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March 14 - April 4, 2005
In the Dadian Gallery:
The
AMerican Print
Alliance
September 11
Memorial Portfolio
We
are still stunned by the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. For artists
and all those who value the diversity of our lives, understanding this loss is
exceptionally difficult. It is hard to comprehend three thousand innocent people
killed in one day, not by a natural disaster, but by men who want to destroy the
freedom of our way of life.
The
idea of commemorating the victims with a memorial of images on paper, rather
than stone or steel, is a reflection of our art. The portfolio is a simple and
prevalent format among printmakers, which allows even a large group of prints to
be sent for exhibition to many places. And this portfolio is very large, 445
artworks donated by artists from the United States, Canada and ten additional
countries.
The Memorial Portfolio is not about economic, political or military consequences
of terrorism. It is our way to turn the symbolism around. Thousands of people
died because this country respects freedom of religion and speech and encourages
all individuals to reach their full potential. We celebrate their individuality
in that spirit of creativity. We hope our expression of sympathy comforts their
families and friends, a nation and the world.
Dr. Carol Pulin, director of the American Print Alliance, started this project
by suggesting that we ask each of our artists to create one print to commemorate
one person. “A memorial portfolio is a way to help us understand the loss of so
many individual lives. The Vietnam memorial is eloquent and moving because we
read names and, even if we don't recognize any of them, we recognize common
first names and last names. They were mostly soldiers and it seems appropriate
that the names are carved alike, as in traditional war memorials that stand in
town squares around the world. The Oklahoma City memorial for the Murrah
Building victims is composed of scattered groups of simple chairs. Some are
small chairs for children, but they are otherwise stylized and alike. Although
it is a terribly large number, one can grasp 168. But for thousands of people,
the artworks have to be different, individual images for the concept to be
effective.
People
will inevitably be drawn to certain pictures: some will spend time with those
portraying a scene, others will find meaning in abstract colors. As viewers walk
along, they will stop to think about some here and there, be drawn to another
down the row, just as they might be intrigued by various faces in a crowd. To
convey the sheer number and the individuality of each life is the challenge.
Speakers will tell us about acts of courage and compassion,
and writers will recount memories of each man, woman and child. We, however, are
thankful for the language of art and especially prints. Besides a heritage of
responding to social and political needs, we offer an evocation of life that
crosses cultural and national boundaries.
This portfolio was
intended to honor individual lives and thereby to create a new legacy from these
terrible events. Few of the artists knew a victim personally, but their
compassion for strangers reflects a respect for cultural differences. The
artworks are exceptional, from very simple to amazingly complex, all heartfelt.
Representatives
from each Alliance council thought deeply about the issues and offered their
intense reflections in introspective comments. The initial premise that every
artwork submitted would be included in the portfolio
¾ because each represented a life
¾ shaped our decisions on all the major
factors: theme, size, display and media. To encourage all artists to take part,
even if their printmaking usually requires complex processes or expensive press
time, we accepted other techniques as well as prints (etchings, lithographs,
screenprints, woodcuts, etc.). Drawings, watercolors, photographs, handmade
paper, all original works of art on or of paper fit in this conceptual
portfolio.
Each
contributing artist is a member of an Alliance council or a subscriber to our
journal, Contemporary
Impressions. The imagery is as distinct as the artists, who range in
age from high school students to retirees. They chose to commemorate life with
landscapes, figures, city scenes and abstractions. Many responded with
expressions of sorrow or of hope. Some artists portrayed the everyday activities
and joys of living. Thus, this portfolio is intended to cherish memories of
life, with artwork as individual as those who are no longer with us. The scale
of the project will unavoidably remind everyone of the number of innocent lives
lost. The power of this memorial will come from seeing the actual prints on
exhibition in so many communities, demonstrating the role of the arts in all our
lives.
The
size of the artwork and the form of display are more than usually inextricably
linked, because they will be seen as symbolizing facets of the theme, affecting
the portfolio's emotional power. The initial idea immediately called to mind the
office papers raining down on New York City from the damaged towers of the World
Trade Center. The standard size of office paper would be an eloquent evocation
of that phenomenon, but also an exceptionally disturbing memory of senseless
destruction. We wanted to commemorate people, not memorialize acts of violence.
So we chose 8 x 10 inches, a size that would still evoke those floating papers,
but that we hope will remind viewers more of pictures from a family photo album
or pages from an artist's book.
Thinking about arranging so many artworks in a
simple grid, a format often used in galleries today, led us to refine the
display and apply its qualities as a deliberate visual strategy. A grid in this
context recalls well-known photographic installations by Christian Boltanski,
especially those based on the last yearbook from a Jewish high school in Berlin
closed in 1938. The formal structure could distance the display from the
heart-rending photocopied images of the missing posted all over lower Manhattan
(and we reminded artists, even those who wanted to create a work about someone
they knew personally, to respect the privacy of grieving families). The strings
of artwork have an obvious analogy to a clothesline, a very mundane, everyday
device in contrast to the enormity of the tragedy. So the display also recalls
the Tibetan tradition of printing woodcut prayers and icons on colorful cloth
squares and hanging them where the wind will blow their messages to the
universe.
Many aspects of our world are being challenged,
and aesthetic conventions of art are likely to be as well. The Memorial
Portfolio will eventually be donated to a museum collection. But it is
especially significant to show it first in non-traditional places like airports,
hospitals and schools, as well as art centers. Here it will touch the lives of
people who wouldn't ordinarily think about art, much as the events of September
11 touched so many people who previously wouldn't have thought of themselves as
connected to the lives lost.
The American Print
Alliance, founded in 1992 in Washington, D.C., is a group of non-profit
printmakers' councils representing about 5,000 artists in the United States and
Canada. The Alliance sponsors exhibitions and publishes
Contemporary Impressions,
an acclaimed international journal filled with inspiring essays and articles,
interviews and reviews about prints, paperworks and artists' books. Subscribers
receive two issues a year and a specially commissioned original print.
Resource publications include the
Guide to Print Workshops,
describing places where artists have access to presses and other equipment and
technical expertise. Our internet site has a place for exhibitions (including
full-color images of many of the works in this portfolio), a gallery for print
arts, an extensive list of print and artist book collections at museums and
libraries, articles about techniques and advocacy for the print arts on
copyright, documentation and other issues. Please visit us at
www.PrintAlliance.org or write for
more information: 302 Larkspur Turn, Peachtree City GA 30269.
send comments or questions about the gallery to
the curator at:
dsokolove@wesleysem.edu
the copyright of individual works of art belongs to the
relevant artist
please do not copy or distribute
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