Latest news with #DylanFarnum


Daily Mail
4 days ago
- Business
- Daily Mail
Trump's national garden plan with 250 sculptures at risk, artists warn
President Donald Trump may face headaches as he tries to cobble together hundreds of statues before the 250th birthday of the U.S. Speaking in front of Mount Rushmore during his first term in 2020, Trump vowed that statues would soon be going up in America. Half a decade later Trump is working to make good on the promise he made before the stone faces of the most revered presidents. But his plan to create a national sculpture garden, replete with the busts of at least 250 American heroes, all before July 2026, is already facing major hiccups. 'It seems completely unworkable,' Daniel Kunitz, editor of Sculpture magazine, recently said of the president's plan for the National Garden of American Heroes. The main issue, Kunitz told Politico, is timing; the creators will have just nine months to produce their works. 'It doesn't seem to be very serious,' Kunitz said of the project. 'It's sort of trolling.' One sculptor even suggested that Trump may have to look to China for help with his ambitious project. Dylan Farnum, who formerly headed up the highly-esteemed Walla Walla Foundry, told Politico that America simply does not have the number of artists needed for such a task. 'You'd be flooding the capacity of artists in this country who do that kind of stuff, and the capacity of foundries,' Farnum said. 'There are places where you can really whip some stuff off. They can do it in China.' Trump revamped his plan for the sculpture display in a new executive order earlier this year. 'The National Garden will be built to reflect the awesome splendor of our country's timeless exceptionalism,' the order says. 'The National Garden will feature a roll call of heroes who deserve honor, recognition, and lasting tribute because of the battles they won, the ideas they championed, the diseases they cured, the lives they saved, the heights they achieved, and the hope they passed down to all of us.' The action also calls for the garden to be completed 'as expeditiously as possible.' However, it remains unclear where the garden will be or what the design will look like. The order calls for an appropriate space to be identified, though the governor of South Dakota has offered a location close to Mount Rushmore. The White House is currently receiving artists' applications to create sculptures until July 1. The application process is being overseen by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). The group, along with the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) will contribute a total of $34 million for the project. Artists are asked to volunteer 10 - 20 names from Trump's list of U.S. heroes that they want to bring to life. A single applicant can be selected for up to three sculptures. Those selected can earn up to $200,000 per sculpture. NBA legend Kobe Bryant, signer Whitney Houston, American gardener Johnny 'Appleseed' Chapman, Walt Disney, Harriet Tubman and more are on the list of heroes. George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Jackie Robinson and Rosa Parks are also some of the names on the expansive catalog. Artists will not know the status of their applications until September - meaning they won't know which famous American they will be sculpting until then. Once approved, artists will have until June 2026 to complete there statues and get them to the government roughly a month before the nation's 250th birthday on July 4, 2026. 'You put out an [request for proposal] and then there's just a long period working with the institutions,' Kunitz said. The editor noted that the Trump administration will likely work closely on the designs with the artists, which could, and likely will, slow down work on the hundreds of sculptures. 'A year is highly unlikely,' he said of the turnaround time. The NEH did not return the Daily Mail's request for comment.


