Recently I was struck by how long I have been experimenting with the combination of living things with airplanes, from the first small bronze sculpture I ever made to my most recently unveiled larger-than-life memorial. I didn’t intentionally return to this theme. I know this happens to poets and musicians, too.

First Lesson
First Lesson, 1976, bronze, wood, 5.5″ x 3.5″ x 2.5″
Rolling Home
Rolling Home, 1977, bronze, 12″ x 6″ x 6”
Plane Tree
Plane Tree, 1979, fabric, wire, stuffing, 40” x 36” x 24”, photo credit: Paul Warchol
Reclining Figure
Reclining Figure, 1979, fabric, foam, stuffing, zipper, 10″ x 48″ x 36”, photo credit: Paul Warchol
September 11th (detail)
September 11th (detail), 2001, bronze, 18” x 10” x 12”. photo credit: Michael Bergmann
September 11th: A Memorial for the Cathedral of St. John the Divine
September 11th: A Memorial for the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, 2012, bronze, 39″ x 24” x 20”, photo credit: Michael Bergmann
September 11th: A Memorial for the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, 2012
September 11th: A Memorial for the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, 2012, 78” x 22” x 30” (bronze: 39” height), bronze, steel, glass and fragments from the rubble of the World Trade Towers, photo credit: Michael Bergmann
September 11th: A Memorial for the Cathedral of St. John the Divine (detail)
September 11th: A Memorial for the Cathedral of St. John the Divine (detail), 2012, 78” x 22” x 30” (bronze: 39” height), bronze, steel, glass and fragments from the rubble of the World Trade Towers, photo credit: Michael Bergmann