RICHARD BECKER, FNSS

Artworks


Concept: Jane Stanford Space

DUE TO JANE (PORTRAIT OF YOUNG JANE STANFORD)
Bronze, Stainless Steel and Granite
10 feet tall
2028
Proposal for Stanford University

Executive Summary

This proposal presents a commemorative sculpture recognizing Jane Stanford — co‑founder and steward of Stanford University — and inviting reflection on her strength, leadership, and enduring influence on the institution’s early development.

The work centers on a forward‑looking portrait of Jane at college age, presented without the trappings of her era and envisioned as a permanent outdoor installation in a prominent campus setting. Monumental yet approachable, the sculpture is intended to anchor a space for reflection, gathering, and engagement as part of daily campus life.

Fabricated with materials that will endure for centuries, the project will be developed through a collaborative process aligned with Stanford University’s standards for public art, campus planning, and long‑term stewardship.


Why This Project Matters

A transformational visitor experience: Visitors gain a deeper understanding of Jane Stanford’s story and its connection to the university’s origins, and are invited to reflect on how individual choices shape institutions and the world.


Key Conceptual Elements

A relatable, forward‑looking portrait of young Jane Stanford: Connects her directly to today’s students and the future she envisioned.

Depicted without the trappings of her era: Removes Victorian distance and presents her as a timeless leader, not a historical artifact.

Her mourning locket transformed into a mirror: Once a symbol of grief, now a reflective surface that engages viewers and symbolizes the world she shaped — and the lives she continues to influence.

A corrective to her only existing campus monument: Where she is depicted kneeling; this work acknowledges her central role as co‑founder and steward of the university’s survival.

A reflection of resilience and vision: Highlights her leadership after Leland’s death, when she sustained and defended the university’s future.

A 200‑year forward gesture: Celebrates her bicentennial and frames her legacy as a living force — evolving, enduring, and still shaping Stanford’s future.


Spatial Intent & Visitor Activation

A welcoming, monumental catalyst: Designed as a spatial anchor — a place to meet, reflect, and reconnect with Stanford’s origins — supporting moments of contemplation, conversation, and connection across the campus community.

A space designed for reflection and connection: A place to gather, think, and feel the continuity of Stanford’s story — with site features developed in collaboration with campus planners.


Materiality & Presence

Crafted in bronze, granite, and stainless steel at 10 feet tall: Materials and scale chosen for permanence, dignity, and contemporary relevance.

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An Enduring Tribute to Her Transformative Generosity, Leadership, and Vision.
An inspiring space to reflect and connect.

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Concept: Cardinal Spirit

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Cardinal Spirit

Cardinal Spirit explores light, movement, and perception through shifting visual experience.

A tall, cardinal-red curved form is perforated with a halftone pattern that resolves into an image only from a particular position.

As viewers move around the work, the image briefly appears, then dissolves, shifting between presence and absence. From the convex side, the image appears to follow the viewer’s movement.

The piece invites slow looking and physical movement, rewarding attention without asserting a fixed point of view.


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Other Concepts

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Collections & Collaborations

© Richard Becker Studio LLC
Studio based in San Diego
Working throughout Southern California and Los Angeles
Television Academy commission sculptures ©ATAS, used with permission