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Our sculpture uses
combinations of architectural materials including cast concrete,
high-fire glazed tile, and stone. It often appears to be
abstract, but it has a traceable lineage to imagery and ideas
that we glean from our research and discussions on what defines
an area.
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The University of New Mexico and New Mexico Arts
commissioned Hank Saxe and Cynthia Patterson to create this
monumental artwork marking the entrance to the UNM Taos Campus.
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The Public Art Sculpture
titled 'Confluencia' at the Downtown Transit Terminal comments
on El Paso's unique position as a transit hub and passageway
between Mexico and the United States.
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Los
Candelarias was one of the first Spanish settlements in the
middle Rio Grande Valley of New Mexico. Located very close to
the Rio Grande bosque and Nature Center, the community still has
a strong connection to its agricultural heritage.
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Springwater Dancers was commissioned for Oklahoma City
Educare, a privately funded facility for the teaching and care
of children between the ages of 6 months and 5 years.
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Mariposa Falls is located at the entrance to the new Queen Creek
Library. It is a representation of the hydrologic cycle in the
Sonoran Desert of southern Arizona that provides irrigation
water for the agriculture that has historically supported the
Town of Queen Creek.
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El Jardín',
was created especially for the East Las Vegas Community/Senior
Center. It celebrates
the East Las Vegas community and the role of the Center in the
reinvigoration of the neighborhood.
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In January 2003 Saxe-Patterson was chosen by a selection
committee under the auspices of the City of Santa Fe Arts
Commission as artists to create a monumental sculpture for Las
Acequias Park.
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Decorative tilings and Spanish inscription
commissioned for the altar at Our Lady of Guadalupe Church in
Taos, New Mexico. |
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© 2009
Saxe-Patterson |
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