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Excerpt:
...Lush, semi-tropical vegetation growing rampant alongside
a bayou called Petit Calliou in Chauvin, Louisiana,
just 60 miles South South-West of New Orleans, was rapidly
threatening a landscape of sculptures created by a local
bricklayer and self-taught visionary artist, Kenny Hill.
In a short time, the life-size cement figures would
have disappeared beneath the undergrowth, like the temple
sculptures surrounding Angkor Watt. But the discovery
of the site by Dennis Siporski, then professor of Art
at the nearby Nicholls State University in Thibodaux,
led to the initiation of a rescue plan. Siporski contacted
Terri Yoho, Executive Director of the Kohler Foundation
in Wisconsin who organised the restoration and Nicholls
University committed to a maintenance programme.(1)
As a result, the Chauvin
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Sculpture Garden – which was constructed by Hill over
a 13-year period and which represents the artist’s highly
individual spiritual vision – lives on.
In its present state, the garden still retains some
of the original rose bushes and banana trees planted
by Hill. It is a lush and tranquil place, but carries
an undercurrent of melancholy, a skein of tension created
by the profusion of sculptured self-portraits of Hill,
who appears throughout the site as a humble witness
to the retinue of angels. One polychrome cement figure
portrays him on horseback, another represents the bearded
artist quizzically listening to a sea shell he holds
to one ear, in others he is suffering or afflicted.
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