A Buddha, Full of Air, Sits Serenely on the Waves

THE NEW YORK TIMES
By Sharon Otterman
NEW YORK---The 10-foot-high inflatable Buddha sat on a wooden lily pad in a cove of the East River, bobbing gently back and forth on the ripples of the tide. As a public park run by a nonprofit corporation, the Socrates Sculpture Park regularly hosts playful, provocative outdoor art displays that change with the seasons. “Floating Echo,” by Chang-Jin Lee, a Korean-born visual artist who lives in New York City, is part of an exhibition by emerging artists. Religion is often, like economics or culture, a subject of the public art at the park, said John Hatfield, the park’s executive director. A short walk from the Buddha, for example, was a statue of the Virgin Mary made of birdseed; it changes each day with the pecks of twittering sparrows. “Religion is a part of our lives, and therefore it’s a part of what artists are sometimes interested in exploring, philosophically, politically, spiritually,” Mr. Hatfield said. [link]

Comments

New York City can pull off anything. It is ashame more cities would shy away from allowing these type of exhibits in public parks for sure!
The city really is impressive, but Grand Rapids is doing an amazing thing right now too with the ArtPrize week---nothing like it and its something we must attend next year.