Art Collection
Walter Gordinier
Journey to Janus
(Aerial sculpture)
Acquired: 2000
Location: South Atrium, Second Floor Spine,
Second Floor Clerestory
Artist Walter Gordinier has created striking architectural
and cast glass sculptures for colleges and universities,
corporations, and private collections throughout the U.S.
and abroad. The Portland, Oregon based sculptor studies
light and uses it to create color in his works. The three
elements commissioned by the Library Board of Trustees
employ dichroic and cast glass, metal, paint, and acrylic
tubing. In all three works, the interplay between sunlight,
interior light, and the elements of the sculptures create
varied effects throughout the day. Contrasts of color,
iridescence, and luminosity are evident in all parts of
the work.
The aerial sculpture is entitled Journey to Janus after
the Roman god portrayed with two faces who sees both the
past and the future, just as the library is the keeper
of the past and the future. The features of the aerial
sculpture allude to the Odyssey, the great poetic voyage
of antiquity. In this piece, that voyage is a metaphor
for the library, speaking to the magic, adventure, and
fulfillment of dreams that transcend time. Within the atrium,
the boat—a vessel represented by the cone—begins
the journey. The sphere and articulated line are a compass
to the future unknown that is symbolized by the crystal
dichroic glass alignment where the passage ends its course.
The tubes, located in the second floor spine, extend the
piece by representing change and movement—a sail.
To Gordinier, it is up to the artwork, "to create
an experience of passage, an event for the spirit," while
providing, "a point of contemplation and revival
[that] will be worth re-seeing tens of times, each time,
fresh." |