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Friends of the Park – 55

March 9, 2015 by Salt Lake Public Art Program Leave a Comment

This project was created to recognize the importance of our parks. Artists photographed visitors to the park, talked with them and incorporated their brief story into the plaques.

Plaque text: What kind of football team was the 1991 West Side Bantams of Riverside Park? “They lost a lot of close ball games,” says Coach Ted Davis.

Despite losing, these 13-year-olds were serious about the game. Their offensive strategy was to run the ball to set up the pass. But Coach Davis had another strategy – “to teach the players the value of discipline and ot build their self confidence.”

The parks. They’re all about growing.

Dancing Clowns – 54

March 9, 2015 by Salt Lake Public Art Program Leave a Comment

This project was created as part of a downtown improvement program. It was installed at this location in the center median to mark the west end of downtown and welcome motorists who are entering downtown from the North Temple overpass.

Asteroid Landing Softly – 53

March 9, 2015 by Salt Lake Public Art Program Leave a Comment

“Asteroid Landed Softly” is a sundial and suggests the image of Southern Utah’s landscape. Many old European plazas have a clock tower to act as a landmark of the city. This piece carries the some tradition in which time is on element of space.

The sundial works in the following manner – through a slit in the tower a beam of sunlight is cost on the plaza floor. The beam acts as an arm of a clock, and hour (nine to two o’clock); every fifteen, twenty and thirty minutes are marked by stainless steel tubes. The hours are indicated by double tubes on which a prism is attached so that when sun beam falls on it, a small batch of colors is cast on the plaza. On the inclined granite slabs are engraved months of a year. When the top end of the sun beam touches the engravings, it marks the month. The farthest tip of the slab indicates the winter solstice while the middle end indicates the spring and autumn equinoxes, and the closest bottom tip marks the summer solstice. The slabs also show dates of Pioneer Day and Utah’s Statehood.

The sundial time, which is called “natural time” is based on the principle that noon is determined when the sun crosses the meridian (or the true south) of the particular location. Our watch, on the other hand, is based on a system called “real time” where the time zones start in Greenich, England. This system is basically human made convention. The natural time and real time coincides only at a longitudinal line where a time zone changes. Within times zones there are differences between the natural and real times. In addition we have daylight savings time, thus at some locations the difference between the two systems is nearly two hours. This piece tries to demonstrate this discrepancy or gap between the two systems and points to the question of what is natural and what is real. (A Roman is said to have complained, ”Let the gods damn the first man who invented the hours, the first man who set a sundial in this city! For our misfortune, he has chopped up the day into slices).

The magnificent Southern Utah landscape is a wonder of natural forces creating in many parts most unnatural rock formations. Many boulders are perched up in the air in the most precarious positions, such as Balanced Rock. This piece tries to capture the image of the Southern Utah with its use of red sandstone rock superimposed with the method of the surrealism painting of Rene Magritte. The rock, which might be a visitor or an asteroid from outer space, is balanced on a tower clad by reflective glass. Images of downtown buildings, sky and clouds are reflected on the glass and become a part of the sculpture. The lower portion of the tower is clad with raw copper sheets whose color will continue to change over many years. The working of a sundial is based on the rotation of the earth, and through this sundial and its movement of the sun beam, we can literally see and feel, the rotation of the earth. This rotation suggests an idea of wheel, thus various images of wheels borrowed from different cultures are depicted in the pattern of the pavement for the base of the sundial. They include icons of Judeo-Greek zodiacs, Native American’s medicine wheel, Ying-Yang of the Chinese, and twisting patterns of wind and water (and perhaps of galaxies).

Matsubayashi “hopes this sundial with its floating rock will trigger the observer’s mind to the basic scientific curiosity and artistic imagination in their most innocent beginning and to wonder about the mystery of natural forces, to ponder what is nature and reality, what is time and space. Or perhaps one can simply kill time by standing in front of it. Today many of us are being chased by time.”

This project was part of the Block 57 development / The Gallivan Center.

River of Words – 59

March 9, 2015 by Salt Lake Public Art Program Leave a Comment

Poetry: Mark Strand

Design: Stephen Goldsmith, Landmark Design and EDA

This artwork was part of the Gallivan Plaza renovation project.

Water Walk – 51

March 9, 2015 by Salt Lake Public Art Program Leave a Comment

Untitled – John Swain

March 9, 2015 by Salt Lake Public Art Program Leave a Comment

Deadly Virtues – 37

March 9, 2015 by Salt Lake Public Art Program Leave a Comment

Utah glass artist, Douglas Soelberg, created this colorful curtain wall to be incorporated into the front the the Justice Courts Building. The work brings movement and color to the façade of the building, engaging passersby and welcoming employees and those who have business in the Justice Courts.

 

The Doll and Dare – 36

March 9, 2015 by Salt Lake Public Art Program Leave a Comment

The Doll and Dare

Like sunspots etching meaning
To the weather of our days,
Or rays of sunlight falling
With a shimmer shadow
Through the leaves of meadow trees

Like early winter morning hoarfrost
Clinging to the highest twigs
And branches, melting with the sun.
But staying crisp and crystalized
With the memory and mind.

Like children playing on the bench
Of summer gestures frozen
As we see them with their skirts
And shirts still there suspended
As the wind had left them –

Still as real and still as time
Which passes and as long as time
Shall be – the doll and dare
of childhood dye
The fabric of all later life.

Dennis Smith

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