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UC Regents
Description
Architecture and City Planning Sculpture and Installations Garden and Landscape Fleischner's La Jolla Project, completed in 1984 and the third work in the Stuart Collection, is located on the Revelle College lawn south of Galbraith Hall. Seventy-one blocks of pink and gray granite are arranged in configurations that refer to architectural vocabulary: posts, lintels, columns, arches, windows, doorways, and thresholds. Like players on a field or game pieces (Fleischner made a series of small gamelike sculptures in the late sixties), these elements transform an ordinary, nearly flat lawn into a space with allusions ranging from an ancient ruin to the contemporary construction site. Fleischner's work is always determined by the topography of a site, its spatial relationships, and the distinctive ways people move through and around it. What is most important for him is to interpret and essentialize a place by using minimal means to delineate natural lines and boundaries, while establishing an interplay of horizontal and vertical elements. There is no single way to experience La Jolla Project - it generates a complex set of spatial and historical relationships which invigorate and give meaning to the formerly undefined area it occupies. From: http://stuartcollection.ucsd.edu/artists/fleischner.shtml UC San Diego Library, UC San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093-0175 (https://library.ucsd.edu/dc/contact) The La Jolla Project is more commonly known on campus as "Stonehenge." It is a popular place for students to go to talk or study. Revelle College: University of California, San Diego; La Jolla, California, United States
Type
image
Format
Lawns (landscaped grass); pink granite; granite (rock); site approximately 2 acres
Form/Genre
outdoor sculpture architecture (object genre) lawns (landscaped grass) sculpture gardens site-specific works sculpture (visual work) follies (architectural) installations (visual works) Minimal post-and-beam structures Abstract (fine arts style) public art
Identifier
ark:/20775/bb02746141
Language
No linguistic content
Subject
Space (composition concept) Classicism Artificial ruins Geometric abstraction Ruins Light (energy) Portals Minimal Antique, the Contemporary Shadows Arches American University of California, San Diego--History Outdoor sculpture Architecture (object genre) Lawns (landscaped grass) Sculpture gardens Site-specific works Sculpture (visual work) Follies (architectural) Installations (visual works) Post-and-beam structures Abstract (fine arts style) Public art
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