You could hardly have lived in Southern California these past three months or so and not know something about this massive, 340-ton granite boulder and its journey from the quarry in Riverside County where the artist laid claim to it forty years ago for just this purpose. Its transportation to its site at the museum required the fabrication of a special vehicle and an eleven-day trek that drew thousands of gaping spectators--not to mention daily media coverage--along the way. It is now supported in place--for the next thirty-five hundred years, the LACMA's director, Michael Govan assures us--by a 465-foot long concrete slot that allows the visitor to walk directly underneath what is by now affectionately known as "the big rock."
There were speeches--the Mayor, the County Supervisor, the Chairman of the Museum's Board of Trustees, the Director. The artist kept wisely mum, allowing his work to speak for him. It did so, given its scale, quite loudly. The ribbon was cut by a delightful little girl, and the dignitaries led the way down the slope and under the rock for the first official viewing, followed by a parade of donors (the piece cost, as I understand it, some $10 million--though my private guess is that this would be an understatement,) a bevy of media and hundreds of us, the hoi-polloi...
We gazed upward and admired what few people ever see: the underside of a boulder that has the heft of an asteroid.
Okay, interesting things to think about here--the ancient history of the megalith, the Brobginangian object that reminds us ephemeral beings of our fragility and impermanence; we think of giant Olmec heads, of Stonehenge other rock circles, of Egyptian obelisks, of gigantic statues of the Buddha... objects whose very weight and imposing presence imbue our species with a sense of spiritual awe. We think of mass and and levitation, certainly, of weight and volume, of contour and shape. We think of the symbiotic relationship between art and nature. The surrounding flat, landscaped area of sand-colored decomposed granite reminds us that the rock originates in the California desert, that we live in this relatively fertile spot by the ocean, separated only by mountains from that arid expanse; and, as Mayor Villaraigosa aptly reminded us in his speech, in a world of changing climate that requires our responsible stewardship. Here in Los Angeles, our cars and freeways contribute excessively to the pollution of our atmosphere.
Beyond all this, I found myself troubled by a couple of perhaps picky details. One, the rock really doesn't "levitate." It sits, firmly bolted to its support structure, the very solid concrete channel that is engineered to carry its weight. I had expected something more magical, more threatening somehow, more oppressive. I was looking for what I might describe as a sense of imminence, or omen, and I didn't really find it. And then it seems to me that the same support structure, in its considerable length and width, tends to minimize the scale of the rock as you approach it. Once you get there, okay, it's pretty darn big, but it's somewhat diminished in the perspective from which you're invited to approach it. Still, definitely worth a visit, worth spending some time with. (A walking meditation, perhaps: "One Hour/One Rock.)
... invite the eye to create its own lines, pointing along inexhaustible, multi-directional paths that lead around and back on themselves in a way that is at once amusing and as puzzling as a maze. She has turned another wall black...
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