Utlunta by Peter Lundberg[/caption]
Sculpture On the Green, Cashiers
The Village Green in Cashiers is a bucolic setting to wander and ponder. The well-groomed park is home to eight magnificent sculptures, including the monolithic and awe-inspiring Utlunta, named for a mythical Cherokee monster. Rub your hand over the angular shoulder muscle of a bronze lioness depicted in “The Hunt,” or lose yourself in the abstract and perplexing steel of “Volar.”
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Kinetic Wind Structure by Lyman Whitaker[/caption]
Children will marvel at the fanciful trinity of kinetic wind sculptures that twirl and dance high above the Village Green, and jump for joy at the life-like bronze child titled “Come Play with Me.”
Meandering park paths weave through the 12-acre campus of the Village Green, replete with gardens and resting places, a spacious playground, a wetlands boardwalk and picnic spots. It’s located at the intersection of U.S. 64 and N.C. 107 in Cashiers.
Western Carolina University Fine Arts Museum public art, Cullowhee
The mountain-ringed campus of Western Carolina University has nine outdoor sculptures to explore, courtesy of the WCU Fine Art Museum.
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Eclipse by Jeral Kledis[/caption]
A black geometric arch titled “Eclipse” was the first public art installation 25 years ago. It’s now catapulted to the most-photographed work on the sculpture trail in the countdown to the Great American Solar Eclipse coming August 21. Jackson County has been named one of the prime solar eclipse viewing destinations in the path of totality.
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Guardian Angels by Be Gardiner[/caption]
An interactive sculpture called “Dirtmaker,” symbolizing renewal and sustainability, joined WCU’s public art collection last year. A short jaunt down a wooded campus hiking path leads to the organic sculpture seemingly borne of the forest around it. Gently rock the giant drum by its trunks and lend your own hand to rejuvenating the earth beneath. You can chart your own course through the WCU sculpture trail using an interactive online map, but a good starting place is the piece simple called “Catamount” — none other than the WCU mascot — posted like a sentinel at the main campus entrance off N.C. 107 in Cullowhee.
Green Energy Park, Dillsboro
Harnessing green energy to fuel the arts, the Jackson County Green Energy Park houses studios for potters, blacksmiths and glassblowers. The working campus has a collection of sculptures, some made by former artists-in-residence and some selected through sculpture contests.
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Box of Souls by Bob Doster[/caption]
The artists’ workshops at the Green Energy Park — from kilns and glass torches to forges and a foundry — are powered by methane captured from an old, closed-down landfill. After perusing the sculptures, take a guided tour of the complex or browse the onsite art gallery Thursday through Saturday. Located along Haywood Road off U.S. 441 on the edge of Dillsboro.
To plan your visit to Jackson County, and see the stunning outdoor art for yourself, visit www.DiscoverJacksonNC.com.