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Bees for Sunset Park

9 Av (D)

Bees for Sunset Park

Christopher Russell
Artwork in Cast bronze by Christopher Russell showing gates with honeycombs and bees.
“Bees for Sunset Park” (2012) by Christopher Russell at 9 Av. Photo: Stefan Hagen

About the project

Christopher Russell’s artwork is centered on the image of the bee. The artist imagined the station as a kind of beehive, a center of activity, with many individuals converging, like bees, darting in and out, to and from their many pursuits. The historic building with its central entrance and peaked roof evokes the feeling of a beehive. The artist found the image of the bee an appropriate motif since the station’s architecture is inspired by the Arts and Crafts style. During the Arts and Crafts period, artists and designers utilized the bee, the hive, and honeycomb extensively, in decorative wall coverings, objects and furnishings. 

Incorporating this imagery, Russell designed two sets of gates and finials for the fences that surround the open spaces at each side of the station. The cast bronze gates are based on honeycombs, greatly magnified. These monumental honeycombs are populated by equally magnified bees depicted in their crowds, busily occupied. The cells of the honeycomb are open, allowing light to pass through, and bringing out the hexagonal pattern of the comb, which creates depth and visual interest, when viewed from a distance. 

The finials, atop each the tallest posts along the fences, feature a single bee, larger than life, working on an equally exaggerated flower head. The bees are intended as an affirmation of nature in the city, reminding passers-by of their fertility, productivity, and community. The artwork was fabricated by Modern Art Foundry. 

About the artist

Chistopher Russell is endlessly curious about the world around him, finding inspiration for his ceramics in his study of art history, architecture, the decorative arts, literature, botany, and whatever else catches his eye. In addition to his sculpture at 9 Av Station in Brooklyn, his work is also on public view at NYU Langone Hospital, where he was commissioned to create a ceramic wall painting for their Bay Ridge Campus. His work has been exhibited widely in group shows and fair exhibitions, including The Bernardaud Foundation in Limoges, France, Royal West Academy in Bristol, England, Deutsche Bank in New York City, Paul Robeson Gallery at Rutgers University, and WaveHill, the prestigious public gardens in The Bronx, New York. A Massachusetts native, Russell attended Wesleyan University and moved to New York City in 1985, where he has lived and worked ever since.