Wintering Goldfish

Title
Wintering Goldfish
LC Subject
Photography Calligraphers Calligraphers' marks Calligraphy art photography color photography nature photography photography (discipline) internal dye diffusion transfer process
Creator
Finne, Ron Paul
Description
Internal dye, diffusion process (Polaroid SX-70) prints mounted as five vertical pairs with poem written in pencil on the mat. Text: Wintering goldfish breathe slowly below tiny frozen spheres of icy air while overhead/ basalt bridges that also swam red once through the deep pool of the earth now have cooled into the sky as bones of trees flesh of sun/ nerves of light (Finne, 1989). Ron Paul Finne; Wintering Goldfish; copyright 1989; collage of internal dye (Polaroid SX70) prints; The Oregon Arts Commission has ten Regional Arts Councils that provide delivery of art services and information. The Council for this location is: Lane Arts. You may view their website at http://www.lanearts.org/
Location
Lokey Science Complex >> Lane County >> Oregon >> United States Lane County >> Oregon >> United States
Street Address
Cascade Hall, 1260 Franklin Blvd., Eugene Oregon
Award Date
1989
Identifier
1989_uo_sci-complex_10_a01
Item Locator
FIN: 89-9
Accession Number
1989_uo_sci-complex_10_a01
Rights
In Copyright
Dc Rights Holder
Finne, Ron Paul
Type
Image
Format
image/tiff
Measurements
13 x 28 inches
Material
Photography; Calligraphy polaroid SX-70 prints, text in pencil
Set
Oregon Percent for Art
Primary Set
Oregon Percent for Art
Relation
1989 UO Science Complex 1989_uo_sci-complex
Has Version
slide; color
Institution
Oregon Arts Commission University of Oregon
Note
'Wintering Goldfish' is the first in a new series of works using text with images to explore 3 dimensional structure and the passage of time in the natural world. (Information provided by OAC documentation.) An interactive campus map of the University of Oregon may be viewed at: http://map.uoregon.edu/ Cascade Hall, second level stairway niche
Color Space
RGB
Biographical Information
Text and image used to explore three dimensional structure and the passage of time in the natural world (Finne, 1989).