Trigger 4
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''Trigger 4'', also known as ''Trigger Four'', is an outdoor 1979 steel sculpture by
Lee Kelly Lee Kelly (May 24, 1932 – March 28, 2022) was an American sculptor who has more than 30 sculptures on display between Eugene, Oregon, and Vancouver, Washington. Kelly has been called "Oregon's sculptor". Personal life Born in rural McCall in ...
, located on the Reed College campus in Portland, Oregon.


Description and history

''Trigger 4'' was designed by Lee Kelly and installed in front of the Studio Art Building on the Reed College campus in southeast Portland in 1979. Kelly had served as a visiting associate professor of art at Reed between 1976 and 1979. Like the Studio Art Building, the sculpture was donated to the college by John Gray, who served as chairman of the Board of Trustees, and his wife Betty. The Cor-Ten or mild steel sculpture measures approximately x x and contains an inscription of Kelly's signature and the number 79 on the bottom of the post on the sculpture's northwest side. The Smithsonian Institution describes the work as an abstract ("geometric") sculpture "whose primary forms are triangles and lines". Its condition was deemed "treatment needed" by Smithsonian's " Save Outdoor Sculpture!" program in February 1994.


Reception

Following the sculpture's installation, ''Reed'' magazine questioned whether it depicted a Chinese character, a horse, or simply an abstract figures formed by lines and angles, saying "perhaps the beauty of the new Lee Kelly sculpture... is that it can evoke different images and meanings." The magazine also said the rust-colored sculpture provides a "striking contrast" to the blue roof and grey exterior walls of the newly constructed Studio Art Building.


See also

*
1979 in art Events from the year 1979 in art. Events * October 25 – Frederic Edwin Church's 1861 painting ''The Icebergs'' sells for US$2.5 million at Sotheby's New York, the third-highest amount paid for any painting at auction at this date. * November ...


References

{{Reed College 1979 establishments in Oregon 1979 sculptures Abstract sculptures in Oregon Outdoor sculptures in Portland, Oregon Reed College campus Sculptures by Lee Kelly Steel sculptures in Oregon Weathering steel