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Artist
Hopes Flame Warms Hopes of Cancer Patients
Springfield News-Leader
by Chris Bentley
Eternal Flame installation
Russ RuBert's newest sculpture has a specific purpose.
It's designed to give hope to cancer patients. But
it's also the largest piece of public art in Springfield,
and it gives RuBert, who designed an earlier sculpture
on the Southwest Missouri State Campus, hope that
more such pieces may be on the way.
His new sculpture, a 21-foot-tall sweeping brass
shape called "the Eternal Flame" stands
in the atrium of the $8.3 million Mid-America Cancer
Center, 2055 S. Fremont Ave., which opened in April.
The flame cost about $40,000, center officials said.
It can be seen from Fremont through a large circular
window at the front of the building.
"It's the central focus of the center. It's
symbolic of beauty and life beyond the disease," Gregory Fecteau, the center's administrator, said
Thursday.
The sculpture is scheduled to be dedicated from
7 to 9 this evening at a multimedia event at the
center, 2055 S. Fremont Ave. The event is open to
the public.
RuBert, 30, designed the sculpture in October, when
St. John's Regional Health Center, which operates
the center, invited several artists to submit ideas.
The St. John's Auxiliary volunteer group had raised
money for the sculpture. Another $460,000 the group
raised bought a large piece of radiation therapy
equipment, said Sister Stephanie Miller, vice president
of St. Johns.
RuBert got the idea of brass flame from the center's
logo which includes a flame shape. The shiny surface
of the sculpture is burnished in patterns to continue
the motif.
"The burnishing makes it catch the light and
make it look almost like the movement of flames,"
Miller said. "He did a beautiful job."
A committee chose RuBert's idea in December, and
construction began on it in January at Rose Metal
Products Inc., 1955 E. Division St.
It was installed in the center in April, but the
dedication event was put off until today in order
to coordinate activities, RuBert said.
The event will include an interactive computer display
also designed by RuBert's company Public Sphere.
RuBert hopes that the sculpture and the event will
help show Springfield the importance of public art.
Springfield has few examples of large sculptures.
One is RuBert's Echosphere at SMS, near the corner
of South National Avenue and East Grand Street.
"This is a renaissance period for the arts
we're entering. A city like Seattle doesn't even
consider putting up a large hotel or bank building
without considering some kind of art," he said.
"I hope Springfield becomes like that."
Pam Kanagawa, vice president of Public Sphere, pointed
out that Springfield's options are open.
"We can be whatever we want to be around here.
We choose our direction," she said.
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