2 minute read
See how our lights shine
from June 2021
Illuminated sculptures are the newest feature welcoming visitors to Downtown Arlington
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At four stories tall and equipped to create a spectacular light show at night, Downtown Arlington’s latest public art addition, Flamme d’ Illuminacion, is hard to miss. The City selected artist Michelle O’Michael of Houston to create the iconic sculptures as part of the transformative Abram Street Rebuild through Downtown. The four towering woven steel sculptures stand between City Hall and Levitt Pavilion Arlington and welcome people as they arrive Downtown. At night, the silver towers are illuminated by programmable LED lights that can remain static, color sweep or ficker like fames and Michelle O’Michael created Flamme d’ Illumiacion in Michelle O’Michael created Flamme d’ Illumiacion in whose colors can be changed
a rented industrial fabrication space because they a rented industrial fabrication space because they
were too big to craft in her Houston studio. were too big to craft in her Houston studio. for holidays or special events. O’Michael says she created the sculptures to add to the vibrant, welcoming atmosphere in the newly renovated public plaza near Founders Plaza, which hosts concerts, festivals, and other community gatherings. “What I was working toward with the towers was for them to be cohesive with what was there and to stand out at the same time,” she says. “If you sit there and look at them in the daytime, from diferent viewpoints, all the crossing points line up to form X’s, at some points, you can see swirls, and from other vantages they look like infnity signs. They have a presence and there is an element of intrigue.” O’Michael afectionately refers to the four towers of Flamme d’ Illuminacion as the daughters to a smaller, 12-foot lighted sculpture she created years ago that is known as Flame d’ Espoire. The scale of the four towers presented some new challenges for the Texas artist, who had to rent an industrial fabrication space instead of using her Houston studio. The project took just over a year to complete, due to delays related to the coronavirus pandemic, she said. At 40 feet and three and a half tons each, Arlington’s lighted towers may be the largest woven steel sculptures, she says. The programmable LED lights mean that each tower can feature its own color patterns that ficker, sweep, rotate, blend and twirl. “I think that they are really going to be a huge draw. You can bring your picnic and sit in the park at night and be with the lights. It’s peaceful and meditative,” O’Michael says. “I want people to have some beauty and place of comfort and a pleasant thing to look at.” The public art, the open lawn area and the new pedestrian amenities all contribute to an inviting community space that will draw people Downtown year-round.
Photos: City of Arlington