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City of Sydney — Cloud Arch



Downloads City Centre art announcement – Sydney Morning Herald
Statements consolidated Cloud Arch
City of Sydney media release
City of Sydney's Cloud Arch sculpture approved in fiery council meeting – Sydney Morning Herald
Junya Ishigami’s redesigned ‘grand arch’ for Sydney doubles in size – Architecture, Au
Stop the name calling and let's talk art – Sydney Morning Herald
Wanted: some bravery in Sydney public art – Sydney Morning Herald
Unpublished letter – Sydney Morning Herald
City of Lightness – The Saturday Paper
Cloud Arch animation

Ishigami (b. 1974 Kanagawa, Japan, lives and works in Tokyo) is an architect and artist who brings a unique philosophy, aesthetic and skill base to his work. Widely recognised as a force in art and architecture today, Junya Ishigami is credited with creating a new form of art and architecture. This new form expressed itself in Cloud Arch, a construction that would appear to be lighter than air, floating, like a cloud. This sculpture couldn’t have been made when the Opera House was built – it is a product of new thinking and 21st century technology. 
           Cloud Arch was conceived in 2014 with the idea of bequeathing the city the signature landmark it needed to herald the new era of light rail and pedestrianisation – as, perhaps, only an artist with one foot in the camp of architecture could have done. In 2014, George Street, the main north-south artery of central Sydney, was in the process of being transformed through the implementation of the new light rail system. Cloud Arch would function as a gateway, allowing trains and people to pass under it. lt would be visible from across the city. The large swell made by the loop of the arch would frame Town Hall, the Queen Victoria Building, and all the important monuments and buildings at the heart of the city that are significant to people. By locating Cloud Arch at the very heart of the city centre at Town Hall Square and at the midpoint of the newly pedestrianised George Street, it would become the signature entrance gate to the newly transformed pedestrian street and a true icon for Sydney.
            In her statement at the time of the announcement, Flynn would remind people that there is no rule for evaluating public art. There is no one right or wrong answer or opinion about it. She maintained this was one of the special attributes of a work like Cloud Arch: that it invites commentary and open discussion. Artists like Ishigami embrace that sort of discussion and the fact that people bring their own personal histories and views to the works they have made.
            In so many ways, Ishigami was the perfect choice of artist for Sydney: forward-looking, ambitious and visionary like the city itself. An innovator who has captured the imagination of people worldwide, he would create a new form of civic monument with Sydney as the lucky beneficiary. 
Barbara Flynn Pty LtdInstagram, Linkedin, barbara@barbaraflynn.com, +61 (0) 411 877 379
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