In the Hot Desert Sun
by Laurie Search
Title
In the Hot Desert Sun
Artist
Laurie Search
Medium
Photograph - Digital Photography
Description
An awesome piece of art by Ricardo Breceda at Galleta Meadows in Borrego Springs, CA.........
Here is part of a great article on this place by the website sandiego.about.com: Dennis Avery, land owner of Galleta Meadows Estates in Borrego Springs envisioned the idea of adding free-standing art to his property with original steel welded sculptures created by artist/welder Ricardo Breceda, who is based in Perris, California..........The life-size or larger sculptures are of creatures that once roamed the Borrego Valley when it was a lush forest. Mammoths, camels, turtles, wild horses and giant sloths are some of the pieces that have been attracting the curious to town..........Avery, of the Avery Label fortune, owns about three square miles of undeveloped property throughout Borrego Springs. He commissioned Breceda in 2008 to create a collection of metal prehistoric creatures..........The display, dubbed �Sky Art� by Avery, was initiated in the spring of 2008 with the placement of a family of gomphotheres, prehistoric elephant-like mammals that roamed North America, including the San Diego area, almost 4 million years ago. The largest of Breceda's tusked creatures measures 12 feet tall and 20-feet long..........In just a few years, the collection grew to include sculptures of animals that were once found in the area, like sabertooth cats, giant tortoises, prehistoric camels, Columbian mammoths, Merriam�s tapirs, extinct horses, ground sloths, and massive birds. Avery's quirky collection, many of which are visible from Borrego Springs Road, grew even more unique with the addition of - somewhat incongruously - human figures like a gold miner, Spanish padre, Native American, farm workers along with popular dinosaurs such as a spinosaurus, velociraptor, allosaurus and Tyrannosaurus rex..........In all, there are 129 figures of Breceda's creations..........The latest of Breceda's creations is probably the most spectacular - a 350-foot sea serpent that seemingly burrows and emerges from the desert sand. With the head of a dragon and a rattlesnake's tail, the serpent, which cost around $40,000, took four months to craft, and it took another three months to erect it in Borrego Springs..........Although Ricardo Breceda's creations are part of Avery's Galleta Meadows Sky Art collection, the menagerie isn�t just situated in a single place. Most of the sculptures can be found along the Borrego Springs Road both north and south of downtown Borrego Springs. Most of the collection is scattered north of Christmas Circle, the roundabout in the center of Borrego Springs. A number of other sculptures are displayed south of Christmas Circle along Borrego Springs Road before you get to Yaqui Pass Road..........The Breceda creatures can easily be seen from your car while driving, but you can park your car off the pavement and get up close to take pictures. Just be careful - you're in the desert environment, so you'll need to take precautions because you're in rattlesnake country. In addition, be aware that there is traffic traveling at high speed along Borrego Springs Road.
Uploaded
February 16th, 2014
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Viewed 4,415 Times - Last Visitor from Fairfield, CT on 04/26/2024 at 5:01 AM
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Comments (31)
Angeles M Pomata
Awesome photo, dear Laurie!! Love the framing, the gorgeous sculpture, and the incredible environment to place it! L/F
Sunil Kapadia
Marvelous viewpoint and composition. Lovely b/w treatment. Love that shadow too. Truly get the feeling of the harsh light. LF
Karen Adams
Fantastic image, Laurie! this reminds me of clips I have seen from the movie Lawrence of Arabia....Love the vast empty space!...fv
Laurie Search replied:
Im so glad you like it, Karen!!! Thank you so, so much!! I truly appreciate it!! :)))
Jeff Folger
I looked at it and didn't give it a second thought, I thought it was real and then I started reading your description and chuckled at my lack of noting details like spikes sticking out of feet :-). L/F
Laurie Search replied:
LOL...yes, the spikes sticking out of the feet are a good indicator...:) But in your defense, you can really only see one of them...and I thought (and hoped) the camel looked real at first glance, too....so I'm glad you thought it was!! :))) Thank you very, very much, Jeff!!! :)))
Nick Boren
Wow.. this is an amazing camel image dear Laurie... I wish I could see one.. lol ;-))))) fv