Sue Shelton White
Wanda Stanfill, 2017
201 E. Main St.
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A life-size bronze bust and granite monument honors Sue Shelton White for her pivotal role in Tennessee’s ratification of the 19th Amendment in 1920. The bust portrays White in her early 30s and facing the East because that is the direction she needed to go to make change for all citizens. The Sue Shelton White monument in Jackson is part of the Tennessee Woman Suffrage Heritage Trail.
Oil-based clay and lost wax method was used to create the bust.
Installation date: May 25, 2017
Bronze bust: 32 inches tall
Granite monument: 40 ½ inches
Sculptor: Wanda Stanfill, Jackson, TN
Foundry: Lugar Bronze Foundry, Eads, TN
untitled #2
By James Davis
409 E. Lafayette St.
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Artist Statement:
“My work deals with form and the different rhythmic qualities that can be altered by a slight change of an angle or curve in these forms. In these rhythmic studies I try to look at the composition as a piece of music. I want the work to have some sense of improvisation, hold a chord structure, and have a tune in the same way that a piece of jazz is composed. Each piece can be very similar, but in slight variations can give a different feeling from the next. The subtle changes and the feelings that they cause are what I am after in my work.”
James Davis
HERmitage 2
By Susana Jones
91 New Market St.
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Artist Statement:
”I have always been fascinated by survival in the wilderness.I built tree houses and dug caves as a kid and later homesteaded land in Costa Rica where I lived for 22 years. My sculpture is an extension of these experiences and deals
in particular with hand hewn structures. HeRmitage 1, made of cedar logs, is an enclosure based on a triangle, the ancient symbol of the feminine. Vertical poles stand watch at the corners of the three sides made from split cedar planks. The center of the structure is wrapped with grape vines.”
Susana Jones
the athletes
Brian Russel
101 Jackson Walk Plaza
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Artist Brian Russel designed the Athletes for the Jackson Walk area. Angles of the structural pipe supports complement the roof overhang trusses on the LIFT building in front of it. The forged aluminum parts of the figures suggest the anatomy of musculature in a fluid, dynamic context, depicting bodies in motion.
Gethsemane
Shawn Morin
400 S Highland Ave
Crescendo
Gregory Johnson
100 N Highland Ave.
Reading Mantis
Tim Pace
433 E Lafayette St.
Guitar Sculpture
Don Worth
305 E College St #6215
Mother and Child
Jim Collins, purchased 2007
91 New Market St.
Jail Piece
Michael Atkission
314 E Main St.
Reaching for the Sun
Wayne Trapp
305 E College St #6215
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Officially titled "Reading Mantis," this piece was sculpted from recycled metal by artist Tim Pace. The sculpture is of a large praying mantis, wearing glasses and reading a book, stands outside the Jackson Madison County Library. It is approximately 20 feet tall and is painted a pale green.
Burden of Proof
Chris Wubbena, purchases 2008
314 E Main St.
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Artist Statement:
“I like to believe that the artwork I create is in some way an amalgamation of various landmarks and artifacts. A landmark is more than a simply object or place; it is a reminder of an emotion, experience, or discovery. An artifact is a clue into secrets, secrets that have resisted the affects of time, to tell old underlying stories. The landmarks and artifacts presented in my work, through material, forma, and content, investigate our shard contemporary existence as it sits teetering atop a world or accumulated beliefs, traditions, and misconceptions.”
- Chris Wubbena
7 Pillars
Lee Benson
Shirlene Mercer Park
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The Pillars sit on top of a mound of Shirlene Mercer Walking Trail Park, constructed by artist Lee Benson, retired professor and Art Department Chair of Union University.
The Pillars represent:
Bishop Isaac Lane – In 1882, he founded a CME school in Jackson to provide education for the freedmen.
Austin Raymond Merry – He established the South Jackson School for the Colored, which was the forerunner of what would become Merry High School.
Samuel McElwee – An attorney, he was the first African American to serve three terms in the legislature and the first one to be nominated for Speaker of the House.
Miles Vandahurst Lynk – The first African American to establish a medical practice in Jackson.
Beebe Steven Lynk – She was one of the first African American women in the nation to teach chemistry at the university level.
Milmon Mitchell – Assisted then-Special Council Thurgood Marshall with the Department of Justice to expose the discriminating practices in Brownsville.
The Seventh Pillar represents:
J. Emmitt Ballard, Isaiah Savage, Myrtle Monroe, James Buchanan, W.K. Seals, Genevieve Brooks, Dr. John C. Frierson, Dr. Wesley C. McClure, Rev. Chester A. Kirkendoll, Rev. Udelle D. Lewis, A.J. Payne, Frank Walker, Dr. Isaiah L. Hildreth, Dr. Ernest Brooks Sr., and T.C. Ozier
Benson expanded upon his sculptures at Sherlene Mercer Park in 2023, installing a new piece in honor of Gene Huntspon, Dr. Kimmie Powell Davis, Mary Cunningham, David Woolfork, and Gil Scott Heron.
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Artist Statement : “Jim Collins sculpture style uses silhouette figures constructed of stainless steel, brass, and painted steel. Collins was a Professor of Art at the University of Tennessee from 1966 until 1983 when he resigned that teaching position to deviate full-time to his career as a professional artist.”
Unity Park sculpture
Lee Benson & Chris Nadaskay
336 S Highland Ave
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An architectural sculpture was created in memory of the community’s response to the devastating tornadoes of January 1999. Union University art professors Lee Benson and Chris Nadaskay conceived and designed the centerpiece sculpture. The sculpture is sixty feet in diameter and 22 feet tall and believed to be the largest public sculpture in the Tennessee. The design incorporates free-falling water, six columns representing the six who died in the storms and a seventh column that stands for the unified spirit the community displayed during aftermath. Randomly placed stone spheres represent each location in the area where the tornadoes touched down.
Living Stones
LEE BENSON
Shirlene Mercer Park
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This sculpture is an east-west axis and north-south axis, symbolizing that Christ will return to the east and the five stones are situated toward the east. The circle "is the greatest concept in art" and the steel circles in his sculpture represent God, light, and love.