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Aluminum Yucca ‐ Detail, horizontal • (2003) Gordon Huether 2023 08-15

 

Here's what the artist has to say on his web page, about this sculpture:

 

"Aluminum Yucca was made from salvaged hollow aluminum fuel tanks from F-16 military aircraft. The hollow forms were sliced vertically to resemble the scooped shape of the Datil Yucca leaf, which is native to the area. At night, the sculpture is illuminated by a slow-moving, solar-powered color wheel that recreates the hues of the Albuquerque desert landscape.

 

The exaggerated scale celebrates the romance and nostalgia of western Road Culture in the 20th century – evident all along Route 66 in wigwam-shaped hotels, five-foot Mexican sombreros and giant cowboy boots."

 

The color wheel for the lights (not on, in this Detail} seems to be no longer working – the lighting later came on green and stayed green the whole time I was there.

 

Funded by Albuquerque's Public Art Urban Enhancement Division, the city considers this piece the "Route 66 Gateway to Albuquerque" from the East Mountains. The Division has posted an image of it themselves here, but you'd never know from it that this yucca is 22 feet high and 15 feet wide (6.7 x 4.6 meters).

 

Location: rocky hillside, Tijeras Canyon NE, I-40 West/Route 66 just east of exit 167; Albuquerque, New 7:55pm

 

That's the Manzano foothills on the horizon, south.

My pic of the entire sculpture (and a person, for scale) is here.

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Uploaded on September 12, 2023
Taken on August 15, 2023