- Lake County News reports
- Posted On
EcoArts: Lake County Sculpture Walk features artwork 'in dialog with nature'
MIDDLETOWN, Calif. – The 11th annual EcoArts: Lake County Sculpture Walk is a Lake County treasure not to be missed, and remains open to the public through October.
Since 2003, more than 200 sculptures “in dialog with nature” have been installed along the Middletown County Trailside Park, and attendance has steadily increased from a few hundred to a few thousand visitors each year.
The sculpture walk has developed a reputation among curators, artists and art lovers throughout Lake County and the Bay Area.
This year's exhibit features 23 large-scale sculptures created by artists, community groups and schools.
From anthropomorphic forms, to mysterious portals, to organic radial arrangements and gilded earthen goddesses, the artworks address nature or the relationship of humankind to nature by employing natural and/or discarded industrial and commercial materials.
Steel, wood, glass, plastic, tree prunings; most were destined for a landfill until these artists heard the call and made a statement in some way through material, message, or both that highlights through example the idea of reuse, repurpose and recycle while reminding us to refocus attention to the natural bounty around us.
There are eight weeks of exhibit time remaining, and with the weather cooling down, ample opportunity to walk the trail and enjoy the works on view.
Free to the public, the exhibit is open daily from dawn to dusk, June through Oct. 13, and is located along the center trail of the park.
Pick up a free, self-guided tour booklet at the beginning of the trail and follow the exhibit, which is about one-third of a mile long. Walking shoes and drinking water are advised.
Docent tours are available throughout the exhibit season at no charge (donations gladly accepted). Contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or call 707-809-5398 for information or to join a guided tour.
Middletown County Trailside Park is located on Dry Creek Cut Off. From the Highway 29/175 intersection in Middletown, travel toward Cobb Mountain about three miles and turn left at Dry Creek Cut Off.
This 103-acre park filled with woodland and meadows features 2.3 miles of trail for walking, biking, horseback riding and of course, art viewing.
EcoArts of Lake County is a nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting the visual arts, visual art education and ecological stewardship for artists, residents and visitors to Lake County.