The original UW campus downtown was once covered with old-growth timber, as was its present location when the school moved north in 1895. Now, as that institution continues its inexorable sprawl south of Pacific Street toward Portage Bay, New York artist Brian Tolle reminds us of that arboreal past with his recently installed Stronghold. It is at first glance nothing more than a stump on a manicured lawn. Walk closer (sprinklers permitting) and youll see its a constructed stump, an invented artifact made of inexpensive cedar slats. Measuring about 23 feet in diameterwith a seating area within, possibly for picnicsStronghold suggests the enormous tree trunks that once drove this regions economy, that helped establish the city and our states first university (founded in 1861). But such towering cedars and firs are all gone, of course, and Tolles materials are of the size and grade you could buy at any lumberyard. This neo-stump stands next to a new UW bioengineering building (near 15th Avenue Northeast and Pacific)appropriate, since technology is the new timber of the Northwest. In shape, the irregular ring also echoes our skyline of ancient, crumbling volcanoes (Mount St. Helens in particular) that were formed in violence. The installation recreates local history before it met the crosscut saw. BRIAN MILLER
Starts: Aug. 22. Daily, 2008
