Columbus is part of restoration of Constatino Nivola’s damaged concrete horses in NYC

The mold process to restore the concrete horses is underway in Columbus. Photo provided by Hadley Fruits

COLUMBUS, Ind. — Edward G. Fitzgerald is something of an artistic surgeon and people can watch some of his meticulous work Thursday afternoon to restore a noted late, Modernist sculptor’s work.

“Sure you could call me that,” Fitzgerald said. “Sometimes people also call me a building doctor.”

Officially, he’s a senior associate at New York City’s Jablonski Building Conservation Inc. that restores everything from buildings to subway stations to at the moment the Brooklyn Bridge.

Currently, Fitzgerald is in Columbus in an effort to restore Italian sculptor Constatino Nivola’s weathered and badly damaged concrete horses that were made and displayed since 1964 at the Wise Towers Plaza, a public housing authority complex on New York’s Upper West Side.

Part of that restoration begun earlier this week includes using one of the sculptor’s near-exact 1970 fiberglass horses from Richards Elementary School. At 4 p.m Thursday at the soon-to-open Columbus Propeller Inc. maker space, Fitzgerald will be removing the mold from one of the three horses from Richards. He will then use that next week to create new horse model pieces to replace the 12 New York City horses’ worn-down eyes, ears, and even legs that were mysteriously and inexplicably chopped off last year, according to a story in The New York Times.

Richard McCoy, executive director of Landmark Columbus, which cares for the city’s noted art and architecture, decided only days ago to make this a public event.

“This is a pretty rare opportunity to get a peek into the creative process,” McCoy said.

A gift from J. Irwin and Xenia Miller, 12 sculptured plastic horses designed by Nivola of New York City were installed in a ring around a tree near Richards Elementary School in 1970. From The Republic archives

For the complete story, see Wednesday’s Republic.