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Dwyer, Gary C.,
Ethnic -- Indian
Abstract -- Geometric
Outdoor Sculpture -- California -- San Geronimo
Earthwork
Sculpture
Miwok Link, (sculpture).
Artist:
Dwyer, Gary C., 1943- , sculptor.
Title:
Miwok Link, (sculpture).
Dates:
1984-1986. Dedicated July 12, 1986.
Medium:
Earth, Cor-Ten steel, concrete disks, redwood bark, trees, and plants.
Dimensions:
Sculpture: approx. 20 x 80 x 450 ft.
Inscription:
signed
Description:
This large earthwork was designed as a tribute to the Miwok Indians of the San Geronimo region. It consists of five earth mounds planted with low-growing, native plants. The area between the mounds is covered with redwood bark and protruding from the top of the hills are poles, semicircular disks, and trees. Part of the earthwork illustrates the Miwok legend about the establishment of the San Geronimo region. According to the Miwok legend, Coyote Man created a dome-shaped sky and then shot two arrows into the ground to establish the first inhabitants, known as Hail and Rain. This portion of the legend is told in the center of the earthwork where there is the "Dome of Heaven" represented by a round earth mound with four openings to symbolize the cardinal points. At the eastern end of the earthwork is the "Monument to the First People" which consists of two twenty-foot steel poles protruding from an earth mound. These poles represent the arrows Coyote Man shot to earth to create the first people, Rain and Hail.
Evergreen trees which provide the link between the earth and the sky, and help the Miwok hear the song of the wind, are planted along the length of the earthwork. Oak trees which provide acorns, a Miwok Indian food source, are planted on two tear-drop mounds. Elderberry trees used to create flutes played at night to keep the stars awake are planted on a ramp-shaped mound at the western end of the earthwork. The end of each section is walled by concrete disks buried in the ground so that only half a circle is exposed. The disks appear to be faced with metal plate which has been wire brushed in circular patterns.
Subject:
Ethnic -- Indian -- Miwok
Abstract -- Geometric
Object Type:
Outdoor Sculpture -- California -- San Geronimo
Earthwork
Sculpture
Owner:
Administered by Marin Municipal Water District, San Rafael, California
Located San Geronimo Water Treatment Plant, Sir Francis Drake Boulevard, South side, after Railroad Avenue, San Geronimo, California
Remarks:
This sculpted and planted earthwork, designed to screen the water treatment plant, illustrates the San Geronimo Valley's Miwok Indian legend concerning the origins of the region. The earthwork was sponsored by Public Art Works (formerly InterArts of Marin) and the Marin Municipal Water District. Major funding was provided by the San Francisco Foundation and the Marin Municipal Water District. IAS files contain related articles from the Point Reyes Light, Dec. 27, 1984, pg. 10 and June 19, 1986 and The Fax, July 16, 1986.
References:
Public Art Works, San Rafael, CA, 1991.
Save Outdoor Sculpture, California, San Francisco survey, 1994.
Illustration:
Image on file.
Note:
The information provided about this artwork was compiled as part of the Smithsonian American Art Museum's Inventories of American Painting and Sculpture database, designed to provide descriptive and location information on artworks by American artists in public and private collections worldwide.
Repository:
Inventories of American Painting and Sculpture, Smithsonian American Art Museum, P.O. Box 37012, MRC 970, Washington, D.C. 20013-7012
Control Number:
IAS 66150002
Copy/Holding information
Smithsonian AmericanArt Museum
Control Number
Inventory of American Sculpture
66150002
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