Fantastic Frigid and Fragile Sculptures of Snow
Far from child’s play that goes beyond the conventional carrot-nosed snowman, artists have long crafted chilly creations of snow sculptures. From small blocks of snow to epic proportions, transforming enormous snow blocks into larger than life masterpieces of an ethereal nature, some top the scales at 20 to 30 tons, measuring hundreds of feet in length.
Photo Amsterdamned
Typically using nothing more than simple hand tools such as shovels,
hatchets, and saws, snow sculptures and carvings are often created in
full view of spectators, thus giving it kinship to performance art. Winter festivals have prominently held snow sculpting competitions throughout the world in cold climes, most notably in Sapporo, Japan, the Harbin International Ice and Snow Sculpture Festival in China, the Quebec City Winter Carnival in Canada, and various other locations including Perm, Russia, and the U.S. The Saint Paul Winter Carnival in Minnesota is allegedly the oldest annual winter carnival in the world, with the first dating back to 1886.
Harbin 2009 Ice & Snow Festival. This 394-foot (120-meter) long Snow Sculpture
is still in the carving process. Photo Frankartculinary
The Zhao Lin Park is its designated location, along with several expositions held including the artistic Snow Sculptures at the Park on Sun Island, and the Ice Carvings at the Zhao Lin Park. The Harbin Ice & Snow World is gigantic and illuminated at night, and the Disney Ice Festival is located in the City Centre.
It lasts from January to late February every year with winter temperatures frequently dropping from -4°F to -31°F. (-20° to -35° C).
Harbin 2009 Ice & Snow Festival. Snow Train with a Steam Engine on each side.
The wagons are partly carved out for visitors to go inside. Photo Frankartculinary
The 2007 festival featured the Canadian theme, in memoriam of Canadian doctor Norman Bethune. It has a Guinness World Record of the largest snow sculpture measuring 28 feet (8.5 meters) high and 820 feet (250 meters) long, using over 13,000 cubic meters of snow. The composition consisted of 2 parts — “Niagara Falls” and “Crossing the Bering Strait” (the latter depicting the migration of the First Nations).
The famous Sapporo Snow Festival is one of Japan’s largest winter events held annually over 7 days in February. During the 58th Festival in 2007, about 2 million people visited Sapporo to see the hundreds of beautiful snow statues and ice sculptures at Odori Park and Susukino sites, in central Sapporo, and the Satoland site.
The Snow Festival began in 1950, when local high school students built 6 snow statues in Odori Park. In 1955, the Self-Defense Force joined in and built the very first massive snow sculpture, for which the Snow Festival has become famous for. The Festival has grown from these humble beginnings to become one of the largest and most well known of Hokkaido’s winter events.
How to Create Massive Snow Sculptures
So just how do these artists create such mammoth sized snow sculptures? According to Snowfes, a wooden frame is built and filled with tightly packed snow — based on a blueprint and small model of the sculpture — which also serves as scaffolding.
Once the packed snow is hardened, the frame panels are removed and the carving carefully begins. Hatchets and shovels are used to outline the sculpture, and then details are added.
Since warmer daytime temperatures make the sculptures fragile, many sculptors work at night.
When the sculpture is completed, the scaffoldings are removed, along with accumulated snowfall and icicles that have formed on the carving.
Mini fort made of ice was part of a snow sculpture exhibition in the Hokkaido Mountains.
Photo Kinobiel
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