Three works approved for Treasure Island
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Barbara Diamond
A naked lady, two mythical beasts and a five-piece seating
arrangement were added on Tuesday to the inventory of sculptures on
the Montage Hotel property and Treasure Island Park.
The selected works will cost $125,000. The cost of all public art
for the project is expected to exceed $700,000.
Cheryl Ekstrom’s “Parallel Dance,” which will be installed on the
pathway from the park to the hotel swimming pool, is valued at
$34,950.
Athens Group, which owns and is developing the resort property,
will pick up part of the city’s tab for public art: $35,000 for Linda
Brunker’s 10-foot statue of a woman, titled “Voyager,” and $55,000
for Gerard Basil Stripling’s bronze seating arrangement. Both will be
installed in the park.
The city’s actual cost will be $72,000, its obligation under the
public arts ordinance.
All selections were Arts Commission recommendations.
Ekstrom incorporated the suggestion of waves into the tails of her
sculpted horses to reflect the movement of the ocean.
“It represents travel, escape,” Ekstrom said. “I was influenced by
Japanese art, which is integral to the craftsman art movement.”
Ekstrom’s fantastical horses will be cast in bronze and installed
on opposite sides of a pathway. The sculptures are each 24 inches
tall, 26 inches high and 14 inches wide, smaller than her usual work
and smaller than other pieces of public art on the site. They will be
installed on 36-inch high concrete pedestals.
Stripling’s bronze-plated seats will be topped with a heat wax
application to preserve the finish. Johnson’s wax will be applied
twice a year as maintenance.
“I wanted ‘Repose’ to convey all things that are calming to me,”
the artist said. “The shapes represent waves crashing on the shore as
well as figures reclining on the beach.”
The benches, which the Arts Commission prefers to call functional
sculpture, will be installed on the peninsula in the northern section
of the park.
Brunker’s cast bronze “Voyager” will be installed on the ocean
side of the parking structure. It will not be visible from South
Coast Highway. She said the piece was inspired by the ocean and the
myriad life that is contained in it.
These pieces complete all the Art in Public Places requirements
for the project. The city’s ordinance requires developers to
contribute art valued at 1% of the estimated value of the project or
donate an amount equal to 1% to the Art in Public Places Fund.
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