Crum Creek Meander Coming Down
Just as flower blooms in the garden are ephemeral, so is garden art. On November 30, 2014, the installation Crum Creek Meander, located next to Magill Walk, is scheduled to be dismantled. There are only two months left to see this provocative, controversial, and interactive piece.
Installed in the fall of 2013, Stacy Levy’s temporary piece has generated much conversation, passionate opinions for and against the piece, imitation, and it has been the platform for other pieces of art. Designed to generate awareness and generate conversation, this piece succeeded in creating a buzz across campus.
Stacy Levy, a leading environmental artist, is drawn to water and how it flows through the natural landscape in seen and unseen ways. She was struck by how the Blue Route (Route 476) is a human stream over Crum Creek. Crum Creek Meander is designed “to bring a sense of the creek to people’s minds” by creating a “ghost” of the creek in a highly visible space.
Designed to be interactive, clear vinyl strips allow viewers to see wind interact with the piece and allow visitors to cross the virtual creek. This is often a favorite feature for children visiting the Arboretum. Several can often be found running in and out with sheer delight.
Art in your garden can inspire conversation and introspection. Contemplative moments in the garden can be the most impactful; consider adding art to your landscape. Come experience Stacy Levy’s Crum Creak Meander and add your voice to the campus opinion about this piece of art. PS…Don’t forget to run through the vertical strips, it is great fun!
Wayne Tyson
Posted at 19:20h, 11 DecemberKinda, nice, but I hope these don’t grow too much bigger–at least not as big as those of that murderer-artist “Christo,” whose “art” is downright deadly. Let us have more art for its own sake, and keep the money proportional, if not out of the “Temple” entirely. “Artist” and “publicity agent” seem mutually exclusive . . .
I hope the plastic will be recycled, at least. Natural materials are, and some nice constructions can be fashioned from, say, prunings. Then they can rot into “mulch.” But keep it off the tree trunks, please, at least of dicots.
Becky Robert
Posted at 08:36h, 12 DecemberDear Wayne, The plastic was recycled into the food storage facilities here at Swarthmore College.
Sincerely,
Becky