an unveiling, reception, and millennium
party was held on December 12, 1999. Here is a picture just as I started
to unveil it. Up until then, it was wrapped in black plastic, as if I collaborated
with Christo.

Development
This sculpture took over a year from concept to
completion, and during that time, it evolved considerably. My initial
design was for a smaller piece, in which the books were tightly interlocked
via slots. If you study my original paper model, shown below, you will
see that all sixty books have the same pattern of five slots. I planned
on forming each from a single board, in a five-wood color pattern.

I wrote a proposal to the New York State Council for the Arts describing
the sculpture and community assembly idea, and was awarded an individual
artist's
grant. With the state grant came encouragement to seek co-funding to
build a larger project. I took the idea to the Northport Public Library
and the administration and board of directors enthusiastically supported it
and arranged for a community fundraiser to support it. This larger budget
allowed more design options. I ended up choosing a more open form, with
cast bronze components and more intricate books. I relied on computer modeling
to examine a range of possibilities. Below are two images of the final design.
The above image is centered on a five-fold donut, and the next looks at a
three-fold
donut.
To give a sense of its appearance with books, I made the following sketch,
which was the all I saw of it until the day
of assembly, when it finally became real.
Acknowledgments
A sculpture of this intricacy can not be built
by a single person. This project is made possible in part with public funds from
the New York State Council on the Arts, administered by the Huntington
Arts Council. In addition, many individuals contributed greatly, both in the
fund drive and in direct help to me. In roughly chronological order:
Sara Bluestone of the Huntington Arts Council gave me excellent guidance in
writing the proposal. Mary Ellen Moll, community services librarian
of the Northport Library, was my main liaison, who organized meetings, wrote
press releases, did publicity, arranged parties, and many other behind-the-scenes
things, e.g., arranging for the hook in the ceiling. Stephanie Heineman
(Northport Library director) and Eileen Minogue (assistant director) championed
the project for me, presenting it to the board of directors, and provided
other support. Marty Rebholz provided good engineering advice on the
structure. Lee Holcomb let me use his computer-controlled router for carving
the titles, and freely shared his expertise on gold leafing and finishing.
Jamie Swan provided all kinds of good advice, and machined the metal parts,
drilling and tapping the holes in the donuts and milling the slots in the
metal rods, all with great accuracy. Tom Pappel resawed one-inch boards
down to quarter-inch. Victoria helped with the layers of varnish that
lie below the gold leafing. Cooper directly worked with me in applying
the gold leaf. Rob Comforto made a video of everything. Marty Rebholz,
Jamie Swan, Walt Zurawski, and Tony carried and hoisted its 150 pounds up
to the ceiling. And, of course, a great many people collaborated at
the assembly event to put the sculpture together. Thank you one and all.
|