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TOUR DU JOUR : A Flock of Fountains

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Hottest

L.A. Prime Matter, 1990

For the record:

12:00 a.m. Feb. 25, 1996 For the Record
Los Angeles Times Sunday February 25, 1996 Home Edition Los Angeles Times Magazine Page 12 Times Magazine Desk 1 inches; 34 words Type of Material: Correction
In “Flock of Fountains” (by Bill Stern, So SoCal, Jan. 21), the location of Eric Orr’s L.A. Prime Matter sculpture, was misidentified as being on the cornor of Figueroa and 7th streets. It is at the corner of Figueroa Street and Wilshire Boulevard.

Northwest corner of 7th and Figueroa streets

Designed by Eric Orr

Every 15 minutes, gas flames fringe thin sheets of water that flow down the corrugated bronze surfaces of two 32-foot triangular columns. This water sculpture also features a beam of xenon light that shoots up about one mile.

Highest

MacArthur Park sky cascade, 1993

Middle of MacArthur Park Lake

Designed by Bruce Ptolemy

A column of water rises from a man-made lake and shoots higher, about 125 feet, than any fountain in Southern California.

Most Musical

Hollywood Bowl Fountain, 1940

At the entrance to the Hollywood Bowl on Highland Avenue

Sculpture by George Stanley

This streamline moderne fountain includes a severely stylized 15-foot sphinx-ish figure of the Muse of Music, a Leger-like cubist rendering of Comedy and Tragedy and a lithesome Brancusi-esque interpretation of the Muse of Dance. A trippy trio. Neon illumination was added in 1994.

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Most Innovative

Electric Fountain, 1930

Northeast corner of Santa Monica and Wilshire boulevards, Beverly Hills

Designed by Ralph Flewelling

The first fountain ever to have underwater lighting. An Indian maiden kneels atop a column, which stands on a base whose bas-relief (designed by Merrel Gage) depicts the early history of California. Around the fountain are pictorial tiles in Mission Revival terra cotta and teal, showing scenes of California including, incongruously, an Indian family with a Scottish terrier. The lights in the Electric Fountain haven’t worked for more than a year.

Most Hydrophilic

William Mulholland Memorial Fountain, 1940

Southwest corner of Los Feliz Boulevard and Riverside Drive

Designed by Walter S. Claberg

With its central 50-foot waterspout surrounded by four circular cascades and a 90-foot-diameter reflecting pond lit by 35 submerged floodlights of various colors, the fountain honors William Mulholland, the engineer who secured the city’s future in 1913 by bringing--some would say stealing--water via aqueduct from the Owens Valley.

Most Choreographic

The Plaza Fountain, 1988

Plaza of the Music Center

Designed by WET (Water Entertainment Technology)

Its 160 spouts of water rise and fall from the plaza floor with the impeccable synchronization of a corps de ballet. Each full “performance” lasts 12 minutes.

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