N t E e W Physical Plan Physical S e eat Center Vickner Guest Hous en Hous ennis Center ennis ch Retr s Campus Safety nt Norelius Hall Chur Almen- anson T anson Lundgr Sw College View Apartme View College s nsen Hall nsen re st Field South Wind II (1982), a memorial to longtime Vice President for in time is fixed when the child, at its apex in an orbit So We Finance Rud Lawson (1939–1976), is one of a series of Granlund around the parents, becomes the link completing the sculptures ascribing gestures and personalities to the four winds. It arch. Granlund has said, “When I thought of placing Gibbs Hall stands in a sculpture garden on the south side of campus. Apogee at Gustavus, I considered the time spent here The stylized Linnaeus (Head of Carl von Linné) by young people. It is here that relationships often (1988) was placed at the entrance to the Melva begin, which develop into new families. It is also here North Hall Lind Interpretive Center of Linnaeus Arboretum in that a young person becomes keenly aware of the support that has been given by the family for many l the spring of 1988 to commemorate the Swedish n Apogee (1980) Lund Center years.” Apogee was commissioned by the family of the Lund Center natural scientist (1707–1778). This sculpture has Hal Uhler Rev. Gottfrid Lindau, Class of 1917, to honorField orth his also been installed at the Missouri Botanical Garden sw Campus Center memory. Another casting of this work is installed at United Hospital in C. Charles Jackso in St. Louis and the Linnaeus Garden in Uppsala, Holling St. Paul. Sweden. Granlund has written, “Since the Linnaeus Admin. Carlson Linnaeus (1988) Building name was derived from the image of a lime tree, I The Eckman Mall Plaque (1981) ise a medallion embedded in the low n esident’s felt it appropriate to incorporate the tree shape as I wall east of the O.J. Johnson StudentPr Hous Union kiosk. The plaque pays sculpturally celebrated the life and work of Linnaeus. The orderliness tribute to the Eckman family for their support of mall construction and O.J. Johnson e y Student Unio of the eighteenth-century wig reminded me of the precise arrangement beautification. ar Old Main Hall Beck of plants at the Linnaeus Garden in Sweden. I have taken the liberty of Beck Hall The giant alphabet block BC/AD (1973) rotates on its base, pointing Academic Memorial Libr melding these two images in this sculpture.” toward both Folke Bernadotte Memorial Library and Folke Bernadott Several faculty members commissioned Granlund Christ Chapel. It reminds the viewer that the letters GUSTAVUS ADOLPHUS COLLEGE GUSTAVUS to create Jacob and the Angel III (1962), the first of the alphabet are the foundation of every work in om Hall Christ Chapel of his sculptures to be installed on campus. It was the library. It also makes the claim that, just as a deep Rundstr originally sited on the north side of Vickner Hall diagonal incision cleaves the cube into halves of equal and then moved to the west entrance of the new volume, so human history has been radically bisected complex when Confer Hall was built to join Vickner. by the intervention of Christ. It has been argued that Hall Olin Peterson House Int’l. Center In the Genesis story, Jacob wrestles with a vague this sculpture expresses the purpose of the College Carlson ting individual who might be either a man or an angel. BC/AD (1973) more compellingly than any other object on the e 1009 House t Jacob and the Plan ed Nobel Walker House Angel III (1962) Granlund’s single figure helps us to see that Jacob’s campus. Hea Central A.H. Anderson Hall Alfr Hall of Scienc st Residence Hall Residence st we contest for identity, mastery, and courage, which South Flight II (1980), in the lobby of Folke Bernadotte Memorial Library, Adolphson House is also our own, is an inner struggle. is a memorial to Rhoda Lund, first president of Gustavus Library Orbisc (1999), which is sited on “Hello Walk” near the Edgar M. Associates. Its graceful rising posture is indicative of the aspirations of om House w Sjostr Carlson Administration Building, is a gift from family, friends, and the human mind and spirit. e Vickner Hall alumni in memory of 1956 graduate and longtime alumni director airie Vie The Edge (1975) was originally housed inside the College’s hockey Residenc and vice president Cecil Eckhoff (1963–1994). The men and women Pr arena, which is now a part of Lund Center for Physical Education and e and Dance Wing Confer Hall .A. Mattson Hall of the Gustavus Alumni Assocation are symbolized by the male and P Health. A male figure glides on an invisible skate whose blade has been of campus. the center Chapel at Christ at starts traditionally Tour Theatr female figures imbedded as