Lindy Lee's 13-tonne Ouroboros, based on the ancient tale of the same name about a snake swallowing its own tail, allows visitors to enter the sculpture's "mouth" and see the light beams inside.
A gigantic sculpture representing renewal and the cycle of life will outlive generations of visitors who walk inside the shiny coil over an expected lifespan of five centuries.
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The fences are still up, but the $14 million Ouroboros briefly flickered to life this week as the lights were tested for the first time. As features editor at The Canberra Times, I love telling ...
It came, it settled and now it glows. As features editor at The Canberra Times, I love telling people things they didn't know - or even things they've always known - about the city we live in. As ...