Daily Mail
5 days ago
- Business
- Daily Mail
Trump's dream to build a $34 million 'heroes' garden hit with major setback
President Donald Trump may face headaches as he tries to cobble together hundreds of statues before the 250th birthday of the U.S. Speaking in front of Mount Rushmore during his first term in 2020, Trump vowed that statues would soon be going up in America. Half a decade later Trump is working to make good on the promise he made before the stone faces of the most revered presidents. But his plan to create a national sculpture garden, replete with the busts of at least 250 American heroes, all before July 2026, is already facing major hiccups. 'It seems completely unworkable,' Daniel Kunitz, editor of Sculpture magazine, recently said of the president's plan for the National Garden of American Heroes. The main issue, Kunitz told Politico, is timing; the creators will have just nine months to produce their works. 'It doesn't seem to be very serious,' Kunitz said of the project. 'It's sort of trolling.' One sculptor even suggested that Trump may have to look to China for help with his ambitious project. President-elect Donald Trump and family pose at the end of a welcome celebration at the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, DC, on January 19, 2017 Dylan Farnum, who formerly headed up the highly-esteemed Walla Walla Foundry, told Politico that America simply does not have the number of artists needed for such a task. 'You'd be flooding the capacity of artists in this country who do that kind of stuff, and the capacity of foundries,' Farnum said. 'There are places where you can really whip some stuff off. They can do it in China.' Trump revamped his plan for the sculpture display in a new executive order earlier this year. 'The National Garden will be built to reflect the awesome splendor of our country's timeless exceptionalism,' the order says. 'The National Garden will feature a roll call of heroes who deserve honor, recognition, and lasting tribute because of the battles they won, the ideas they championed, the diseases they cured, the lives they saved, the heights they achieved, and the hope they passed down to all of us.' The action also calls for the garden to be completed 'as expeditiously as possible.' However, it remains unclear where the garden will be or what the design will look like. The order calls for an appropriate space to be identified, though the governor of South Dakota has offered a location close to Mount Rushmore. The White House is currently receiving artists' applications to create sculptures until July 1. The application process is being overseen by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). The group, along with the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) will contribute a total of $34 million for the project. Artists are asked to volunteer 10 - 20 names from Trump's list of U.S. heroes that they want to bring to life. A single applicant can be selected for up to three sculptures. Those selected can earn up to $200,000 per sculpture. NBA legend Kobe Bryant, signer Whitney Houston, American gardener Johnny 'Appleseed' Chapman, Walt Disney, Harriet Tubman and more are on the list of heroes. George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Jackie Robinson and Rosa Parks are also some of the names on the expansive catalog. Artists will not know the status of their applications until September - meaning they won't know which famous American they will be sculpting until then. Once approved, artists will have until June 2026 to complete there statues and get them to the government roughly a month before the nation's 250th birthday on July 4, 2026. 'You put out an [request for proposal] and then there's just a long period working with the institutions,' Kunitz said. The editor noted that the Trump administration will likely work closely on the designs with the artists, which could, and likely will, slow down work on the hundreds of sculptures. 'A year is highly unlikely,' he said of the turnaround time.
Yahoo
6 days ago
- Business
- Yahoo
Trump's $34 Million ‘American Heroes' Garden is Already Facing Major Hurdles
You'd struggle to find a more perfect metaphor to capture Donald Trump's brash, self-aggrandizing modus operandi than the proposed National Garden of American Heroes, a gaudy tourist attraction built to whitewash history using tens of millions in funding stripped from actual historical conservation and scholarship programs. The icing on the cake here is that it is already being sued. The garden has been the source of much derisive humor, but still looked to be going according to plan, opening to coincide with the nation's 250th birthday celebrations in July 2026. Now, experts have poured cold water on the idea, claiming that it's fundamentally impractical. 'It seems completely unworkable,' Daniel Kunitz, editor of Sculpture magazine, told Politico. The issues lie in the capacity for the American sculpting sector to actually undertake the work. White House communications in the executive orders passed to get the project done demand fine, realistic depictions of such figures as Abraham Lincoln or Martin Luther King Jr. There are fewer than 70 workshops capable of undertaking such work in the United States, and most of them are booked out six to 18 months in advance. 'You'd be flooding the capacity of artists in this country who do that kind of stuff, and the capacity of foundries,' said Dylan Farnum, former head of one of the nation's top fine-art sculptors. On top of this, sculptors will not be chosen until late September, with a delivery deadline of June 1, 2026; commission grants are thought to be lower than necessary to complete the work in the requisite materials; and the White House has yet to select a location for the garden. Of course, there is one place the Trump administration could turn to to get the job done faster—China. The Asian superpower rival has a significant advantage when it comes to pumping out life-like replicas, but the quality may not meet American standards. While it remains to be seen just how the statues in the garden will be crafted, a Chinese-made National Garden of American Heroes would certainly not go unnoticed.