Antelumpen

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"Antelumpen" in June 2005. Photo by Steve Horne

Antelumpen is a stone and metal interactive kinetic sculpture designed and constructed by sculptor Zachary Coffin and formerly owned by the Birmingham Museum of Art. It consists of three 18-foot utility poles painted teal, each with an abstracted yellow-painted steel antelope head, attached by hinges to a 14,000 pound boulder. A tube-steel "steering wheel" attached to cables allows viewers to rock the heads up and down, simulating grazing.

The work was begun at the Socrates Sculpture Park in New York, New York and was stored incomplete in Atlanta, Georgia until Coffin was offered space at Wade Sand and Gravel to complete it for a 1997 solo exhibition entitled "Industrial Jungle". The work was subsequently then purchased for the museum's permanent collection with the support of Dr Sam Barker. It was displayed outdoors on the southeast corner of the museum building after the exhibition.

It remained there until 2010 when it was loaned to the Five Points West Library. CraneWorks donated labor and equipment for the move. Betty Gold's Kaikoo II was installed in its place. Coffin's sculpture was damaged during the April 27, 2011 tornado outbreak. The museum offered to return it to the artist. Current plans have it going to a sculpture reserve in California after it it repaired.

References

  • Nichols, Alison (March 1997) "Man of Steel: Sculptor Zachary Coffin." Black & White
  • "Museum shares arts with Five Points Library." (May 26, 2010) Birmingham Museum of Art press release


Antelumpen, the stone and metal interactive kinetic sculpture, was damaged by the April 2011 storms. The Birmingham Museum of Art assisted by Craneworks removed the damaged sculpture on Friday 7/1/11 about noon. Antelumpen was on loan from the Museum and has been on display at Five Points West Library since May 2010.

External links