Here are some of the photos Robin Whittle has taken. For more photos, including of other works not shown below, please follow the Subcategories links at commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Inge_King. The Subcategories include multiple photos of the one sculpture, from different angles, in different lighting etc. often with full camera resolution versions of the image. I took two dozen or so photos of Rings of Saturn because I like it so much!

Please click the title to the right of the image to reach the Commons.Wikimedia.org Subcategory page for this sculpture.

Inge King's Forward Surge sculpture in Melbourne Australia Forward Surge Inge King’s best-known work, in one of the busiest parts of Melbourne, just south of the Concert Hall on St Kilda parade, directly over the Yarra from Flinders St Station. Forward Surge commissioned in 1974, completed in 1976 but not installed until 1981. It is fabricated from welded 1/4″ (6.35mm) steel.
Inge King's Sentinel sculpture in Melbourne Australia Sentinel13 metres tall, Sentinel is located at the junction of the Eastern Freeway and Doncaster Road in Melbourne’s north-east.
Inge King's Rings of Saturn sculpture at Hiede Museum of Modern Art AKA Heide Gallery Melbourne Australia

>Inge King's Rings of Saturn sculpture at Hiede Museum of Modern Art AKA Heide Gallery Melbourne Australia

Rings of SaturnRings of Saturn (2006) is as dramatic and striking as Forward Surge. While Forward Surge and Sentinel are located in busy public thoroughfares, Rings of Saturn is not visible from roads or from ordinary urban footpaths – and so less well known. Beautifully situated in the grounds of the Heide Museum of Modern Art, in Bulleen (a north-eastern suburb of Melbourne), this monumental stainless steel can be viewed from many angles.In an interview shortly after Rings of Saturn was installed, Inge King said:

Working with Heide Museum for Rings of Saturn, firstly we agreed on a maquette. Then when I saw the site I knew I had to enlarge the work to do what I call ‘conquer the landscape’.The Australian landscape is an enormously powerful landscape; vast and with clarity of atmosphere, and you never know in advance how work will look in it. The landscape grips my imagination – I try to measure my work against the vast spaces of this country. Conquering the landscape does not rely on scale but simplicity and clarity of form expressing inner strength and tension.If my sculpture is outdoors or in the public domain I like it to arouse people’s curiosity to explore the work. Multidimensional objects look different from every angle. The exciting thing about outdoor sculpture is the change with the light, the weather… everything is in constant flux. It becomes almost a living entity.

Inge King: Playing Seriously by Zara Stanhope, Artlink, Vol 26 No. 4: www.artlink.com.au/articles.cfm?id=2866.

The dimensions are given ArtLook_2006 as 4.0 x 6.0 x 5.0 metres. Some notes on the fabrication process are at the Australian Stainless Steel Development Association (link):

Using Inge King’s 50cm model of Rings of Saturn, Melbourne fabricator Robert Hook co-ordinated the laser cutting of about 3 tonnes of 5mm grade 316 stainless steel, then welded the two full circles and two semi-circles.
He took the welds down with a 5 inch grinder, then used a polifan disc to smooth them out. He created the linished look with Poly-PTX flap wheels and used a 9 inch, 100 grit sanding disk on the larger surfaces.Rings of Saturn was commissioned through the Heide Foundation, with support from Lindsay and Paula Fox, and sits in Heide’s Sir Rupert Hamer Garden.
Inge King's dialogue of circles sculpture at La Trobe University, Bundoora, Melbourne, Australia Dialogue of CirclesThis 1976 steel work is situated in the moat, just north of the Union, in La Trobe University’s Bundoora campus.A second Inge King sculpture in the Latrobe University Sculpture Park (brochure) is her 1968 Encounter. This has no plaque and is situated to the west of Glenn College, on the east bank of The Moat, south west of the junction between Centreway and Moat Drive.
Inge King's Sun Ribbon sculpture at Melbourne University, Parkville, Melbourne, Australia Sun RibbonThis 1980 steel sculpture is located in the Union Lawn, east of the Union, in the Parkville campus of Melbourne University.(This is a long-exposure image at dusk, so the image is not as the sculpture appears to the eye.)
Inge King's Shearwater sculpture at Southbank, Melbourne, Australia ShearwaterShearwater (1994-95) is located a few hundred metres north-west of Forward Surge, on the south bank of the Yarra at Southbank, directly north of the Eureka Tower.There are many species of Shearwaters, but the most common in Australian waters is the Short-tailed Shearwater, commonly known as the Mutton Bird: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short-tailed_Shearwater .
Rings of JupiterI don’t yet have any pictures of this, nor does Commons.Wikimedia.org. It is located indoors, in the Ian Potter Gallery, in the Federation Square buildings, at the corner of Flinders St and Swanston St, directly east of Flinders St Station:www.ngv.vic.gov.au/collection/pub/itemDetail?artworkID=61679
Inge King's Island Sculpture at MacClelland Gallery Sculpture Park, Langwarrin, near Melbourne, Australia Island SculptureWell known to sculptors and to locals, but probably not so well known to most other Victorians, the McClelland Gallery Sculpture Park (https://mcclelland.org.au/) has many sculptures, in a bush setting, with free public access and space for barbecues etc. One of the sculptures is specifically designed as a children’s playground. Within the park is a small island, home to this 1991 steel sculpture and kindred spirits of the feathered variety. This park also has Inge King’s Flight Arrested (1964) and Jabaroo (1984-95)