On our recent trip to New Mexico, we briefly drove up to Santa Fe to look for one of our bracelet artists, Randy Secataro. He's usually on the Plaza, but, alas, he wasn't there this trip. So we walked around and found this fantastic sculpture a few blocks north of the Plaza at the Civic Center. We were both very impressed with the movement of this piece. Colette Hosmer’s "Santa Fe Current" utilizes multiple forms of Rio Grande Cutthroat trout to simulate flowing water. This sculpture was chosen for the Santa Fe Civic Center Public Art Project. Twenty seven carved granite fish (each two feet by three and a half feet) analogizes Santa Fe as a stream - fluid, vital, and forward moving. We later were at a gallery in the Railyards and saw two more of these trout only they were probably 5 feet high.
Monday, September 28, 2009
Santa Fe Cutthroat Run
On our recent trip to New Mexico, we briefly drove up to Santa Fe to look for one of our bracelet artists, Randy Secataro. He's usually on the Plaza, but, alas, he wasn't there this trip. So we walked around and found this fantastic sculpture a few blocks north of the Plaza at the Civic Center. We were both very impressed with the movement of this piece. Colette Hosmer’s "Santa Fe Current" utilizes multiple forms of Rio Grande Cutthroat trout to simulate flowing water. This sculpture was chosen for the Santa Fe Civic Center Public Art Project. Twenty seven carved granite fish (each two feet by three and a half feet) analogizes Santa Fe as a stream - fluid, vital, and forward moving. We later were at a gallery in the Railyards and saw two more of these trout only they were probably 5 feet high.
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