![]() "Vantage Point", on the Seattle Post-Intelligencer blog Horsebytes by Monica Bretherton with extensive close-up images of the sculpture.Ĭoordinates: 46★7′59″N 119★7′41″W / 46.9663°N 119.9615°W / 46.9663 -119.ROCHESTER, N.Y., 19, January 2022 – Kodak Alaris has announced a global strategic alliance with digital intelligence company ABBYY. ![]() Washington Curiosities: Quirky Characters, Roadside Oddities & Other Offbeat Stuff, pp. ^ a b Ellensburg Daily Record (20 November 1987).^ a b Associated Press (7 October 1990)."Sculptor Govedare Wants to Free the Ponies". "All the pretty horses of Vantage are only half done". Over the years Grandfather Cuts Loose the Ponies has become one of the most-seen public art installations in the state according to the Seattle Times, with 100 million vehicles having driven past it between 19 alone. By 2008 the cost of constructing and installing it was estimated at $350,000. The 13-ton steel basket from which the horses were to emerge was never constructed. The sculpture has remained unfinished since then for lack of funds. The first six horses were finally installed on the ridge in October 1990 with 9 more in the ensuing months. Only the lead stallion had been completed by August 1989 and was unveiled in Riverfront Park as part of the fundraising drive. However, fundraising was slow with many potential corporate donors reluctant to support a sculpture that would not be situated in their own community. The original plan was to install the horses in the spring of 1989 during the state's centennial celebrations. The state's Department of Transport ceded the land on the ridge to Grant County which had pledged to maintain the sculpture and the Thundering Hooves Centennial Sculpture Committee was set up to raise the $250,000 in private funds needed to construct and install the sculpture. In November 1987 members of the Washington Centennial Commission also wrote a letter in support of the project. Govedare's proposal was given official support by the Centennial Committee of Grant County in March 1987 followed by support from the centennial committees of the surrounding counties- Spokane, Adams, Lincoln, and Kittitas. A ridge above the Columbia River near Vantage Bridge was proposed as the site because the last great roundup of Washington's wild horses took place in the area in 1906. The sculpture would celebrate Washington's 100 years of statehood with a monument both to the native peoples of the state and to the wild horses which once roamed there. He conceived the idea for the wild horse project in 1986. Govedare had previously created several public art sculptures in Washington, most notably The Joy of Running Together, 40 life-size steel runners installed in Spokane's Riverfront Park to honor the annual Bloomsday Run. The horses, now colored a rich red from oxidation and each weighing approximately 1000 pounds, are welded to four-foot-long metal poles set into the ridge on which the sculpture stands. The 15 life-size horses which comprise the sculpture (as of 2014) are made from half-inch-thick panels of COR-TEN steel, a special iron alloy that rusts on the surface but still retains its structural integrity. However, funds ran out and the basket has yet to be erected. The basket was to be decorated by local artists with designs of people, leaping salmon, and running deer, "a sort of futuristic Noah's Ark", as Govedare said in 1988. They will be a companion for work and play on this planet. Now, take these ponies I am cutting them loose. In Govedare's imagined tale, the Grandfather Spirit says as he tips the basket:Ĭreatures of this planet, behold, a Great Basket! I send this basket, bearing the gift of life, to all corners of the universe. The original design was for a 36-foot-high tipped basket with two horses still inside and 16 more galloping away from it, a gift from the Grandfather Spirit. According to the Seattle Times, it is one of the most-seen public artworks in Washington state. Presented as a gift for the centenary of Washington's statehood, the sculpture was conceived as a memorial to the wild horses which once roamed the region. It consists of 15 life-size steel horses which appear to be galloping across a ridge above the Columbia River. Grandfather Cuts Loose the Ponies (also known as the Wild Horse Monument) is a public art sculpture created by David Govedare in 1989–1990 and situated near Vantage, Washington. ![]() Grandfather Cuts Loose the Ponies photographed in 2012
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