Needle Tower
Needle Tower is a public artwork created by American sculptor Kenneth Snelson in 1968. It is located on the grounds of the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C., USA.
Description
This 26.5-meter-tall abstract sculpture is a tapering tower made of aluminum and stainless steel. The aluminum tubes act in compression, held in tension by the stainless steel cables threaded through the ends of the tubes.According to Valerie Fletcher from the Institute for Human Centered Design, the “Needle Tower brings together advanced engineering methods with a very sophisticated aesthetic of abstraction".
Acquisition
The piece was a gift of Joseph Hirshhorn in 1974.Tensegrity
Snelson's unique sculpture style is well articulated in Needle Tower.The structure style displayed is known as "tensegrity," a description given by Snelson's former professor Buckminster Fuller to the melding of tension and structural integrity. According to Snelson:
Tensegrity describes a closed structural system composed of a set of three or more elongate compression struts within a network of tension tendons, the combined parts mutually supportive in such a way that the struts do not touch one another, but press outwardly against nodal points in the tension network to form a firm, triangulated, prestressed, tension and compression unit.