Fontaine

Mixed media installation. 2022.
10’ x 10’ x 5’.
Inflatable pool, pool noodles, modified inflatable drink holders, fake stone bird fountain, steel, pvc, grow light, water pumps, plastic tubing, electronics, bottle cap, crushed Coca Cola can, condom, hemp, jute, corn, arugula, speckled peas, water, nutrient mix.



Out of the blue, it is he
Vision to me, bearing leaves
Petals green, covers me in all my shame

- PJ Harvey, lyrics from Fountain (Dry, 1992)

From such a gentle thing, from such a fountain of all delight, my every pain is born.

- Michaelangelo



Fountains - etymologically meaning source or spring, from the latin root “fons” - have been features of human settlements since the bronze-age. Even in antiquity, decorative reservoirs distributed water for populations of early city-states. The urban equivalents of ancient wells, fountains became central gathering places: a location to collect precious drinking water, bathe, and relax. At the same time, these architectural features, designed and financed by ruling elites, function as material reminders of centralized power and the dynamics and responsibilities between social hierarchies.

Advancements in engineering allowed fountains to take advantage of gravity and hydrostatic pressure: water-flow could now burst vertically from the fountainhead, momentarily escaping gravity. A fountain exhibits magical abundance, an endless bubbling source of life and prosperity. Metaphors for fertility, growth, sexuality, and leisure develop further alongside increasingly elaborate sculptural ornamentation.


As modernity approaches, the symbolism of fountains overtakes their original function. Water is no longer accessible for visitors to collect, as they would possess this resource at home. Instead, water becomes an object for aesthetic contemplation, a vehicle through which to visualize control over natural elements, a material with which to explore the human imagination and build powerful narratives.

In these histories, the fountain becomes a lens through which to trace humanity’s ongoing relationship with water, functional design and aesthetics, power and luxury. It is both a projection of symbolic understanding and a resilient reification of such value systems.



What values would a contemporary North American fountain uphold? Water is seemingly limitless and easily available, and simultaneously, a vital agricultural resource in short global supply. In the developed world, it is an affordable luxury for gardens, outdoor activities, sports and enjoyment; elsewhere, it is a cause for anti-privatization protests or war. Water is easily contained in plastic receptacles which themselves become part of an increasingly distressed oceanic ecosystem as they are discarded.

Fountain presents several improvisational scenarios, each reflecting on these inextricable relationships between water, disposable plastic, agriculture, and leisure; the relationships between human design and irrepressible natural processes. They are unlikely monuments temporarily assembled for no one in particular, performing cycles of inevitable decay and necessary regrowth.










Photos by John Healey.


© 2024 Adam Basanta