Musica
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This article is about the statue. For music of the spheres, see Musica universalis. For other uses, see Musica (disambiguation).
Musica is a bronze statue unveiled in 2003 that sits in a grassy knoll at the center of a traffic rotary where Division Street meets 17th Avenue South across from the Owen Bradley Park in the Music Row area of Nashville, Tennessee.
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[edit] Composition
Musica is Alan LeQuire's largest sculpture commission to date. It features nine nude figures, male and female, dancing in a circular composition approximately 38 feet (11.5 meters) tall. There are five figures which spring forth from the base. Four more rise up in the center floating above the others. The pinnacle of the statue is a female holding a tambourine. The scale of each figure is fourteen to fifteen feet, or more than twice life-size. The dancers and part of the base are cast in bronze. The other part of the base is composed of massive natural limestone boulders, which are prevalent in the Nashville area.
Much of the work on the statue was actually done at a foundry in Wyoming, with the pieces transported and assembled onsite. It weighs approximately 10 tons.
[edit] Vision
LeQuire writes of his work:
- "Dance is the physical expression of music and the piece is intended to convey that feeling to the viewer in a composition which is simple, exuberant and celebratory. The theme of the sculpture is music, because of the historical and economic significance of the site. This is the heart of Music Row, the area and the artistic activity for which Nashville is best known. The sculpture conveys the importance of music to Nashville, past, present and future, and represents all forms of music without reference to any one form or style. It is meant to provide a visual icon for the area and for the city as a whole. The theme is music, but the sculpture represents artistic creativity itself. An artistic idea often seems to miraculously and spontaneously burst forth. This is what happens in the sculpture, and the title Musica suggests this since it refers to all the 'arts of the muses.'"
He also intended for the work to make a statement about diversity and racial harmony. Just as I wanted all different kinds of music included, not just country, I always wanted it to be a reflection of our culture the way it is, he said. This is a multicultural city with an amazing number of ethnicities in it. Using live models, whose facial and bodily features he depicted, LeQuire created two Caucasian women and one Caucasian man; an African-American man and woman; one Asian-American woman; a Native American man; and a Latino man and woman.
[edit] Funding
The $1.1-million project, funded by local arts patrons who gave on the condition of anonymity, is being offered as a gift to the city to highlight that very point. Such a permanent tribute, since approved by the Metropolitan Nashville Arts Commission and Metro Council, is what project backers sought originally when they approached LeQuire several years back. The artist is quoted as saying, "They wanted to do something lasting for that area, which is such a significant place in the history and future of Nashville. Plus, everyone felt that Music Row, as important as it has been, never had a sort of identifying feature. That was the whole reason for the roundabout itself, and those who created it always imagined a monument that went in the center."
[edit] Controversy
The work was controversial in conservative Nashville because of the representation of frontal nudity, although it is generally considered that the work is entirely tasteful and not at all sexualized. Because of the textured surface, the genitalia "don't really grab your attention. They are semi-hidden, but they are definitely there," according to LeQuire.
One television commentator, Larry Brinton, referred to the statue constantly as "the naked statue" after its unveiling. Others were equally indignant. "It seems quite hypocritical to me that, in a nation like ours, naked statues paid for by private money can be displayed on public land but a copy of the Ten Commandments paid for by private funds could not," says Jerry Sutton, pastor of Two Rivers Baptist Church in Nashville. Sutton, Brinton and others called for removal of the statue from public view, but it remains firmly in place, and is a centerpiece of the urban renewal project that is currently underway in the Music Row neighborhood.
Proponents of the statue are equally vehement in its defense. Columnist Gail Kerr of The Tennessean writes, "At the War Memorial Plaza, the enormously tall statue also has some careful draping going on. But look at the back of the statue. Talk about your buns of steel." She urged bemused indifference to the current controversy. "If you have such a peculiar fetish for bronze that fondling Musica's tambourine will be simply irresistible, just steer clear of the roundabout. Otherwise, don't get your toga in a wad."
Regardless of one's stance on the statue, it provokes powerful emotional responses. It has been the site of prayer vigils on the right and gay-pride events on the left.