Untitled (crow on roof-ridge Waagstraat complex - kraai op nok Waagstraat-complex)
Gert Sennema
About this artwork.
On the occasion of the opening of the Waagstraat complex, CBK Groningen organised the exhibition Dwalen door de Waagstraat (Wandering along the Waagstraat) in 1996. In this exhibition, six Groningen artists were invited to respond to the space and atmosphere of the architecture of the Waagstraat complex at locations of their own choosing.
Gert E. Sennema depicted his critical view of the Waagstraat complex by making three wooden crows. These birds symbolise Sennema's sense of unease with the Waagstraat complex: “Crows regularly appear as props in an historical setting of castles, churches, graveyards or ruins. Within this setting, their presence is synonymous with impending or present doom”, says the artist.
One of the three crows is still present. It sits on the gable apex of the complex, like an ominous harbinger. The second crow, which was placed on the copper drainpipe (second-floor patio of the residential complex), has now been removed. The third crow, which was sitting on the windowsill of the News Café, was also taken away by the artist because the animal unsettled a staff member: it gave him nightmares.
At the request of the then-alderman Paas, Sennema made a fourth crow, meant to scare pigeons. The bird sits with spread wings on the second floor of the town hall, in front of the window where Paas had his office at the time.
Location.
Waagstraat (op nok Waagstraatcomplex)
Facts & Figures.
-
Design
Gert Sennema -
District
Centrum -
Year of creation
1996 -
Art type
Art in / on a building -
Material
Burnt apple wood -
Dimensions
h 0,35 cm