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To: Annette who wrote (27911)1/2/2001 12:48:15 PM
From: Mannie  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 65232
 
<I expect to see a giant black monolith in my back yard with
apes throwing bones at it every morning.(cue 2001 music...)>......OK, here you go...

Tuesday, January 02, 2001, 12:00 a.m. Pacific

Anonymous monolith brings a landmark movie
to mind

by Mark Higgins
Seattle Times assistant metro editor

Rebecca Sargent gently put her
fingertip to the black steel monolith
mysteriously planted on a grassy
knoll in Seattle's Magnuson Park
and declared it had a vibe, like one
she felt at Machu Picchu, the
ancient Incan ruins.

Her husband, Denny, guffawed.

But why wouldn't it? On the first
day of 2001, the monolith
glistened in the warm sunlight of a
new millennium. At roughly nine
feet tall and several feet wide, it
certainly looks like the shrieking
black marker in Stanley Kubrick's
landmark movie, "2001: A Space Odyssey."

And like the movie, the renegade sculpture raises at least a couple of questions.
Like, who put it there, obviously without the city's permission?

There are precious few clues. Certainly, there is no commemorating plaque. The
hollow monolith - perhaps an empty fuel tank? - was carefully positioned on the
park's Kite Hill, possibly on New Year's Eve, to capture the attention of the masses
strolling along the lakeshore below. At its base the sod was carefully tamped back
into place, but several plastic bottle-cap rings littered the ground, suggesting the
artists sought refreshment after their clandestine labor.

News of the monolith's appearance circulated late New Year's Eve on Capitol Hill
as the Infernal Noise Brigade, a marching band of anarchists, led a peaceful parade
downtown where a bonfire was lit at First Avenue and Pike Street.

Anonymous art in Seattle - a place of interminable tame public art - is a guilty
pleasure. Remember the 700-pound steel ball and shackles placed on the right leg of
the art museum's Hammering Man? Or the 1,800-pound metal heart Jason Sprinkle
- "Subculture Joe" - placed at Westlake Park in 1996, in protest of a lot of things?
That stunt cleared out a swath of downtown when police decided the artwork might
contain a bomb, which of course it didn't.

And what message does the Magnuson monolith convey, besides an obvious rip-off
of the movie?

As Denny Sargent moved forward to touch it yesterday he began to hum the theme
song of 2001, "Tum-Tum-Tum-Tum-Tum-Tum - Tum!"

"I feel my intelligence increasing by the moment," he said.

His son, Jason, offered no verbal appraisal but hugged it. Why? It was warm from
the sun.

While no bones flew into the air, a boomerang suddenly circled by in swooping arc.

John Thoe retrieved the boomerang and paused to inspect the artwork.

"It's cool," he said. "Especially on the first day of 2001."