Sunday, September 26, 2021

September 25, 2021 - Echo Echo Echo


 






















Jaume Plensa's "Echo" at the Olympic Sculpture Park.  The 46 foot tall statue represents a Mountain Nymph that had offended the goddess Hera. To punish the nymph, Hera took away her ability to speak, except to repeat the last word of others.  The statute looks across Elliott Bay and Puget Sound in the direction of Mount Olympus.

The Olympic Sculpture Park opened in January of 2007.  Unocal had operated a fuel facility here from 1910 to 1975.  The contaminated soil was removed and before the 9 acre sculpture park was opened  200,000 cubic feet of soil and 80,000 plants were put in place.





Alexander Calder's "The Eagle".




Mark di Suvero's "Schubert Sonata".





September 25, 2021 - Myrtle Edwards Park


 North of Broad Street, where much of Seattle's 'working' waterfront ends, are a series of connected small, narrow public areas that run along the shores of Elliott Bay.  From south to north they are the Olympic Sculpture Park, an extension of the Seattle Art Museum, Myrtle Edwards Park and Centennial Park.  These green spaces are sandwiched between the BNSF railroad tracks and Elliott Bay.  

The parks sit on what was an industrial area that included oil and petroleum operations. Material from the excavation of some portions of Interstate 5 had even been dumped here.  The land was purchased in 1972 and work began in 1975 to transform it from a rubble strewn toxic brownfield to the gem of a green space that it now is.

In 1976 "Adjacent, Against, Upon" was installed.  The art installation partly in view here, is made of three concrete plinths and three huge granite boulders quarried in the Cascades.  One is 28 tons and the other two weigh 45 tons.  

The shoreline was restored to provide public access to the water as well and to improve the marine habitat with pocket beaches and kelp beds.  Walking and biking trails run through the parks and connect with the rest of the Seattle waterfront. 

Across the railroad tracks, is the landmark globe and eagle Seattle Post Intelligencer.  The Seattle PI newspaper is longer in paper form, but the globe remains.