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Moving Forward

By Donna Sink

The seven shelters are located throughout downtown along the Cultural Trail.

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Moving Forward

Artist: Donna Sink, architect

Year: 2013

Medium: Stainless steel, 3-Form Eco-Resin, & cement with TX Active additive

Specs: Seven transit shelters approx. 8 ft. 6 in. x 8 ft. 9½ in. x 4 ft. 6 in. each


Moving Forward by Indianapolis-based architect Donna Sink is a series of seven eco-friendly transit shelters that showcase original, site-sensitive poetry by published authors who have ties to Indiana. Each shelter is composed of 3-Form Eco-Resin panels, which are made of 40% post-industrial re-grind content, mounted in a stainless steel frame. The shelters are installed on TX Active cement pads, which help reduce many pollutants deemed harmful to human health and the environment through a photocatalytic process. Each shelter was conceived as a method for allowing poets to participate in the public art program. A call for poetry was released and entries adjudicated by a panel of professionals selected by the Writers’ Center of Indiana. Each shelter has part of the poem embedded in the resin panels, while the entire poem is legible on one of the shelter side panels.

Selected poems and their respective shelter locations:

“Invisible Movements” by Karen Kovacik –Virginia Ave. near McCarty St. temporarily moved due to Red Line Construction

“The Painters” by Richard Pflum –Virginia Ave. near Woodlawn Ave. temporarily moved due to Red Line Construction

“The Bowl of Possible Peas by John Sherman–Virginia Ave. near Lexington Ave. – temporarily moved due to Red Line Construction

“Circle, Chorus” by Mitchell Douglas–Washington St. west of Illinois St.

“Settlement” by Micah Ling–Washington St. outside the Eiteljorg & Indiana State museums

“Art with a Heart by Vienna Wagner–Massachusetts Ave. at Walnut and Park

“Our Street in Endless Circles” by Jenny Browne–Massachusetts Ave. east of College Ave.

Donna Sink

Donna Sink is an Indianapolis-based architect who is interested in innovative and sustainable design solutions. In addition to designing residential and commercial spaces, Sink has extensive experience in exhibition design and is married to the artist Brian McCutcheon. They live in Indianapolis’ Broad Ripple Village Cultural District with their son, Angus. Sink received her Bachelors of Architecture from the University of Arizona and her Masters of Architecture from Cranbook Academy of Art. She has worked at architecture firms throughout the country and in Europe, and was formerly a partner at MW Harris Architecture and Design in Indianapolis, IN.

Sink explains, “the design intent is that the sun will illuminate the colored graphic and cast the shadow of the words on the sidewalk.  This temporal, immaterial rendering references the poem’s existence as idea, not object.  It also relates the work to the seasonal changing of the sun’s angle in relation to the human body on the sidewalk.”

More about Donna Sink & Moving Forward here.