Baarn

trajectory for Rembrandt - 2002 - curvature length 250m - 100 Salix Alba (white willow) branches and three oaks
(before painting the tops of the willows white)
In
1999 the Dutch Sculptors' Association (Nederlandse Kring van Beeldhouwers)
planned a sculpture exhibition -
Landschap Partnerschap (Landscape Partnership) - to be held from April through September 2002
- on the estate of the Groeneveld Castle in Baarn, the
Netherlands, the theme being the relationship between man and his environment.
Around the castle itself the English garden style prevails. The
surrounding area was charted as plots of farmland according to a geometrical
system, as is the layout of the greater part of Holland. The location of the
gardens follows this mathematical system. But the style of the gardens
themselves is informal and asymmetrical. There are the typical serpentine lakes,
winding drives, and clusters of trees in lawns that, in England, echoes the
wooded distance, pulling nature towards the house. But here in Holland the
effect is the opposite, to a certain extent making the gardens into a oasis
inside of the grid of the surrounding landscape. And Holland is flat!
Lucien den Arend, who was invited to
participate in this project, chose a location towards the perimeter of the
estate. With his installation he interacted with the axial geometry of the long
tree lined lane which approaches the castle, in its axis, gardens from the south.
The location for the semi permanent
installation is the area south-west of the lane, leading from a point
between the two left trees (below) - the sculptor planted one hundred willows in a
curved array leading the eye towards the group of three distant oaks which can
be seen between the nearest two trees on the left.

location for trajectory for Rembrandt - 2002 - Baarn NL (view direction North)
with appreciation for the assistance of
Marja de Jong and Arjen, Erwin en Wouter of the Round Table Baarn/Soest
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