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Interviews: On Rainbows...
Written by Tammie Byram Fowles, PhD, LISW-CP   
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Nov 29, 2008 A +  A -  RESET  

Interview with Dr. Fred Stern, The Rainbow Maker, who creates natural rainbows in the sky as large as 2000 feet across for events in support of world peace and global unity.

Fred Stern, the Rainbow Maker

Fred Stern, the Rainbow Maker

Dr. Stern is an internationally recognized innovator in public art. He has served as Associate Professor of Sculpture at Pratt Institute, and as Associate Professor of Visual Arts at New York University, the University of Maryland and the Instituto De Allende in Mexico.

Stern has received five major awards from the National Endowment for the Arts and grants from many local and private agencies to support his work. He was the first artist to receive an Art in Public Places Individual Artist Award from the Endowment, for his rainbow work.

He has created natural man-made rainbows as large as 2000 feet across for the cities of Austin, Baltimore, Columbus Junction, Iowa, Chicago, El Paso, Huntington, Long Island, Klamath Falls, Oregon, Las Cruces, Miami, New York City, Salt Lake City, San Francisco, Santa Fe and Silver City, NM. In 1992, Stern created a series of rainbows at the U.N. sanctioned Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro. In 1995, he presented his rainbow work, "Keshet Sheket," a Holocaust Memorial, as the opening piece for the Eutopia Festival in Potsdam Germany. This past summer he presented his work at the Stockholm Water Festival and created a moon rainbow for terminally ill children at Camp Sundown in New York.

In 1996, in conjunction with Japanese National Television, he accomplished a long-term dream of creating a rainbow over the United Nations Building in New York. In this monumental piece, he raised what he sees, as the Planet's or God's true flag, over the flags of all nations, establishing a visual metaphor for Global Unity and World Peace.

Upcoming events include a rainbow for an Arab-Israeli Peace Conference in Haifa, Israel and a rainbow for the Hague Appeal for Peace in Holland.

Stern's rainbow work involves the creation of an artificial rainfall using fire truck or fire boats, pumping water into the air. The water drops refract the sunlight and establish the rainbow. A computer program is used to determine the optimal time, position and spray parameters for the rainbow generation.

Although his rainbow work began as Conceptual Sculptural Pieces, they have become Public Art works serving as a visual metaphor for global unity and world peace. As an artist, Stern combines a visual sensibility with an ethical responsibility in the realization of his work.

In addition to his rainbow work, Stern has become a vital force on the Internet through a series of web sites. The central one is http://www.rainbowmaker.us/. His work has been featured in the newly released book, "The Book of Rainbows" by Richard Whelan, First Glance Books, Cobb, Ca.

Stern has coordinated groups of artists in the presentation of public works for The International Sculpture Conference in Washington, D.C. and The Primer Gran Festival De Dos Culturas in Mexico. He served as an advisor and participant to the New York Annual Avant Garde Festival for more than 10 years.


Tammie: What moved you to begin creating rainbows?

Fred: I was working as an artist in Baltimore teaching at the University of Maryland. Much of my work involved large scale public art works. I was looking at how to make a large scale piece in an urban environment, easily. I came up with the concept of the rainbow. I saw it as sculptural. It was 3-d and it had a sense of the aesthetic. It just was not permanent. The first one was in 1978.

Tammie: You've traveled all over the world creating rainbows and I know that countless individuals who've experienced them have been profoundly moved. I'm wondering though if there's a particular event that you've participated in that has most moved you.

Fred: The Earth Summit in Rio in 1992. There were over a thousand children that came with banners to see the rainbow. There was no sun as they were arriving. Then when the last of the kids got to the beach the sun broke out. I can still hear them shouting, "Arco Iris" as the rainbow was sailed along the beach. When the event was completed the sun went back behind the clouds.

The other was the rainbow over the United Nations building in 92. That one took three years to realize, but it allowed the rainbow - the "planet's flag"- to be flown above the flags of all nations.



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Last Updated( Jan 13, 2009 )
reviewed by: Harry Croft, MD
Psychiatrist, HealthyPlace.com Medical Director
 

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