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The Jao Family Sculpture Garden, officially dedicated June 16, 2005, is a stone's throw away from the Humanities Bridge in Aldrich Park, University of California, Irvine. The garden features four white marble sculptures donated by real estate tycoon Frank Jao from a local Vietnamese Cultural Court display in Little Saigon, Westminster, an ethnic neighborhood Jao helped to develop.
Frank and Catherine Jao and Family
With appreciation for your generosity and vision
School of Humanities
University of California, Irvine
June 16, 2005
The sculptures are of poet Li Bai, the goddess Magu, statesman Qu Yuan, and philosopher Lao-zi. According to a plaque at the site, Li Bai is surrounded by large smooth stones alluding to his life in the mountains, the goddess Magu by cloud-like winter blooming bergenia (Bergenia crassifolia), Qu Yuan by wave-like New Zealand sedge (Carex testacea), and Lao-zi by lily turf (Liriope muscari) on one side and pinkhead smartweed (Polygonum capitatum) on the other to represent yin and yang. I was unable to find any information on the artist who did the sculptures, though the statue of Lao-zi looks like it was based on an existing historic sculpture (I saw a photograph of the older statue on the Internet).
Photos copyright © 2009 Kat Avila
Date of Photos: May 2009
Time of Day: Taken over the course of two weeks in the late morning and early evening. I discovered that shadows were needed for definition as photos taken during the afternoon looked washed out.
Additional Notes: The statue of Li Bai had its thumb broken off on the right hand that he is holding behind his back, and the delicate fingers of Magu's left hand were snapped off. Also, there was visible bird excrement on all the statues. On the morning I shot video, I did not notice until too late that pranksters had placed pebbles in Li Bai's wine cup and on the ledge made by Qu Yuan's hands, or it is possible they were stone offerings. That same morning there were several snails crawling up Magu, so I had to shoot around them.
Update: In December 2009, the statue of Li Bai was missing its head! I don't know how it happened or if there are any plans to repair the damage.
Camera: Canon SD1000 |

A black phoebe sits
atop Qu Yuan's hat. |

a brown garden snail |
Overall Garden View

Li Bai, Magu, Qu Yuan, Lao-zi |

Magu, Lao-zi, Li Bai, Qu Yuan |

Li Bai, Magu, Lao-zi, Qu Yuan |

Magu, Lao-zi, Qu Yuan, Li Bai |

Li Bai and Magu |

Magu and Lao-zi |

Qu Yuan and Magu |

Magu and Qu Yuan |

Li Bai, Qu Yuan, and Magu |

Qu Yuan, Lao-zi, Li Bai, Magu |

Qu Yuan and Lao-zi |

Lao-zi and Qu Yuan |

Magu, Qu Yuan, and Lao-zi |

Magu and Qu Yuan |

Qu Yuan and Li Bai |
Li Bai (aka Li Po, 701-762 A.D.), a Tang Dynasty poet who is remembered for his love of wine as much as his poetry
Magu, goddess of eternal youth and beauty who offers an elixir and the peaches of immortality to a lucky few
Qu Yuan (340-278 B.C.), an exiled statesman and poet whose death is memorialized by the Duanwu Festival (5th day of the 5th lunar month; aka the Dragon Boat Festival)