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Art
One
of the largest collections of international and Australian art gathered
on Australian shores, World Expo '88 was a virtual open-air sculpture
garden without parallel.
Given the leisure orientation of the
Expo, Expo Authority Artistic Director (and Academy Award Winner)
Australian John Truscott wanted to sway away from the predominantly
'science-and-concrete' heavy look of former Expositions, and filled the
Expo site with large clunky high art world sculpture pieces that
would provoke and linger in the public's mind, as well as the 'light
weight' whimsy and interactive nature of the immensely popular 'Human
Factor' plaster-of-paris still life figures - to the almost
eeringly realistic series of 6ft high humanoid robot clones in
silver-blue jumpsuits that, from their pyramid glass prisms,
welcomed guests to the Expo in computer synthesized speech in over
32 languages.
The World Expo '88 Sculpture Collection in
itself had a budget of more than $AUD 25 million - and featured works
from Rodin to Moore, Frink, Hudson, Oakes, Grubb, Graetz, Pomodoro,
Tinguely, Johns, Cole and more - with some of the works especially
commissioned for the Expo, others on special loan, and others purchased
outright. Most notable of these of course, was the several million
dollar Expo Night Tower 'Night Companion' - with it's 88-metre xenon
beam search light - designed by prominent Melbourne artist Robert Owens
and interpreted by Charles Sutherland - which still stands in today's
Brisbane - some 500 metres away from it's original Expo location.
Truscott
was also the brain-child behind the futuristic illuminated white
plastic cubes, pyramids and cones that sat in groups by the Expo's
Brisbane River foreshore, known as the 'cubistic flotilla'; the world
globe upon the Expo's River Stage - with Australia prominently in the
centre; and the larger-than-life metallic insects and beetles of the
epiphyte forest.
Here you will find the names and some of the
images of the famous World Expo '88 Sculpture Collection, several
of whose works were retained for Brisbane and purchased by
Government and private enterprise, which we hope to augment with
images also of the 80-odd Human Factor figures - which have now found
their new home in several Queensland and other Government Department
Building foyers, as well as inter-state and overseas.
If
you are interested in viewing works of art from World Expo '88 in
today's Brisbane, don't forget to do the World Expo '88 Heritage Trail
Walk - also featured on this web-site - where over two weekends one can
gain an appreciation of some of the better known works retained for the
City of Brisbane, as well as gain a brief overview of the City itself.
Guided Tours with the Executive Director, John McGregor, are carried
out in the first two Saturdays of each June - in the height of
Brisbane's balmy and summery winter weather.
This page will soon feature photographs of the 'Human Factor' works, as well as more photographs of some of the international sculpture borrowed or purchased for the Exposition.
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