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Fourth Floor Art Installation

Fred Nagelbach standing next to part of the fourth floor art installationThe theme of the fourth floor artwork is lifelong learning. 

Chicago artist Fred Nagelbach has created a three-dimensional sculpture for the fourth floor that is part sculpture, part anthropological exhibit. This work invites viewers to pause, explore, and return often.






Curved piece of sculpture that hangs over an area of shelves on the fourth floor

Part of sculpture with two spheres hanging from interconnected rods



Large piece of sculpture that resembles scrivener's tool, hanging under fourth floor windows


Robert Nagelbach works at connecting one piece of the sculpture to the wall

Colorful portion of the sculpture, with pieces of many shapes and sizes, made of different media, hanging on the same wall

Freestanding piece of the sculpture that resembles an obelisk sitting on a carved trunk of a tree

Nagelbach has given the installation the working title of “looking up.” He says that the trail trees and pictographs of preliterate, mid-continent Native Americans suggest the shapes used in symbolic systems of communication, such as punctuation, shorthand, and writing. The themes he used to create this sculpture include alphabets, punctuations, scrivener’s tools, and fruit. “The library,” Nagelbach says, “is a repository of the fruits of the mind.” The materials are wood, steel, aluminum, and bronze.

Nagelbach was born in Liebling, Banat, Romania. He earned a B.A. Degree in geography from Valparaiso University and an M.F.A. Degree in sculpture from Rhode Island School of Design. He was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to study in Germany, where he earned a Certifikat from the Akademie der Bildende Künste, München. Nagelbach’s work has been featured in numerous exhibitions and is included in many collections. Currently, he teaches at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

 
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