Sekimori Ishi

Sekimori Ishi

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The proposed sculpture is an iron and granite representation of a sekimori-ishi.  A sekimori-ishi is a stone tied with garden twine, placed on a path in a Japanese garden as a request not to use that path.  It may be placed for privacy, or to have a guest avoid a dangerous or unpleasant part of the garden.  This sculpture was inspired by Nabuo Sekine and the Mono Ho movement.  This is a Japanese art movement related to Land Art, which encouraged the production of objects, usually of natural materials.  If you grow up in Pittsburgh, cast iron is a natural material.

The proposed sculpture is a granite boulder, wrapped in a one piece, cast-in-place iron cage, topped with an industrial lifting ring. Iron and granite have similar coefficients of expansion with heat, and iron-granite composites were suggested as a construction material a long time ago.   A second piece could be cast, if time and materials allow, with a hole drilled through a boulder, capped at one end with a ring, and the other end with a flange or washer, cast as a single piece.

Daniel C. Postellon

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