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In this Wednesday, Feb. 1, 2017, photo members of the Triforium project, from left, Tom Carroll, Claire Evans, Jona Bechtolt, and Tanner Blackman,  pose for a photo with Joseph L. Young's Triforium a "polyphonoptic" public sculpture at the Fletcher Bowron Square downtown Los Angeles.  For 40 years Joseph Young festooned public buildings, open spaces and private places across his adopted city of Los Angeles with dozens of brilliant, larger-than-life artworks.  Mocked for 42 years as pointless and silly looking, the six-story, space-age-like structure may finally get a second chance, thanks to a $100,000 innovation grant.

In this Wednesday, Feb. 1, 2017, photo members of the Triforium project, from left, Tom Carroll, Claire Evans, Jona Bechtolt, and Tanner Blackman, pose for a photo with Joseph L. Young's Triforium a "polyphonoptic" public sculpture at the Fletcher Bowron Square downtown Los Angeles. For 40 years Joseph Young festooned public buildings, open spaces and private places across his adopted city of Los Angeles with dozens of brilliant, larger-than-life artworks. Mocked for 42 years as pointless and silly looking, the six-story, space-age-like structure may finally get a second chance, thanks to a $100,000 innovation grant.

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