Leo Villareal's THE BAY LIGHTS Unveiled This Month to Celebrate Bay Bridge's 75th Anniversary

By: Mar. 15, 2013
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THE BAY LIGHTS is a monumental light sculpture inspired by the 75th anniversary of the Bay Bridge. Artist Leo Villareal has networked 25,000 individually programmable, white LED lights made by Philips Color Kinetics to create complex algorithms and patterns across the western span. This contemporary art piece is the world's largest LED light sculpture.

The energy-efficient lights are mounted in single strands on the bridge's vertical cables. Together, the lights use 150 to 175 kilowatt hours (kWh) of energy while operating for approximately seven hours each night.

It will cost approximately $11,000 per year in energy to light the piece, which translates to $30 per day at $4.25 per hour. Dedicated solar panels installed in Davis, Calif. by CleanPath will offset all energy used by THE BAY LIGHTS.

In August 2012, permits were awarded by Caltrans, in September 2012, the six-month installation process began, and this month, March 2013, THE BAY LIGHTS was unveiled at the Grand Lighting ceremony on March 5.

Installation of the LED light system took place at night to minimize impact on motorists. A crew of 8-10 electricians from Bleyco Construction worked Monday through Friday, 8:00 p.m. to 5:00 a.m., to install the piece. Saeed Shahmirzai of Zoon Engineering led the construction effort, which included technical design by Parsons-Brinckerhoff.

The artwork will be on display nightly from dusk until 2:00 a.m. through March 2015. The installation can be viewed from San Francisco and points north, but not by drivers crossing the bridge. Beginning in 2015 will be the three-month removal process.

Leo Villareal, creator of THE BAY LIGHTS, is a pioneer in the use of LED lights and computer- driven imagery. He is known for his light sculptures and architectural, site-specific works. Villareal's art is part of the Permanent Collections of major museums, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Naoshima Contemporary Art Museum in Kagawa, Japan and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.

Villareal has earned prestigious international commissions and solo exhibitions worldwide, including BUCKYBALL in New York City's Madison Square Park. A survey show organized by the San Jose Museum of Art in California continues to tour museums in the United States. He is represented by Gering & López Gallery, NYC and CONNERSMITH, Washington D.C.

THE BAY LIGHTS is the brainchild of Ben Davis, founder of Words Pictures Ideas, the San Francisco agency that branded the Bay Bridge East Span, one of the largest public works projects in U.S. history. Davis discovered and was inspired by Villareal's work in Silicon Valley during the 2010 ZERO1 BienniaL. Davis is the chairman of Illuminate the Arts, the presenting organization formed to produce THE BAY LIGHTS.

Amy Critchett is the executive producer of THE BAY LIGHTS and the executive director of Illuminate the Arts. One of the first employees of both WIRED magazine and Oxygen Media, former co-director of ZERO1 and campaign manager for Congresswoman Lynn Woolsey, Critchett is an eclectic and creative producer of culturally significant projects and events.

See THE BAY LIGHTS streamed live each night, watch archived videos, interviews and viewer- sourced images, find current patron and partner information and learn how to support the project at www.thebaylights.org.



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