positive mass and negative space within a enlarged to nearly encompass him. Literally at the moving edge, the three-dimensional Möbius strip. skater concentrates his attention on what lies ahead, and wings rather Schaefer Fine Arts Center Nicollet County, the home of Gustavus Adolphus than arms assure his balance and grace. The Edge was placed on campus Art e Hall Wing Sohr College, is named in honor of French explorer and as a special tribute to Russell and Rhoda Lund on the occasion of the Music Wing surveyor Joseph-Nicolas Nicollét, who first mapped dedication of Lund Arena. this region in the 1830s. His portrait in bronze, Several pieces of Granlund sculpture may be found in offices and other Nicollet (1986), dedicated in the bicentennial year of interior spaces on the Gustavus campus. These include BC/AD Model Nicollét’s birth, was commissioned by Melva Lind, GRANLUND GRANLUND SCULPTURE WALKING TOUR MAP TOUR SCULPTURE WALKING GRANLUND (1971), Man-Nam Model II (1969), and Man-Nam Poem (1970), in e Pittman Hall longtime dean of students and professor of French at etiv the Maynard and Lorraine Hasselquist International Studies Room of a Lind the College, whose scholarship in French language Melv Interpr Center Folke Bernadotte Memorial Library; Floor Exercises (1984), a three- N SCULPTURE Nicollet (1986) and literature includes a book based on Nicollét’s figure, movable, improvisational piece inspired by the 1984 Summer E geson Cabin manuscripts. Granlund has explained, “Nicollét is W etum Olympics (and playfully nicknamed “Olga,”Bor “Nadia,” and “Ludmilla”), sighting the stars to discover where he is on Earth. That’s what we do S WALKING TOUR in the north-side trophy case in Lund Center’s Hall of Champions; at a college. Art is a part of that sighting.” and the President’s Inaugural Medal (1981), the medallions of the Linnaeus Arbor THE LEGACY OF PAUL GRANLUND Venus Nautilus II (1983), which overlooks the tennis courts on the president (1986 and 1987), and the Fine Arts Award (1976), in the northeast side of the campus, is dedicated to the memory of student- president’s office in the Carlson Administration Building. athlete Karen Gibbs, who died from cancer in 1977 prior to her In 2003, Granlund was commissioned to produce the Portrait of senior year at Gustavus. The geometric spiral is the shape metaphor Paul Wellstone (2003) to commemorate the late U.S. senator’s life and of the ancient, chamber-building nautilus, but there are no confining convictions. That bust is now displayed in the Diversity Center on the chambers in this spiral, which is both cradle and spring. The Venus lower level of the C. Charles Jackson Campus Center. The Hillstrom image appears first as an imprinted floating figure near the spiral’s axial Museum of Art, located in the Jackson Campus Center, owns another beginning and then emerges, her reach affirming the discovery of new bust, Head of a Boy (1955), a gift from the Rev. Richard Hillstrom ’38 dimensions of freedom. in memory of Dr. John Lindbeck ’37. In addition, the museum owns 800 West College Avenue Apogee (1980), outside the Carlson Administration Building, echoes Horizontal Lovers III (1986), also a gift from Hillstrom. St. Peter, MN 56082 the joyfulness and exuberance of a family at play. A classic moment w gustavus.edu Arbor Vie Apartments A GOOD PLACE TO BEGIN YOUR TOUR is at Christ Chapel, former admission counselor Douglas “Beard” Sandberg. Time and although you may easily begin at any other point on space are combined as the sculptor converts into mass the fluttering of the map. At the chapel’s north entrance is the red moth wings, which normally happens in time. Movement is suggested double door known as the Christ Door (1961). A in the posture and balance of one wing, suspended in space on its tip. seven-figured, medallion-shaped tree form depicts Embedded in that wing is a fetal male figure indicative of the chrysalis the seven major points of the Second Article of the state; on the opposite side, the wings carry the impression of an Apostles’ Creed. Counter-clockwise from top left, extended female figure, implying liberation and flight, resurrection and these are Crucified, Died, Was Buried, Descended, renewal. Rose Again, Ascended, and Is Seated at the Right Crucifixion (1980), on Eckman Mall to the north Christ Door (1961) Hand of God. The door handles are branches of the of the chapel, is a gift from former College President tree, lifeless on one side symbolizing dormancy and Edward Lindell (1975–1980) and his wife, Patricia. death, with foliage emerging on the other side symbolizing new life Here, at eye level as worshipers walk into the chapel, in Christ.
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