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Sculpture in shape of whale bones OKd

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Eron Ben-Yehuda

HUNTINGTON BEACH -- A sculpture featuring large whale bones rising out of

sand was approved by the City Council by a 6-1 vote Monday as a future

landmark at the corner of Pacific Coast Highway and Beach Boulevard.

A collection of seven fossillike, concrete bones measuring 12- to 16-feet

high will be surrounded by a seating area with speakers that will play a

recording of the sounds of sea gulls, bell buoys, and distant fog horns.

At night, each creamy white whale bone will be illuminated from below.

The city paid an artist $35,000 to design not only this piece of public

art but also two miniature plazas, which were approved in December. The

plazas, planned for an area near the sculpture, will have floor designs

shaped like seashells, according to a city memo dated Monday.

The artwork is part of $7 million in improvements planned for South

Beach, between Huntington Street and Beach Boulevard, the memo states.

The changes include new restrooms, security lights, landscaping and

resurfacing of parking lots.

But the o7 piece de resistancef7 will be the whale bone sculpture,

which could be installed as early as April 2001, said Ron Hagan, the

city’s director of community services.

The sculpture makes a powerful visual statement, Councilwoman Shirley

Dettloff said. The bones are very “touchable” and will “glisten” at

night, Councilwoman Pam Julien said.

The only dissenting vote came from Councilman Peter Green, who said

whales do not make sense as a design theme in Huntington Beach. He

preferred art more in line with the city’s surfing history.

The city had initially considered in December whether to build a

collection of 18-foot stones shaped as surfboards set in a circle of

sand. But the sculpture, dubbed “Surfhenge,” was too similar to a piece

already built on the East Coast, Hagan said.

QUESTION:

What do you think of Huntington Beach’s newest piece of public art?

Call our Readers Hotline at 965-7175, fax us at 965-7174 or send e-mail

to hbindy@latimes.com. Please spell your name and tell us your hometown

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