Los Angeles – 340-Ton Granite Makes its Debut at County Museum

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    Jonathan Alcorn / ReutersLos Angeles – The rock was the star as the Los Angeles County Museum of Art pulled the covers off artist Michael Heizer’s latest creation – a 340-ton boulder positioned to appear as though it’s floating in midair.

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    About a thousand people showed up under sunny skies in Los Angeles as the gigantic work titled “Levitated Mass” was unveiled on LACMA’s backyard, where it is intended to remain forever.

    Its centerpiece is the two-story-tall chunk of granite that was hauled 105 miles from a Riverside rock quarry earlier this year. Since then, the rock has been carefully positioned above a 465-foot-long trench that museum visitors can stroll.

    From the trench, the rock appears to be hovering overhead.

    The 67-year-old Heizer, who rarely appears in public, was on hand for the ribbon-cutting ceremony and led the first procession under the big rock. Along the way he waved and shook hands with museum officials and art enthusiasts.

    Also Sunday, the museum opened “Michael Heizer: Actual Size,” an exhibition of more than a dozen gigantic photographs showing other works by the artist.

    Heizer may be best known for “Double Negative,” a 1,500-foot-long land sculpture cut into a desert mesa in southern Nevada.

    Heizer has planned for more than 40 years to create “Levitated Mass,” but had to locate the perfect rock. He finally found one in a quarry on the outskirts of Riverside about seven years ago.

    It took dozens of people and a specially built trailer to haul it over the surface streets of 22 cities.

    The trip lasted nearly two weeks, with the rock traveling only at night and rarely faster than 5 mph. Thousands of people turned out to cheer it on.

    To thank those who put up with road closures and other delays, the museum is granting free admission for a week to people who live in zip code areas traversed by the rock.


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    9 Comments
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    lawrenceyid
    lawrenceyid
    11 years ago

    Anu ameilim, vhaim ameilim….After 120, he will go up and say, “you know what I planned and did over 40 years?, I schlepped a big rock!”

    Kanaim
    Kanaim
    11 years ago

    And this is supposed to be art? This is what part of our tax dollars go to support via the NEA? What idiot makes these decisions? What idiot decides that money should be given for boulders instead of food for the hungry? And for trees along the highway instead of housing? People do not need rocks and trees. They need food and shelter. This is a crime in its most obvious form.

    Secular
    Secular
    11 years ago

    Not a good idea in earthquake prone Los Angeles.

    Secular
    Secular
    11 years ago

    …now if they can only get water out of that rock….

    yaakov doe
    Member
    yaakov doe
    11 years ago

    If putting a boulder that Hashem created over a man made trench is art, is there anything that isn’t considered art?

    ShalomCon
    ShalomCon
    11 years ago

    Very powerful art statement.
    But no mention of precautions built into this installation in the event of an earth quake. YIKES.

    cresthill
    cresthill
    11 years ago

    A dimyon for when Hashem suspended the mountain over Klal Yisroel. You could re-enact “na’aseh v’nishmah” and in some small way feel the way they did.

    The_Truth
    Noble Member
    The_Truth
    11 years ago

    “the two-story-tall chunk of granite that was hauled 105 miles…”
    Why don’t “artists” have to answer to reducing the carbon footprint they create for no reason?