Travertine stone, Getty Center, 5 days ago

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“Travertine Stone at the Getty Center  by Eric Doehne …

     ” xxx Travertine is a product of the earth’s water and carbon cycles. As carbon dioxide-rich rainwater percolates through soil and stone, it slowly dissolves tremendous quantities of limestone along underground fissures. Reemerging at the surface as a spring (now saturated with dissolved limestone), this water releases carbon dioxide gas into the atmosphere—much like carbonated mineral water. Because of this “Perrier effect,” the limestone can no longer remain in solution.

It recrystallizes, typically as the water cascades over organic films made of bacteria, algae, and mosses. A dense, banded carbonate stone is built up over time as new material covers older layers.
“Calcite and gypsum, the minerals that make up about 99 percent of travertine stone, are colorless. The beautiful honey color of the Getty Center travertine actually has its origin in the other 1 percent of the stone: traces of yellow sulfur, brown iron compounds, and organic pigments. The intricate “Swiss cheese” texture of travertine is partly the result of gas bubbles, which are often trapped between layers of stone, creating spherical voids. Minerals crystallizing on the ever-present bacteria in travertine deposits—like granular snow blanketing a miniature landscape—preserve organic growth forms, called “shrubs,” and produce much of the rugged relief evident across the stone’s surface. In some cases, travertine layers are similar to tree rings, with lighter and darker laminations representing seasons of growth.  

     ” Travertine is found in greatest abundance where hot and cold springs have been active for tens of thousands of years. The most famous travertine location, and the source of the stone used for the Getty Center, is Bagni di Tivoli, 20 kilometers east of Rome, where travertine deposits over 90 meters thick have been quarried for over two thousand years. xxx” (from getty.edu)

 

#atm it’s 9:22 am July 11 here, coffee Jack in the Box

at the moment, it’s 9:22 am July 11, 2017, here in the Valley … coffee at Jack in the Box diner or fastfood:  policemen and firemen have breakfast here because it’s convenient, they have their breakfast in two minutes then leave, it’s at a busy intersection by the roadside with a big parking lot right in front of the door, flanked by two gasoline stations. Good morning!

“That Profile”, Martin Puryear, Getty Center

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i-Phone-shot by Myra Lambino yesterday, July 7, 2017

Information from getty.edu Title: That Profile
Artist/Maker: Martin Puryear (American, born 1941)
Culture: American
Date:1999
Medium:Stainless steel, bronze
Dimensions:
1371.6 × 914.4 × 345.4 cm (540 × 360 × 136 in.)
Copyright: © Martin Puryear
“A marvel of artistry and engineering, Martin Puryear’s sculpture rises on six slender legs to a height of forty-five feet above the broad expanse of travertine pavement on the plaza at the Getty Center. Stout strands of silver-patinated bronze bind the joints of the airy network of welded, sandblasted stainless steel tubes, two and three inches in diameter. 

Elegant in its apparent simplicity, the sculpture’s complex structure reveals its true character only slowly. The sculpture’s meaning likewise resists a fixed identity, suggesting both a delicate fishnet cast against the sky and a human head in profile. From some viewpoints, it appears to be fully round, but its south face is flat, while the north face curves gently through the air.
That Profile was commissioned by the Getty.” (getty.edu)