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Roam-O-Rama
SD Weekly Reader volume 28/number 40/ October 7,1999
By Jerry Schad
A Guide to Unexpected San Diego
Coming= soon to a vandalized scenic overlook or trail side destination:
Public art of ambiguous intent and questionable legality. Art scaled
to the exact dimensions of missing historical plaques and interpretive
markers. Art with a cynical, wry, or whimsical message - depending on
who's viewing it.
Last autumn, a shiny gray plaque suddenly appeared on the site of the
forlorn and long-vandalized Imperial Highway (County Highway S-2) historic
marker at the San Diego - Imperial County line. Where once there resided
a heavy bronze plaque commemorating the opening of a paved link to the
Imperial Valley in the '60s, there now rests a graphite-rubbed plaster
replacement, with words solemnly proclaiming," This is the desert. There's
nothing out here, Nothing"
Ironically, this unauthorized expression of a local artist's creative
impulse may prove more resistant to opportunistic vandals that the original
bolted metal plaque- probably the result of a vandal who tried to pry
a seemingly valuable piece of metal out of its frame, only to hear the
disappointing crack of plaster beneath the plaques's shiny gray patina.
Another unauthorized piece of art is (was?) found on Stonewall Peak
in the Cuyamacas, perched d squarely atop a stone and mortar pillar
that once held a direction-finder. "Crying Wolf" as the artist call
it, a welded rod sculpture of piled up houses, reminiscent of the voracious
new construction on San Diego's fringe, uneasily looks out over thousands
of acres of pristine woods and meadows. "Development couldn't never
happen here", the artist states (or asks) on a Plexiglas coated sign
next to the sculpture. Echoing further comments about overpopulation
is a single word scratched into the plastic 'Rabbits"
The artist's "canvas" also included a number of trail side or mountaintop
locations were small, vaguely female figures ("Female Action Figures",
according to the artist), derived from a twisted piece of tee root and
duplicated in the form of gray concrete casts, have been placed conspicuously
or in conspicuously amid their surroundings, The artist hopes that passersby
might notice the odd material, neither stone nor woo,, and that they
will appreciate in each figure the qualities of strength and femininity.
Some casts have been picked up right away, while others have remained
in situ for weeks or even months.
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