Fall color, a sycamore tree on the east bank of the Wabash River, and a 1983 structure by Indiana State University graphic design student Thomas Dubois, framed by the 2014 “A Song for Indiana” sculpure by Teresa Clark in Fairbanks Park, Terre Haute, Indiana.
Fall color, a sycamore tree on the bank of the Wabash River, and a 1983 structure by Indiana State University graphic design student Thomas Dubois, framed by the 2014 “A Song for Indiana” sculpure by Teresa Clark in Fairbanks Park, Terre Haute, Indiana.
Fall color, a sycamore tree on the bank of the Wabash River, and a 1983 structure by Indiana State University graphic design student Thomas Dubois, framed by the 2014 “A Song for Indiana” sculpure by Teresa Clark in Fairbanks Park, Terre Haute, Indiana.
Fall color, a sycamore tree on the bank of the Wabash River, and a 1983 structure by Indiana State University graphic design student Thomas Dubois, framed by the 2014 “A Song for Indiana” sculpure by Teresa Clark in Fairbanks Park, Terre Haute, Indiana.
Fall color on the banks of the Wabash River, framed by the 2014 “A Song for Indiana” sculpure by Teresa Clark in Fairbanks Park, Terre Haute, Indiana.
The back side of “A Song for Indiana” frames the Paul Dresser Home in Fairbanks Park.
“A Song for Indiana” sculpture featuring Indiana’s state song, “On the Banks of the Wabash, Far Away,” by Paul Dresser.
Following is an excerpt from Terre Haute Tribune-Star feature writer Mark Bennett’s story published today, Oct. 26, 2014:
“Last week, Terre Haute dedicated a sculpture at Fairbanks Park, commemorating Paul Dresser, his masterpiece, “On the Banks of the Wabash Far Away,” and the river itself. The bronze art piece, titled “A Song for Indiana,” by local sculptor Teresa Clark encompasses the man, his composition that became the Indiana state song, and the official state river, the Wabash.
At the dedication ceremony in the Girl Scouts building adjacent to the riverside park, Clark told a crowd of more than 100 people, “This piece is based on where I felt Paul Dresser’s inspiration began” — the images in its melodic chorus, the moonlight, the sycamores and the iconic stream.”