Shipsection

index of sculptures 1988 to 2024

Shipsection [2003]

2003
Bas-relief in salvaged wood #19, 185 x 195 x 16cm.
Private collection Rotterdam, Netherlands.

The Shipsection bas-relief was based on the Costa Classica ship section. Follow this link to learn about its role in the demise of Camell Laird shipyard in Liverpool and about how it ended up in Rotterdam.:



The Costa Classica ship section

In 2002 Cammel Laird Shipyard in Birkenhead near Liverpool was building a 14 storey ship section to upgrade the Costa Classica cruise ship owned by Italian Costa Cruises. The almost 200 year old shipyard was famous in the seventies and eighties for building nuclear submarines. Contracts had dried up with the end of the Cold War, and they were looking for a way into the civilian market. This assignment looked like a promising start. When the Costa Classica was already on its way to Birkenhead to be cut in half, Costa Cruises was taken over by Carnival Cruises, an American firm. Carnival doesn’t do ship extensions, they just replace outdated ships. News reached the shipyard that the Costa Classica had made a U-turn and was now steaming back to Italy. The new owners said they had reports of faults in the section. Within months the shipyard was declared bankrupt and its workers were laid off.
www.telegraph.co.uk/…/The-straw-that-broke-Cammell.html

“The 14 storeys high section was bought by a consortium of Dutch investors. It was scrapped in Heijsehaven harbour in Rotterdam, just opposite my studio. My bas-relief was constructed while the original section was being dismantled. I even got to visit the section before they started. The only way in was to be hoisted on top of it by a tall crane. The upper decks were nearly finished, with spaces fitted as restaurants, a discotheque and a swimming pool. Lower down were hundreds of cabins and a fully equipped engine room – all brand new. It was an eerie experience.”

Image top: photo of the original section in the Heijsehaven by Ron van der Ende.

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Photos taken during our visit to the section by Peter Breevoort.





These works were part of the Mobility exhibition at gallery Delta in 2003:


Dreadnought

index of sculptures 1988 to 2024

Dreadnought

2003
Bas-relief in salvaged wood #18, 195 x 165 x 15cm.
Collection Frits van Dongen, Amsterdam, Netherlands.





These works were part of the Mobility exhibition at gallery Delta in 2003:


Kruising

index of sculptures 1988 to 2024

Kruising (Crossing)

2002
Bas-relief in salvaged wood #17, ca 180cm wide.
Private collection. Location unknown.





These works were part of the Mobility exhibition at gallery Delta in 2003:


Fly Over

index of sculptures 1988 to 2024

Fly Over

2002
Bas-relief in salvaged wood #16, 350 x 210 x 20cm.
Built for Hogeschool Rotterdam (Rotterdam University), Netherlands.


Fly Over was the first bas-relief that was made on commission. It was constructed especially for the auditorium of the new Economic Faculty (H.E.S.) in Rotterdam, part of Rotterdam University. The auditorium is a large space with dark grey walls and bright red linoleum floors. The colour of the floors is incorporated in the work as a red haze. The relief itself was based on photo’s of Kleinpolderplein, a large and complex stacked interchange built in Rotterdam from 1958 onwards.

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View of Mobility at gallery Delta. Hans Sonnenberg is seen seated at his desk.
Fly Over was temporarily installed at the gallery for the occasion of this show..





These works were part of the Mobility exhibition at gallery Delta in 2003:


Catalina

index of sculptures 1988 to 2024

Catalina (Flying Boat)

2002
Bas-relief in salvaged wood #13, 370 x 92 x 20cm.
Private collection, Wassenaar, Netherlands.

Hans Sonnenberg taking notes. Delta Booth, Art Rotterdam, 2005.





These works were part of the Mobility exhibition at gallery Delta in 2003: