Maya Lin designs Arts Plaza for UCI
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Whether hosting a lecture by a Nobel Peace Prize winner or unveiling
the new Arts Plaza designed to engage all the senses, UC Irvine
connects with the community on a variety of levels.
Sharing its physical and intellectual resources remains a priority
for the campus, which celebrates its 40th anniversary this fall with
a wide range of public events. It’s a circular relationship:
Community support has helped establish UCI as a top research
university, which enables it to attract the world’s leading thinkers,
artists and innovators.
The new Arts Plaza provides a perfect example of how UCI and the
community enrich each other. Built with the help of private
donations, the $3.6-million outdoor plaza in the center of the Claire
Trevor School of the Arts has cultural significance that resonates
far beyond the campus. It was designed by artist Maya Lin, who
achieved international fame 25 years ago with her winning design for
the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., while still an
undergraduate at Yale University.
Lin will join Chancellor Michael Drake, landscape architect Pamela
Burton and arts dean Nohema Fernandez for the plaza dedication at 4
p.m. Tues., Oct. 25. The free public event will feature student
music, dance and drama performances, as well as video art by Japanese
artist Takagi Masakatsu.
In designing the plaza, Lin worked closely with Burton to create a
30,000-square-foot plaza that “taps all of the five senses.”
There’s the scent of jasmine, rosemary and other plants growing
throughout the space. Orange trees planted at the entrances not only
satisfy the sense of taste -- visitors are welcome to sample the
fruit -- they also represent Orange County’s agricultural roots.
Visitors can sit on “whispering benches” that play poetry, music
and other sounds, and can watch student films, plays and concerts in
a 200-seat outdoor amphitheater.
The heart of the project, says Lin, is the drawing table. Many of
her designs, notably the Vietnam memorial, feature a large, flat
stone surface inscribed with text that visitors can trace with their
fingers. For the Arts Plaza, she replaced text with “a simple line
drawing that takes its shape as a bubbling line of water on the
surface.”
“You may think you actually see the water drawing a line,” Lin
said. “Text has been reduced to the mark of the human hand, so you
realize, ‘This is a school of the arts.’”
UCI offers another venue for the community to interact with
renowned innovators: the Chancellor’s Distinguished Fellows Series.
An astrophysicist, Nobel Peace Prize winner and civil rights advocate
are among the experts featured in the sixth annual lecture series.
Veronica Tennant, filmmaker and former principal ballerina with
the National Ballet of Canada, begins the series by presenting her
film, “Shadow Pleasures: Making Dance for the Screen,” at 6:30 p.m.
Thurs., Oct. 20, at Edwards University Center, Cinema 6, in Irvine.
Tickets are $30.
Other distinguished fellows include:
* Alan Lloyd, secretary of the California Environmental Protection
Agency, Jan. 18;
* Mary Frances Berry, former chair of the U.S. Civil Rights
Commission, Feb. 16;
* Smithsonian astrophysicist Margaret Geller, best known for her
3-D map of the universe, April 19;
* Harvard sociologist and author William Julius Wilson, May 11.
* Marvin Minsky, Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor
and pioneer of artificial intelligence, May 24;
* Kenyan environmentalist Wangari Maathai, 2004 Nobel Peace Prize
laureate (TBA); and
* Jagdish Bhagwati, Columbia University professor of economics
(TBA).
Most presentations are free and open to the public. For
information, call (949) 824-6503 or visit
o7www.chancellor.uci.eduf7.
While the Arts Plaza appeals to the senses and the fellows series
challenges the mind, the communal spirit of the campus is embodied in
one premier event: the UCI Medal Ceremony on Saturday.
One couple and three individuals will receive the UCI Medal -- the
campus’s top honor -- for their extraordinary dedication, generosity
and service to the university. More than 700 community members and
campus leaders will gather in tents at the Anteater Recreation Center
Fields for the gala.
The 2005 recipients are Dr. Thomas Cesario, dean of the School of
Medicine; Mary Cesario, community leader; Walter Fitch, professor of
ecology and evolutionary biology; Paul Merage, chairman of Falcon
Investment Management and co-founder of Chef America; and Janice
Smith, community leader and UCI volunteer.
Hosted by the UCI Foundation, the gala begins at 5:30 p.m. and
features performances by alumni, students and faculty of the arts
school. Proceeds support the UCI Regents’ Scholars program and
graduate fellowships. For information, call (949) 824-7939.
The campus and community have had a close connection for four
decades, and as the coming events indicate, there’s much more in
store for this enduring partnership.
* Parents Talk Back: Our parent panelists will return next week.
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