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We’re Good, Right Here | Public Sculptures by Ansen Seale | AT&T Center in San Antonio. Item made of steel
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We’re Good, Right Here | Public Sculptures by Ansen Seale | AT&T Center in San Antonio. Item made of steel
We’re Good, Right Here | Public Sculptures by Ansen Seale | AT&T Center in San Antonio. Item made of steel

Created and Sold by Ansen Seale

Ansen Seale

We’re Good, Right Here - Public Sculptures

Featured In AT&T Center, San Antonio, TX

$ On Inquiry

Landscapes come in many forms, especially in Texas which boasts such a wide vista. This work is an alternative South Texas landscape championing an underdog of the local native plant world, Tillandsia Recurvata commonly known as Ball Moss. This much misunderstood plant is neither moss nor parasite as is widely believed. It is a member of the bromeliad family with roots, flowers and leaves. It derives it’s entire sustenance from dust, rain, sunshine.

A native of South Texas himself, Seale explores the idea of community pride as well as the connectedness and network of communication between all things. Proof of this idea comes in the recent discovery that Ball Moss, something so common and easy to ignore, has compounds that are now known to fight cancer and AIDS–and all this from dust, rain and sunshine. In this piece, the idea of “Bloom where you are planted” takes on special significance with the hometown success story that is the Spurs. And because the Spurs call the AT&T Center their home, this piece also calls attention to the pivotal role that San Antonio and South Texas have played in the evolution of telephone communications, even to the extent that ranchers in the 1880’s used barbed wire fences to transmit their conversations before rural telephone networks were put in place.

We’re Good Right Here continues Seale’s interest in native plants of South Texas. Previous works with this theme include pieces at the San Antonio

Item We’re Good, Right Here
Created by Ansen Seale
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Ansen Seale
Meet the Creator
Wescover creator since 2018
Time and Motion

Ansen Seale's time-based works of photographic and sculptural art have been exhibited in museums and galleries internationally and have been collected by corporate, institutional and private collectors. In 2009, he received the Bernard Lifshutz Award in the Visual Arts from the Artist Foundation of San Antonio and his work is in the permanent collection of the San Antonio Museum of Art, The Harry Ransom Center at The University of Texas, Austin and The Museum of Contemporary Art, Salta, Argentina.

Seale works with a special digital camera of his own invention. This camera has the ability to capture a vertical slice of the scene over and over in rapid succession, in effect, swapping the horizontal dimension of the photo for the dimension of time. Instead of mirroring the world as we know it, this camera records a hidden reality. The apparent “distortions” in the images all happen in-camera as the image is being recorded.