Creativity celebration
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Andrew Edwards
Set to the tune of jazz, chorale and chamber music, plans to
transform the Arts Plaza at UC Irvine were unveiled on Sunday at a
groundbreaking ceremony with the project’s designer, noted architect
Maya Lin.
Best known for designing the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in
Washington, D.C., Lin was chosen to renovate the plaza about five
years ago. Her design aims to transform the courtyard surrounded by
the university’s arts buildings into an open-air celebration of
creativity.
“The whole Arts Plaza really focuses back on how art is a part of
everyday life,” Lin said.
Like many buildings at UC Irvine, most of the buildings at the
Arts Plaza have exteriors of beige brickwork. Lin’s design will leave
the buildings in place, but will add a mixture of high-tech features
and greenery in hopes of making the Arts Plaza more inviting.
“It’s kind of like this sea of concrete; it really needed help,”
Lin said.
UC Irvine Chancellor Ralph Cicerone likened the current courtyard,
surrounded by utilitarian-looking buildings, to a “medieval
fortress.”
Cicerone and others involved with the project said they hope the
redesigned plaza will become a popular meeting place for students,
faculty and art lovers.
“It will be a beckoning destination that people can find in the
first place, and then want to come back,” Cicerone said.
To make the plaza more inviting, Lin said she plans to use red,
blue and green lights to illuminate the walkways leading to the
plaza. The Sunday ceremony included a performance by UC Irvine
soprano Stephanie Feder, who was accompanied by the school’s Men in
Blaque chorale ensemble. Two student groups, the Rawlins Quartet, a
chamber music ensemble, and the Jazz Quartet, also performed at the
event.
Lin’s favorite components in her design include plans for a
screening room and a drawing room, which are both open open-air areas
of the plaza. The first area is set to be an outdoor amphitheater
with grass seating for student films and plays.
“ I am looking to be able to have the possibility of summer
evening festivals and performances,” said Nohema Fernandez, dean of
the university’s Claire Trevor School of the Arts.
Plans for the drawing room feature “whispering benches,” which are
to feature speakers for playing music and poetry as plaza visitors
sit around a water table that Lin said was among her favorite works
of her career.
Lin collaborated with landscape architect Pamela Burton, and the
pair came up with a plan to minimize the use of paving and use
fragrant plants like orange blossoms, rosemary and lavender as
natural contrasts to the plaza’s electric lights and video screens.
The expected cost for the plaza is $5.6 million. The project is
scheduled to be built by the beginning of the next school year, and
second-year arts student Jack Bartlett said he looks forward to being
able to relax in the drawing room.
“I think it just seems like a nice place to go to, a nice quiet
area,” he said.
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