Roots of Knowledge

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Artist
Completion dateNovember 18, 2016 (2016-11-18)
Roots of Knowledge
View of the stained glass from the outside of the Fulton Library.
Artist
Completion dateNovember 18, 2016 (2016-11-18)
MediumStained glass
SubjectHistory of knowledge
Dimensions3.0 m × 61 m (10 ft × 200 ft)[1]
LocationBingham Gallery, Fulton Library, Utah Valley University, Orem, Utah
Coordinates40°16′51″N 111°43′01″W / 40.2807751°N 111.7169962°W / 40.2807751; -111.7169962
OwnerUtah Valley University
Websitewww.uvu.edu/rootsofknowledge/

Roots of Knowledge is a permanent stained glass display completed in 2016 at Utah Valley University (UVU) in Orem, Utah, United States. The creation of the exhibit was designed and overseen by stained glass artists Tom Holdman and Cameron Oscarson. It took over 12 years and cost US$4.5 million to complete.

The Roots of Knowledge is a permanent stained glass exhibit in the Ira A. and Mary Lou Fulton Library at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah in the United States.[2] It is 200 feet (61 m) long, about 10 feet (3.0 m) tall, and comprising 80 separate panes.[3] Each of the panels was handcrafted from over 43,000 pieces of glass depicting part of the progress of human knowledge during recorded history.[4][5] The exhibit depicts both religious and secular events and objects.[6]

In addition to the stained, blown, fused, and carved glass used for most of the window, other objects were incorporated into the display.[5] These included a shark's tooth, part of the Berlin Wall, a Purple Heart medal, a $5 bill from 1777, and glass from NASA.[2][3][5][7] Part of the window incorporates a replication of the oldest stained glass known: a window created in 647 AD at The Abbey Church of Saint Peter and Saint Paul, Monkwearmouth–Jarrow in England.[4][8]

A view of some of the Roots of Knowledge windows as seen from a higher floor in the library

History

Reception

References

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