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Healing Place Raises
Sculpture In "Healing Space"
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Hopes in Wake
County have been raised by the promise of the Healing Place and
now a literal raising has taken place. At 11:30am on Wednesday,
December 13, artist Thomas Sayre raised the second of a set of sculptures
he created for the courtyard of the facility.
A crowd of community
members, Healing Place staff members, Board members and Advisory
Board members gathered to see the sculpture put in place. Major
and Mrs. Fred Musgrave provided music with the Salvation Army Band
Quartet. After a brief introduction and music by the band, the group
went outside in the brisk winter air to watch the raising of the
second sculpture.

HP Board President Fred Barber said, "Some of us believe
miracles are going to take place in this building." |

Thomas Sayre created a sculpture with a symbolic barrier. |
Sayre, who created
such local wonders as "Gyre" the three concrete rings on the back
lawn of the North Carolina Museum of Art and the iron entrance gate
and marble wall at the Exploris museum in downtown Raleigh, wanted
to develop a piece on which the men in recovery at the Healing Place
could reflect and meditate. Sayre has pieces around the world and
has worked on a myriad of projects.
He used a technique
called "earth casting." This involves digging a trench in ground
and filling it with concrete and steel supports, and then pulling
the final product out of ground. Sayre thought the method appropriate
for this project because he said it is a "Balance between person
built [human intention]…and what nature does."
The two pieces
are 17-18 feet tall and combined weigh over 30,000 lbs. Entitled
"Door" and "Doorway," the sculptures represent the barriers the
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Healing Place program
participants will face and door removed through which they will eventually
pass. Ultimately, Sayre said, he hopes "real meaning will be discovered
by the men who come here." Eventually a series of walkways and a garden,
both maintained by the men who live at the Healing Place, and a community
gathering area will symbolically join the two structures.

The Salvation Army Band Quartet created a festive atmosphere with
holiday music. |
The Healing Place
originally was going to leave the courtyard blank to cut back on expenses
and stay within budget, but Carol Bilbro stepped in and headed a committee
to do something with the area now known as the Healing Space. An anonymous
donor gave the funding; Sayre donated his time and vision for the creative
process itself. Carolina Crane, under CEO Earl Johnson, donated the use
of a crane and its operator.
The event also celebrated
the opening of the Healing Place; the first wing of the facility will
begin operation on January 15, 2001. Based on a model in Louisville, Kentucky,
the Healing Place will provide shelter, recovery, detoxification and support
service to enable homeless men to overcome substance-abuse problems and
regain control of their lives.
An open house is slated
for April 18, 2001, after all facets of the program are in full operation
and staffed by program participants.
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