Phoenix is filled with sculptures from the figurative to the abstract. Public art sculptures are especially prevalent in Phoenix and Scottsdale, which is where you can find some of the most iconic sculptures around. One records video of viewer eyeballs, and another bears a mark reading “Made in China.” All make cool destinations for tourists — and locals, too.
Air Apparent
James Turrell’s Air Apparent (2012) is one of the artist’s many skyspaces, which he defines as “a specifically proportioned chamber with an aperture in the ceiling open to the sky.” Located on Arizona State University’s Tempe campus, the skyspace was designed in collaboration with architect William P. Bruder and is set within a desert garden designed by landscape architect Christy Ten Eyck. Created with concrete and steel, the structure is described by ASU as “a contemporary interpretation of ancient Hohokam shade ramadas, pit houses and baskets.” Another Turrell skyspace, titled Knight Rise (2001), is located at Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art.
EXPAND Mary Lucking’s Curiouser and Curiouser (detail) at Arizona Science Center. Lynn Trimble
Curiouser and Curiouser!
Mary Lucking’s Curiouser and Curiouser! (2011), comprising three interactive sculptures, is located in the lobby for the Arizona Science Center. Visitors who look through Lucking’s floor-mounted telescope see short videos clips of science-infused scenes, even as a small camera captures video footage of their eye and projects live feeds of the video through the two remaining elements — a telescope and portion of a microscope suspended from the ceiling. Curiouser and Curiouser! was created with aluminum and stainless steel — as well as video monitors, video camera, computer, and software. Its title references an expression used by Alice in author Lewis Carroll’s Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.
EXPAND John Waddell’s Dance (detail) in front of Herberger Theater Center. Lynn Trimble
Dance
John Waddell’s Dance (1974) comprises several nude figurative bronze sculptures — most depicting women in a variety of dance poses. One piece features a man lifting a women with outstretched arms towards the sky, and another a woman playing the flute. The figures dot a plaza in front of the Herberger Theater Center, where resident companies include the modern dance company Center Dance Ensemble. Another iconic Waddell grouping, his That Which Might Have Been (1963) — created to honor four young African American women killed in a church bombing in Birmingham, Alabama — is on view in the garden at the Unitarian Universalist Congregation of Phoenix located in Paradise Valley.
EXPAND William Bennie and Kim Cridler’s Halo at the Phoenix Convention Center. Lynn Trimble
Halo
William Bennie and Kim Cridler’s Halo (2008), a steel conical ring of interwoven agave leaves, hangs suspended above an entrance to the Phoenix Convention Center. Measuring 32-feet in diameter and 4-feet high, the ring references wreaths and their association with entrances. According to Cridler’s artist statement, the piece signifies the wreath as both corona convivialis, which denotes a happy fate and good luck, and the wreath as corona funebris, which denotes transformation through regeneration. Cridler explains that the work “shares the simple yet rich connotation of the ring, as continuity, life, and cyclic time.”
EXPAND Janet Echelman’s Her Secret is Patience (detail) at Civic Space Park. Lynn Trimble
Her Secret is Patience
Janet Echelman’s Her Secret is Patience (2009) comprises a vortex-shaped sculpture suspended 38-feet above Civic Space Park in downtown Phoenix. Inspired by Arizona’s monsoon cloud formations, as well as saguaro cactus features including blooms, the piece was created with polyester and steel. Its three-dimensional multi-layered form is situated within a framework of steel rings, cables, and poles. At night the sculpture is illuminated with shades of blue and magenta, which gradually shift over time through various seasons.
EXPAND Ed Mell’s Jack Knife in Old Town Scottsdale. Lynn Trimble
Jack Knife
Ed Mell’s Jack Knife (1993) anchors the Marshall Way and Main Street intersection in the heart of downtown Scottsdale’s arts district. The bronze sculpture, which was the artist’s first large-scale work, depicts a rider atop a bucking horse — imagery which was inspired by the city’s official seal. The sculpture stands nearly eight-feet high, serving as an important way-finder for both tourists and locals. Mell notes that the sculpture’s angularity “accelerates the power and energy of the rider and horse” and demonstrates a “reverence for the Old West.”
EXPAND Sui Jianguo’s Jurassic Age in front of Phoenix Art Museum. Lynn Trimble
Jurassic Age
Sui Jianguo’s Jurassic Age (2006), which is part of the Phoenix Art Museumcollection, is situated atop a small lawn area near the museum’s main entrance. The artist set a large-scale red dinosaur, bearing the words “Made in China” on its belly, inside a cage — thus prompting reflection on globalization, commercialism, and limitations on freedom. The dinosaur, created with bronze, steel, and industrial paint, is one of the artist’s many works referencing mass-produced toys.
EXPAND Robert Indiana’s LOVE at Scottsdale Civic Center Mall. Lynn Trimble
LOVE
Robert Indiana’s LOVE sculpture, created in many iterations between 1969 and 1999, has its roots in the Vietnam era. One of Indiana’s large-scale LOVE sculptures is located on a grassy knoll at Civic Center Mall in Scottsdale. Created with poly-chromed red and blue aluminum, the sculpture weighs 3,800 pounds. It measures 144-inches high and wide, and 72-inches deep. Indiana’s LOVE image has graced U.S. postage stamps and Museum of Modern Art Christmas cards. The Scottsdale sculpture is routinely used by locals a nd tourists as a background for snapping photographs.
EXPANDPaolo Soleri’s Soleri Bridge and Plaza (detail) at the Scottsdale Waterfront. Lynn Trimble
Soleri Bridge and Plaza
The Soleri Bridge and Plaza (2011) is located at the Scottsdale Waterfront.The bridge is anchored by two 64-foot pylons, and two 22-foot tall pylons. The latter encase a suspended Goldwater Bell assembly fabricated entirely by the artist and exhibited at the Corcoran Gallery in Washington, D.C. during his first U.S. retrospective exhibition. The installation features 10 3,500-pound totemic panels, and one larger panel, replicating the cast wall motif present at both Cosanti and Arcosanti.
EXPAND Mayme Kratz and Mark Ryan’s trueNorth (detail) at Tempe Center for the Arts. Lynn Trimble
trueNorth
Mayme Kratz and Mark Ryan’s trueNorth (2007) spans both indoor and outdoor spaces at Tempe Center for the Arts, located alongside Tempe Town Lake. The work — created with concrete, stainless steel, resin, and fire — referenced a Native American legend regarding earth, wind, water, and fire. It comprises a concrete circle, a line of fire, and resin cylinders randomly protruding from its concrete wall. Cylinders with colors mirroring honey and fire contain tiny objects such as discarded notes and small animal skeletons.
Article by Phoenix New Times