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ROLL & PLAY | Public Sculptures by Alisa Looney | Maryhill Museum of Art in Goldendale. Item made of steel
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ROLL & PLAY | Public Sculptures by Alisa Looney | Maryhill Museum of Art in Goldendale. Item made of steel
ROLL & PLAY | Public Sculptures by Alisa Looney | Maryhill Museum of Art in Goldendale. Item made of steel

Created and Sold by Alisa Looney

Alisa Looney

ROLL & PLAY - Public Sculptures

Featured In Maryhill Museum of Art, Goldendale, WA

$ On Inquiry

Powder Coated Steel 36"h x 75"w x 48"d Maryhill Museum of Art - Outdoor Sculpture Collection, Gift of the North Star Foundation Feature Sculpture on New Plaza overlooking the Columbia River Gorge Roll & Play invites the viewer to feel the freedom we feel when we roll around and play on the floor or in the grass. I created this piece to remind us to enjoy our lives, and make time for play, like we did so naturally as children. I chose yellow because it is a playful color, and reminds one of the color of sunflowers, and the brightest days of life.

Item ROLL & PLAY
Created by Alisa Looney
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Alisa Looney
Meet the Creator
Wescover creator since 2019
Open, energetic human form with messages of Joy & Connection

Best known for her award winning outdoor sculptures, Alisa Looney has exhibited in the U.S. and Canada. Her work is in a multitude of private and public collections, including Maryhill Museum of Art in Goldendale, WA, and several U.S. cities in the Northwestern states of Oregon, Idaho and Washington. She expresses her ideas through sculpture, dance, painting and enameling in her Bend, OR, Studio. At the age of four, Alisa began drawing and building with clay and sand on the banks of the Spokane River, in Northern Idaho. The movement of the river is still present in her work today and she often donates a portion of her sales to organizations that keep our rivers clean and flowing. She fell in love with metal arts as a silver smith in her early years, received her BFA in Design from Boise State University in 1983 and began welding in 1998. Alisa returned to Idaho in 2010 to study with enamellist and BSU Professor Emeritus, John Killmaster, which has allowed her to merge sculpture design and narrative enamels into what she considers her most precious work to date. She loves sharing these enameling techniques through workshops in her Bend, Oregon studio and is currently developing online classes for enamelists near and far.