Garbage Goat | |
Wikidata: | Q124151237 |
Italic Title: | no |
Artist: | Paula Mary Turnbull |
Medium: | Corten steel |
Subject: | Billy goat |
Metric Unit: | m |
Imperial Unit: | ft |
Weight: | about |
City: | Riverfront Park Spokane, Washington, U.S. |
The Garbage Goat is a metal sculpture in Spokane, Washington's Riverfront Park. It was created by Paula Mary Turnbull, a local artist known as the "welding nun", for Expo '74, the city's 1974 world's fair. The sculpture was designed with an internal vacuum mechanism allowing the goat to "eat" trash held close to its mouth. It is also known as the Garbage-Eating Goat; the sculpture does not have a known official name, though Turnbull originally referred to the goat as "Billy".
The Garbage Goat has become an iconic part of Spokane culture and one of its most popular tourist attractions. It has inspired a cult following, a "secret goat culture" in the city, and a series of goat-themed businesses. The debut of the Garbage Goat at Expo '74 was met with protests from dairy goat farmers, who objected to the sculpture as perpetuating the stereotype that goats are reputed to eat anything.
The Garbage Goat debuted at Expo '74, an environmentally-themed world's fair held in Spokane from May 4 to November 3, 1974. Roughly 5.6 million people attended the fair, which was held in downtown Spokane on land that later became Riverfront Park.[1] Sister Paula Mary Turnbull, a local artist known as the "welding nun", was appointed to the expo's Visual Arts Advisory Committee in 1972. Following the fair's ecology theme, Turnbull designed a sculpture that would encourage children to help keep the fairgrounds free of litter and teach them a lesson in cleanliness.[2] The sculpture was commissioned by the "Make America Better" committee of Spokane's Women's Council of Realtors.[3]
Turnbull modeled her sculpture after a billy goat and constructed it in her studio from corten steel, welding pieces together using both gas and arc welding. Steel was used with the intention that it would form a coating of rust that would not require painting or maintenance. The goat's horns were fashioned from recycled springs, the legs from old pipe, and the eyes from the ends of railroad spikes. According to Turnbull, she "purposely kept him kind of spikey, so youngsters wouldn't climb on him." As a work of interactive art, the sculpture features an internal vacuum mechanism capable of sucking up small pieces of garbage through the goat's mouth, allowing users to "feed" it.[4] The trash passes through a 4.5inches tube and empties into a hidden receptacle behind the goat.The roughly 200lb sculpture[5] was installed in a "Goat Grotto" made from basalt located just east of the Looff Carrousel along the southern edge of the park.[6] A button embedded in the stone wall is pressed to activate the vacuum. The original display at the fair included a tape recording of a voice saying, in part, "please feed me, I am hungry", that would play as people passed by.
The Garbage Goat generated controversy and public debate before it was even installed at the fair. Dairy goat farmers were upset that the sculpture perpetuated the stereotype that goats are reputed to eat anything. Kent Leach, the editor of The Dairy Goat Journal, wrote that the sculpture was "degrading, debasing, and grossly misleading". Expo organizers and local newspapers such as the Spokane Chronicle were inundated with letters against the sculpture. While some letters decried the public's habit of feeding trash to goats at fairs, others extolled the positive role of the Garbage Goat in keeping the fairgrounds free of litter. One family wrote that they were planning to boycott the fair and another wrote that they were "repulsed and disgusted by such idiocy".[7] Another letter described the goat as a "fastidious, clean and selective eater". Goat breeders stressed that the public be educated that goats needed to be fed properly like any other animal.[4] A goat breeders association even contacted Congressman Tom Foley about the sculpture, emphasizing the goat industry's efforts to improve the image of the dairy goat.Columnists reported on the ongoing debate over the sculpture for the duration of the fair. William Stimson, writing in the Spokane Chronicles "EXPOsitor" column, summed up the arguments of the critics thusly:
As a compromise with the dairy farmers, the Expo '74 organizers installed a sign touting goats' milk production capabilities when fed a proper diet of the "finest of hays and grains".[4] [8] The sign said in part:
At one point, the tape recording of the goat requesting to be fed stopped functioning. John Hollister and the Washington State Dairy Goat Council had made suggestions to change the goat's speech and to add a placard to the exhibit. In a letter to the editor, A.A. Sellen decried the situation, addressing Hollister, writing "You have literally taken candy from children, robbing them, also, of a chance to learn a valuable cleanliness lesson painlessly."[9] Hollister replied that the council was not responsible for silencing the goat and it was later revealed that mechanical problems had caused the goat's audio to be temporarily disabled.[10]
Turnbull herself was unperturbed by the criticism, saying "I am not trying to malign goats. People have lost their sense of humor."[11] She noted that the goat depicted could not produce milk anyhow, saying "my goat isn't a dairy goat, it's a billy goat."[4]
Besides losing its voice, the goat had other mechanical problems during the fair which may have been the result of overuse. Children were observed carrying garbage from nearby cans to feed to the goat, and one was "rumored to have hoarded trash at home and brought it with him to the fair". The internal vacuum became clogged many times. At one point, the sculpture's legs had to be cut off so that the goat could be flipped over for an "internal enlargement" that a visiting nursing executive described as "practically a resection".[12]
Since its inception in 1974, the Garbage Goat has become an iconic landmark in Spokane and one of Riverfront Park's most popular attractions.[13] It is especially popular with children, though toddlers' mittens are occasionally sucked up.[14]
The Garbage Goat developed a cult following across generations of Spokanite parents and children.[4] The goat has an unofficial Facebook page with thousands of followers[15] and the Spokane County Regional Solid Waste System created a public educational outreach blog for the goat, with posts from "GG the Garbage Goat".[16] [17] The sculpture is credited with inspiring a "secret goat culture" in Spokane as well as a series of goat-themed businesses.[18] A local brewery called Iron Goat Brewing was named for the sculpture and features beers such as Garbage Pale Ale and Head Butt IPA.[19] In 2018, during Christ Kitchen's annual gingerbread build-off in Spokane, the People's Choice award went to The Lilac Bakery, for its life-size gingerbread replica of the Garbage Goat, which could eat small pieces of garbage through an internal vacuum cleaner.[20] Journalist Daniel Walters wrote that Spokane relationships are not official until the goat is fed hand-in-hand by a couple.
At a 40th birthday celebration for the Garbage Goat in 2014, the City of Spokane held a goat-themed party for the public in its honor.[21] The gathered crowd sang "Happy Birthday" to the goat and presented it with a slice of the birthday cake. The goat sucked out the candles on its cake before Turnbull "fed" it a slice.[14] At the celebration, the Spokane Parks and Recreation Department estimated that the Garbage Goat had "eaten" over 14,000 cubic yards of litter.[22]
The Garbage Goat has experienced downtimes and occasionally needs repairs. Vandals once twisted off the goat's horns[23] and the vacuum system sometimes stops working when objects get lodged in the pipe.[24] The sculpture was closed to the public while the Looff Carrousel was being repaired, but was finally reopened in May 2018.[25]
The Garbage Goat has inspired replicas in other communities. In 2002, Kennewick, Washington, unveiled its own "Billy the Garbage Goat" with plans to install the sculpture at Columbia Park next to the Playground of Dreams.[26]