Widely ridiculed 6-story Los Angeles artwork may be revamped
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, colorful mosaics, larger-than-life murals and towering sculptures.
But the work the artist hoped he would be best remembered for was The Triforium. And he was, but for all the wrong reasons.
The space-age-looking pointy edifice that stands six stories tall and is covered with 1,494 colorful lights that once blinked in time to music blasted from its four gigantic speakers was mocked from the day it made its feedback-ridden, embarrassingly screechy 1975 debut.
Critics gave it nicknames like The Trifoolery, The Schlockenspiel and The Million-Dollar Jukebox, and those were the nicer ones. Network news correspondents implied the people of Los Angeles were fools to shell out nearly a million bucks to build this silly thing.


