The last day of July proved to be warm and clear in Grand Rapids, after a storm had rolled through the night before. Mid-morning breakfast proved to be at a place called Lucy’s, an adaptive re-use of a large neighborhood grocery store made into a restaurant, where I had a delicious meat-vegetable-egg creation. Everyone else enjoyed their breakfast orders as much as I did.
We planned to visit the Frederik Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park after breakfast. The last time I’d been there was more than 14 years earlier, and I’d strongly suggested we see it.
While looking for the Meijer location on Google Maps, we noticed a different sculpture garden on the way: St. Francis Sculpture Garden. None of us, me included, had heard of it, but we were intrigued enough to add it to the day’s destinations.
In full, Saint Francis of Assisi Sculpture Garden.
The 11-acre site is owned by the Dominican Sisters at Marywood, whose buildings are visible nearby.
A nonprofit created the garden, with sculptures by Mic Carlson, a Grand Rapids artist. Twenty-four bronzes of St. Francis, in fact. Some are life-sized.
That is supposed to a joyous dancing Francis, which I’ve run across before, but he looks more demented than anything else.
Actually, so does that one. Mic might be a talented sculptor, but those faces of his are a little odd.
Other depictions of the saint — most of them — are small enough to be on a tabletop. At at the sculpture garden, they are on various kinds of pedestals, with signs nearby explaining which aspect of Francis is being illustrated.
Such as Francis and Brother Wolf, telling the famed story of Francis persuading a vicious wolf to change his ways.
Francis and Clare, founder of the Poor Clares.
Besides the artwork at the sculpture garden, one can enjoy pathways through lush grounds, at least in the summer.
Must be an ecclesiastical gazebo.