New beach art no Surfhenge, I hope
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EDITOR’S NOTEBOOK
I heard something this week that sent up a huge red flag.
The city has begun phase two of refurbishing city beaches, a
project that will benefit residents who enjoy the beaches and
tourists in Surf City.
What worries me is that besides new parking lots and lifeguard
headquarters, the city plans to install three new pieces of art.
This is where the alarms sounded.
It is a great concept. Unfortunately, it is one that for me, and
many other Surf City residents I’d wager, now conjures an image of a
two towering, pockmarked concrete slabs sticking out of the sand,
with a third resting across the top.
Yes, that monstrous waste of space and money that residents
not-so-affectionately call “Surfhenge” was the city’s last attempt at
public art.
I cringe at what might be at the beach when it reopens in 2004 and
how much it will have cost taxpayers.
Surfhenge, you might recall, is actually titled Surf Circle and
cost the city $45,000. That is just for the statue alone. The city
also spent $72,000 on surrounding benches and lighting.
It was with relief that I listened to Dave Dominquez, acting
manager of facilities, development and concessions, describe the
artwork planned for the area.
One of the three pieces is an old favorite, the Morehouse Monument
pelican. It is merely being moved to a new grassy knoll and put on a
new pedestal.
Another area will incorporate artwork of the junior guards, which
should at least give the area a local feel. The hopefully artistic
young lifeguards made sea animals out of clay, which were glazed by
an artist and will be mounted on a wall to create an ocean scene.
Finally, and here’s where the real money comes in, an artist out
of Northern California (at least she’s not from New Mexico, like the
Surfhenge creators) has designed 3-D figures of dolphins and the like
that will grace an access ramp down to the beach. She will also
design a surfboard piece (uh-oh) with flags from the various
countries that visit our shores to surf, such as Japan and Australia.
Her artwork sounds simple and relatively tasteful. The price tag,
however, is a bit high at $340,000. I suggest city officials instead
commission a local surfboard shaper to make a board. Depending on the
size, it will only run us $900 tops.
Guess we can’t have taste and a low price.
Our best hope is this artist will at least know to put fins on her
surfboard.
* DANETTE GOULET is the city editor. She can be reached at (714)
965-7170 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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