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It was rusted, and the depleted wood symbols were falling off." Teaneck High School senior Sylvana Dipre with Frog Compass sculpture she designed for the Teaneck Creek Conservancy. The class ...
A three-foot, red wooden frog plays steel drums in the forefront ... started putting her sculptures in the garden as decorations, never imagining anyone else would be interested in her carvings.
For over 50 years, the University of Regina College Avenue campus has been home to an iconic frog sculpture. The frog is credited to the late Saskatchewan sculptor Joe Fafard. But it was not a ...
The 1990 wooden sculpture shows the crucified frog nailed through the feet and hands like Jesus Christ. The frog, eyes popping and tongue sticking out, wears a loincloth and holds a mug of beer ...
This frog sculpture, a former fixture on the playground ... Classes were given a chance to dream up what shape the raw wood should take, and a student vote was used to pick the winning design.
The wooden sculpture by the late German artist Martin Kippenberger depicts a frog about 1 metre 30 cm (4ft) high nailed to a brown cross and holding a beer mug in one outstretched hand and an egg ...
When the Eco-Art Committee of the Teaneck Creek Conservancy went looking for someone to design a replacement for a disintegrating sculpture in the 47-acre nature preserve, it turned to high school ...
It was meant to be community art." The sculpture was not initially built with the intention of lasting forever. The inside of the frog is hollow, originally supported by wood framing and chicken wire.