Posts

As Far as the Eyes Can See, 2020

As_Far_as_the_Eyes_Can_See

AS FAR AS THE EYES CAN SEE, 2020

Cor-ten weathering steel and granite / 24 x 48 x 18 ft / Commissioned by Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX

I wanted to share with you a new public project in Lubbock, Texas. As Far as the Eyes Can See is a site-specific sculpture commissioned for the newly renovated Weeks Hall at Texas Tech University.

Two colossal rings of rough-cut granite stone are placed near and parallel to each other. They are made of recycled curbstone from old cities and roads. A branch made of Cor-ten weathering steel hovers above the stone rings connecting to them at their apex forming a canopy. From a distance it is an object and an image, but as we enter the sculpture it becomes architectural and spatially engaging.

The twin stone circles suggest wheels, movement and physical motion, but can also be read metaphorically representing the circles of natural cycles. The stone rings remind us of two massive frames that offer alternating views of the surrounding landscape. The sculpture becomes a lens into and out of the campus inspired by the curiosity of inquisitive minds, asking students to look further than the limits they see before them.

New Work, Theater of the Wind, 2016

Theater of the Wind is located on a grassy field between several glass buildings in Marina Heights on the edge of the Salt River in Tempe, AZ. The work is made of large recycled granite curbstone and weathering steel. The work allows for participation with integrated seating on stone steps cladding the bow of the boat. The boat emerges from a colossal picture frame, through which the viewer sees the river, a bridge over it, and the desert in the distance. “Theater of the Wind” creates a meditative living landscape painting which the viewer becomes a part of.

Theater of the Wind Announcement