RedBall began as a requested commission by Arts in Transit, an award winning public art bi-state agency based in St. Louis. I was asked to choose among a series of sites and propose a temporary work. After being drawn to an unlikely underpass lacking the glamour of other possibilities I worked through a series of ideas, trying to figure out how to make evident my pull to this particular place. In a late night sketching session, after many failures and in a moment of frustration to realize the compressed potential of the site, I jammed a gigantic ball under the bridge to make myself laugh. Excited, intrigued, and having nothing else I liked, I showed the sketch to my project manager the next day over ice cream at Crown Candy. She laughed too, and thus began the RedBall Project.

That first site was really the start of it all, one experience with a hunk of concrete in a lonely drive by place that led me to realize the way I see. The ball is in some ways a surrogate or point of access. I have become interested in the notion of advocacy, as a sculptor in urban environments the question is not always building new objects but seeing what is already there, and finding the means to transmit that visualization.

Though this work seems to be about an object, it isn't. As much as the physical presence of the piece on the street is an undeniable magnet, the work exists only in relation to site and location. The ball exists to facilitate the imagination of where it might go, where a passerby might think of squishing it in. This transference is as much a part of the work as its formal nature, or the kids bouncing off of it.

September 9, 2001
Kurt Perschke