Showing posts with label Circle Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Circle Museum. Show all posts

Friday, June 2, 2017

The Circle Museum, a roadside treasure

On the side of a well-traveled road, near the eastern border of NY with Massachusetts, lies a hidden treasure, a roadside attraction, an outdoor sculpture park that is totally unadvertised, waiting to be discovered by passersby.  My family and I first happened upon the Circle Museum, the brainchild of artist Bijan Mahmoodi, a little more than two years ago, while on our way to visit a waterfall.  I blogged about the discovery in this post, here, written in September 2015.

A couple of days ago my husband and I were coming home from a drive (our destination will be a topic for another post) and decided to bypass highway traffic.  Instead we took a detour to visit the sculpture park again.  It was, again, worth the time. 
The pic above shows just a tiny percentage of the fields full of Bijan's sculptures.  Amazing stuff, whimsical, inventive, and compelling.  And there's so many pieces, including many that have been made in the two years since we were there last.  I look forward to returning again in the wintertime, to see the sculptures draped with sparkling white snow.  I'll bet that its fabulous!





Bijan and my husband chatted for a while while I took pictures.  He learned that Bijan had recently had surgery for cancer, but thankfully doesn't need chemo.  He's been painting while he waits to be healed enough to build some more monumental scrap metal sculptures.  Here's a couple of pics of his studio. 

 This gathering of strange little sculptures in a patch of weeds reminds me of an old overgrown graveyard.  Maybe that was the intent? 

I was rather smitten by this little guy tucked among the trees.

And these gigantic flowers made me smile.

 Don Quixote, perhaps?

Thank you, Bijan Mahmoodi, for sharing your incredible talents with the world! 

Friday, September 18, 2015

An Artsy Chance Encounter

When you are driving down the road and see something  that makes you want to stop, don't keep driving!  I hate to think that if, when I yelled "What is THAT??  STOP the car!", my husband had kept driving.  We all would have missed an amazing experience.  But thankfully, he stopped and backed up, even though we were on our way to beautiful Bash Bish Falls with our son, and we all agreed it was totally worth it!
We almost missed it.  We were busy discussing road signs when suddenly we were passing what looked like some large scrap metal sculptures in a field.  There was a sign that said "Circle Museum", and that's when I started shouting.  The Circle Museum and Sculpture Park is a one-man show - the creation of an incredible artist named Bijan Mahmoodi.
There are well over a hundred large-scale sculptures.
I read that Bijan said he decided to call it  the Circle Museum because, he said, "our planet is based on the circle - the sun, the planets, the moon, and life itself is cyclical.  The circle is what inspires me."  But certainly all the sculptures aren't based on the circle.  There are eagles, and other birds, for example.
 There's a tree made of shimmering curling strips of metal. 
There's these bent-over human-ish forms, that I thought looked like a yoga class.  A friend saw the photos and told me that to her they looked like "deeply exhausted space aliens trudging across a field."  I love that description!
There's many other sculptures that are based on the human form in one way or another.
Maybe my favorite sculpture is one that I didn't realize was a human form right away, and then when I viewed it from another side, I realized that I was looking at someone with a nice round tush!
 And is that a bunny tail on the tush?
And look at this!  A very clever table and chairs, made out of bathtubs!!
Honestly, there wasn't a thing there that didn't totally blow me away, including Bijan, a lovely man who has no web presence and does not advertise at all, but does live off of his artwork.  He gave us his business card, which basically just has a phone # and email address.  He forgot to have his name printed on the cards!  He is dependent on people like us, who screech to a halt. (Luckily he is on a main road.)  He has been located there, I believe, for 30 or 40 years, but spends winters in Europe.
 And a few more random pictures of the many sculptures...
 Below, my son is photographing a piece that reminded him of Sputnik. 
 We did, by the way, eventually make it to Bash Bish Falls, about 10 miles down the road.  There's a great legend about the derivation of its name, which you can find with a Google search.