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Issue date: 2/9/07 Section: News

Traveling the world, gnome in hand

Garden gnomes - a graduate student's best friend

Paul Richards

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Gnome mascots stand upright in a Graduate Student Center exhibition. Grad students take the gnomes with them in their travels around world, from London, Paris, Switzerland and the Alamo to the Grand Canyon.
Media Credit: Anna Cororaton
Gnome mascots stand upright in a Graduate Student Center exhibition. Grad students take the gnomes with them in their travels around world, from London, Paris, Switzerland and the Alamo to the Grand Canyon.

Move over, Travelocity - the Graduate Student Center gnome is on your trail.

The GSC's mascot, a garden gnome, was well-represented Wednesday night at the opening of the Global Gnome art exhibit, which featured an array of photographs of gnomes from eight University graduate student photographers.

On display until the end of March, the exhibit is a compilation of artwork portraying gnomes in various travel spots over the past few years.

The GSC puts on several varied art shows throughout the academic year.

Since making their home at the GSC in 2002, gnomes have accompanied graduate students in their worldly and domestic vacations.

Students often bring gnomes, supplied by the GSC, with them when they travel. The GSC currently has around six or seven in stock, said DeAnna Cheung, assistant director of the GSC.

"Gnomes [have] been everywhere from the Alamo to the London Bridge," GSC Director Anita Mastroieni . Both of these locations are featured in the current exhibit.

"We're hoping to take [one] to Antarctica," Cheung said.

The idea of bringing the gnomes on travels was derived from the French-based Gnome Liberation Front, an organization that steals gnomes from garden homes and takes them around the world, snapping photos along the way.

And though their escapades are not so radical in nature, Penn gnome photographers still say their travel companions serve as great conversation starters.

Anne Reedstrom, a Graduate School of Education alumna, took a gnome to Paris a few years ago.

She has "pictures of security guards at the French Open with the gnome," as well as pictures of a gnome on the tennis court between matches, Reedstrom said.

"French people found it really amusing," she added. "We would try to explain the whole thing, and none of us spoke French."

In Paris, a gnome was also photographed with the Mona Lisa, with the caption "The Gnoma Lisa."
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Viewing Comments 1 - 4 of 5

Um

posted 2/09/07 @ 3:00 PM EST

Grad students are odd.

Mike Tague

posted 2/09/07 @ 8:16 PM EST

I must take issue with the characterization of Travelocity's gnome as "stiff." I rather like to think of him as a kind wayfarer who guides us upon life's journeys. (Continued…)

Sydney

posted 2/10/07 @ 1:11 AM EST

They just stole this from the movie "Amelie." That's kind of stale...

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

Johan

posted 1/27/08 @ 11:11 PM EST

I don't think Sydney is one of those people who looks beyond what he/she's seen in a movie... Didn't the Catholics "steal" their idea of a Divine man from the movie "Superman", Sydney?

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