In Memoriam: 911
By Tom Wachunas
Ten years ago I was
blessed with the opportunity to be included in a group show at downtown Canton’s
Anderson Creative (later named Translations Art Gallery), guest-curated by Dr.
Fredlee Votaw. Some of you readers may remember the exhibit. It was called “The
Persistence of Memory” – commemorating the 10th Anniversary of 911.
Here’s a link to my comments on the exhibit from back then:
http://artwach.blogspot.com/2011/09/mournings-after.html
So here we are once
more immersed - thanks largely due to the towering medium of television - in
our recollections of 911, twenty years later.
And here I am likewise
immersed. Not only in remembrance of an overwhelmingly tragic event, but also
in recollections of making my contribution to that 10th Anniversary
exhibit - a sculpture, nearly 5’ tall, called Window on the World. The process
was a long one, evolving through about 10 weeks during the summer of 2011, and
one I continue to think of as a series of daily meditations and a season of protracted
prayer.
It started with
purchasing, then gutting (removing the heavy picture tube) a big, used Magnavox
television from a Salvation Army store. An eery serendipity, this finding a
Magnavox TV. Magna vox, Latin for “great voice”. Next, building a wood pedestal. Then faux-painting
those forms to suggest the marble or granite finish of an elaborate gravestone
- a funereal totem.
The protracted
prayer element commenced when I began to handwrite a litany - the names of 2,977
people - on to 41 sheets of white paper, on each page three columns of names.
As I scrolled down the online list I found of all those who perished, one name
at a time, I touched the desktop screen, offering aloud each name to God as I wrote
it onto paper. I made photocopy reductions of those 41 pages, finally cutting
them into thin vertical strips that I glued to the inside walls of the hollow
TV shell, arranged to perhaps suggest the metropolitan skyline of NYC.
Even as I type this
now, in this moment at my computer desk, I can hear my TV in the living room,
broadcasting the reverential ceremonies transpiring at the 911 Memorial in lower
Manhattan.
Television. Tell a
vision. In this moment, I am praying yet again. Looking through this window on
the world. Here, but for the grace of God…
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