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Image / Snake Path: site model: looking west

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Title
Snake Path: site model: looking west
Creator
Smith, Alexis (American mixed-media and installation artist, born 1949)
Contributor
Beebe, Mary Livingstone (American, born 1940)
Date Created and/or Issued
1988
Contributing Institution
UC San Diego, The UC San Diego Library
Collection
Stuart Collection Photographs
Rights Information
Under copyright
Constraint(s) on Use: This work is protected by the U.S. Copyright Law (Title 17, U.S.C.). Use of this work beyond that allowed by "fair use" requires written permission of the UC Regents. Responsibility for obtaining permissions and any use and distribution of this work rests exclusively with the user and not the UC San Diego Library. Inquiries can be made to the UC San Diego Library program having custody of the work.
Use: This work is available from the UC San Diego Library. This digital copy of the work is intended to support research, teaching, and private study.
Rights Holder and Contact
UC Regents
Description
Architecture and City Planning
Sculpture and Installations
Garden and Landscape
Smith's work for the Stuart Collection, Snake Path, consists of a winding 560-foot-long, 10-foot-wide footpath in the form of a serpent, whose individual scales are hexagonal pieces of colored slate, and whose head is inlaid in the approach to the Geisel Library. The tail wraps around an existing concrete pathway as a snake would wrap itself around a tree limb. Along the way, the serpent's slightly crowned body circles around a small "garden of Eden" with several fruit trees including a pomegranate. There is a marble bench with a quote from Thomas Gray: "Yet ah why should they know their fate/When sorrow never comes too late/And happiness too swiftly flies/Thought would destroy their Paradise/No more, where ignorance is bliss, tis folly to be wise." The path then passes a monumental granite book carved with a quote from Milton's Paradise Lost. "And wilt thou not be loath to leave this Paradise, but shalt possess a Paradise within thee, happier far."
UC San Diego Library, UC San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093-0175 (https://library.ucsd.edu/dc/contact)
Type
image
Format
Corrugated board; model-making
Form/Genre
proposals
outdoor sculpture
walkways
landscape architecture
gardens
site-specific works
sculpture (visual work)
models (representations)
installations (visual works)
public art
Identifier
ark:/20775/bb6998226f
Language
No linguistic content
Subject
Snakes
American
Allegory (artistic device)
Eden
Contemporary
Women artists
Allegories
University of California, San Diego--History
Proposals
Outdoor sculpture
Walkways
Landscape architecture
Gardens
Site-specific works
Sculpture (visual work)
Models (representations)
Installations (visual works)
Public art
Milton, John, 1608-1674. Paradise lost

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