Pelican
Story
Fairhope,
Alabama was founded by Midwestern idealists in 1894 as an experimental
utopian community, through a Single Tax Colony based on the philosophy of
Henry George. The founders chose a scenic spot on the eastern shore
of Mobile Bay for its natural beauty, fertile land and temperate climate.
From its early years, Fairhope has been home to artists, writers, and
idealists.
Local boutiques, art galleries,
and antique shops line the downtown streets. Colorful flowers bloom
on every street corner. There are monthly art walks, weekly book
signings and reviews, readings by local and regional authors, Baldwin Pops
concerts on the bluff, as well as the annual Arts and Crafts Festival,
Mardi Gras parades and a New Year’s Eve street celebration.
Fairhope is a tourist destination for visitors and "snowbirds" who
come to the Gulf Coast beaches and golf courses of South Alabama and
Northwest Florida. In particular, the nearby historic Grand Hotel
attracts vacationers and conventioneers to Fairhope’s stores, restaurants
and recreational sites.
In the Spring of 2005, the Eastern Shore
Art Association’s Committee On Public Art (COPA) invited several local
artists to discuss their visions for public art in Fairhope. One of
the suggestions was an initial project to stir excitement in the
community, where art comes alive for everyone. Using the theme of
pelicans, it was suggested that the project be similar to "Cows On Parade"
in Chicago and Kansas City and the A"Fish On Parade" in New
Orleans. "Art Takes Flight" would be a way to get the community
involved and to raise money for public art.
Kay Friedlander,
chairperson of COPA, appointed Barbara Casey and Dean Mosher as co-chairs
of the Art Takes Flight Subcommittee. Barbara concentrated on
organizing the committee and studying temporary art projects in other
cities. Dean worked on the feasibility of getting the pelicans cast
from the original pelican model by his father-in-law, Fairhope’s Craig
Sheldon, for his Celebration of Life sculpture, Fairhope’s first public
sculpture, which celebrated the return of the Brown Pelican to Mobile Bay.
COPA members Claudia Ainsworth, Charles Bassett, Jolane Edwards,
Deborah Kingrea, Coleman Mills, Jenny Rich, and Dianne and Clay Swanzy,
volunteered to serve on the Art Takes Flight Subcommittee, as did America
Jones-Gallaspy, the originator of the proposal. Later, Fran Faust
Slade, Kathleen Taupeka, Nancy Rowe, Deborah Newberry and Fran Taber
joined the subcommittee.
The project was originally planned for
2006, but Hurricane Katrina hit the Gulf Coast in July 2005. New
Orleans was under water, the Mississippi Gulf Coast was destroyed, and
parts of South Alabama received heavy damage. The Grand Hotel at
Point Clear was so severely damaged it stayed closed for more than a year
for repairs.
As a result, COPA moved its Art Takes Flight project
back to 2007 and set a goal of 40 to 50 pelicans, which would be displayed
throughout Fairhope for five months beginning in March and ending in
July. COPA believed that the project would help to lift the spirits
of the community and bring tourists back to Fairhope.
In May 2006,
Thomas Harrison, Arts Editor of the Mobile Press Register, introduced the
project through an article which included a Call for Artists. To be
as inclusive as possible, there was to be no jury selection. The
sponsor would pick the design or the artist.
A brochure was sent
to potential sponsors asking for their support and to artists asking for
their designs. The brochures were placed in Welcome Centers across
Alabama. The Sponsors subcommittee and COPA committee members
approached local businesses and individuals for their financial support.
Adapting the pelican to a fiberglass form and devising an interior
armature and the bases and brackets to make them stable and secure took
eight months. The pelican was not the usual simple, rounded form
recommended for temporary public art projects.
The pelicans had a sneak premiere at a
birthday party for Fannie Flagg, a fund raiser given by Page and Palette,
a Fairhope bookstore and coffee shop. Fannie Flagg read from and
signed her book, "Can’t Wait To Get To Heaven." Participants wore all
white, and a handful of pelicans, unpainted at that time, were adorned
with temporary halos and perched on the grounds of the storybook home of
Pagan and Dean Mosher.
Jo Patton, a Fairhope artist, was
invited to do the first painted pelican. "A Fishy Diet" was displayed
at the Eastern Shore Art Center and made an appearance at the 2006
Birdfest on October 22, 2006.
The initial reaction was so
successful that Art Takes Flight has 71 sponsored pelicans flying
throughout downtown Fairhope. As the flowerbeds and planters were
refreshed by the city, more pelicans were set in place. This slow
process, the increased number of pelicans, and delays in production
resulted in two Flights, a First Flight in March with an initial 30; the
balance were to join them in a Second Flight in May and June. More
production problems delayed the arrival of some in the Second Flight until
the end of July.
In June we were devastated by the theft of the
delightful "Pelican Bill with a Grill," and are still hoping it will be
returned. There is a $1250 reward for the return and a $1000 reward
for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the thief.
Sheldon, the interactive pelican, is on the plaza near the corner
of Section Street and Fairhope Avenue. The Warbirds are flying in
formation from under the balcony at Page and Palette, while the Word Bird,
featuring book spine feathers and signed by local authors, sits on his
nest in a nearby flowerbed. The Wacky Waco bi-plane is perched inside
the new Fairhope Library. A quick walk downtown will also reveal the
Fred Astaire Pelican, Flighty Marilyn, Superman Pelican, Jewelbillee,
Lance Wingspan, Elegant Pelican, Cirque de Soleil, and many others.
The pelicans are now on their correct perches. In late June,
the Tooth Fairy Pelican, Lilly – It’s a Girl Thing, and Pelican Fantasy
flew to their new locations in front of the Fairhope Library, joining
Craig Sheldican and Sunset Pelican II. Nefertiti is now in the French
Quarter, and Southern Nights gave up its perch to Summertime and has taken
Nefertiti’s place across from the Welcome Center. The Courier
Pelican, Paradise Pelican, Pavlovacan and the rest of the flock arrived in
June and July. And the Wine-I-Can, a mosaic pelican bas-relief, and
Party Pelican, ridden by a Mardi Gras jester, went up at the end of
July. The beautifully beaded pelican, Sunset On Mobile Bay, is now
perched by the lagoon at the Grand Hotel.
Maps of the Pelican
Flight Paths are available at the Welcome Center, Eastern Shore Art
Center, and the Eastern Shore Chamber of Commerce, as well as in Welcome
Centers throughout the state.

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