Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Charles Ross (artist)

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Nationality
  
American

Name
  
Charles Ross

Spouse
  
Jill O'Bryan

Website
  
[1]

Role
  
Artist

Known for
  
Charles Ross (artist) wwwsalon94comassetsartwork157Dwanjpg
Born
  
December 17, 1937 (age 86) (
1937-12-17
)

Notable work
  
Star Axis, Dwan Light Sanctuary, Harvard Business School Chapel, Year of Solar Burns

Books
  
Sunlight convergence solar burn

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada

Charles Ross (born December 17, 1937 in Philadelphia) is an American sculptor and earthwork artist. In 2011, he was named a Guggenheim Fellow.

Charles Ross (artist) Charles Ross Star Axis ISO50 Blog The Blog of Scott

Background

Ross graduated from University of California, Berkeley with a B.A. in mathematics and M.A. in Sculpture in 1962.

Ross is creating an earthwork known as Star Axis, which is a naked eye observatory and architectonic sculpture. Star Axis's geometry is derived from the shifting relationship of earth to the sun and the north star.

Charles Ross (artist) charlesrossstaraxisdb09jpg

"As you walk up Star Axis's Star Tunnel, you're walking exactly parallel to the axis of the earth and you're aligned with its outer extension to the stars."Charles Ross

Star Axis was begun in 1971. The Star Tunnel is the central element of Star Axis. It frames our north star, Polaris. The Star Tunnel is precisely aligned with the earth’s axis. Within it a stairway rises 10 stories toward a circular opening at the top that frames all of the orbits of Polaris throughout the ages. As you climb the stairway toward the circular opening you see larger and larger views of the sky. The view from each stair frames an orbit of Polaris for a particular time in the 26,000 year cycle called precession. The smallest orbit of Polaris, viewed from the bottom stair, is about the size of a dime held at arms length. The largest orbit of Polaris, viewed from the top stair, encompasses your entire field of vision.

In 1965 Ross began creating prism sculpturesminimal geometrical objects as perceptual vessels that alter the perception of the environments that surround them. In 1980 he created his first site specific solar spectrum installation. These permanent environmental color and light installations are created by mounting large scale prisms in skylights and windows that project huge spectrums into the architecture. In 1992, Ross designed the prisms in the Harvard Business School's The Class of 1959 Chapel for architect Moshe Safdie. In 1996 he created a solar spectrum environment for the Dwan Light Sanctuary at the United World College in Montezuma, New Mexico. This installation includes 24 prisms mounted in two apses and four skylights so that there is solar spectrum in the sanctuary from sunrise to sunset every day. He has also created permanent solar spectrum installations in more than 20 other locations including Saitama University Medical School near Tokyo in 1999. In 2003, Ross designed a solar spectrum environment for the National Museum of the American Indian as a reflection of the Native American relationship with light and cosmology.

References

Charles Ross (artist) Wikipedia