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Transformation,
connection, endurance of the natural worldall of these themes
run through the artwork, poetry, essays, and music that emerged
from the project, Beyond 9-11: The Art of Renewal in Iowa.
transformation
The very impetus for the project was to transform the despair I
felt at the popular reaction to 9/11/01 to a sense of renewal through
collecting deeper creative responses to the events. Of course, to
some extent, all of the works symbolize the transformation of the
feelings or thoughts relating to September 11 and its aftermath
into a tangible piece of creative work. Beyond that, however, writer
Betsy Snow Hickok seeks to change the focus
on the violent deaths of the victims to remembering the fullness
of their lives, and their continued spiritual existence. Her poem,
In the Telling, reminds us of Greek myths in which things
leave and are returned to us. And If cement and glass
can become as light as air, / why not spirit? / Didnt we see
them upright, whole in the full / September sun? / Didnt we
see them riding the smoke like angels?
Painter
Crit Streed also sought to release the
victims from their violent end in her diptych, Requiescat in
Pace. It is her offering for those who perished, and its subtle
abstraction leaves space for the viewer to reflect and meditate.
Visual
artist Jennifer S. Otis evokes the transience
of life in her stoneware sculpture, Plum. The adjacent forms,
some glazed the color of plum and some black, recall the presence
and absence of fruit on a plum tree. The connected bulbous shapes
indicate the slim veil between life and death, and the cycle that
repeats and repeats.
Sculptor
Elise Kendrot makes transformation not
only a thematic element, but part of the very creative process of
her sculpture, Salt Columns. These six-foot-high, eleven-inch-square
towers are built of salt, water, and red dye. The water was used
to dissolve the salt, but instead of disappearing, the salt rebuilt
itself into something new and stronger and harder than before. At
the base of the columns after the sculpture was installed, some
of the water plumed out and created huge sparkling crystals. These
common elements of life, salt and water, were transformed into stark
beauty and strength. The work reminds us that in the midst of destruction,
life continues on in different forms, and that we can become stronger
even though in our weakest moments we cant conceive of it.
Other
works include:
- painted
glass and tin sconces by Wendy S. Rolfe,
used as vehicles of prayer and comfort and symbolizing the power
of remembrance and renewal through faith;
- Julie
Russell-Steuarts multimedia piece, Flying After,
combining video and poetry to document her journey through fear
to trust as well as belief in the power of love;
- the
poem by Ann Struthers, Those Who
Are With You, turns a somber escape of school students across
the Brooklyn Bridge into a parade led by poets of days past;
- Faye
Tambrinos watercolor painting that shows a darkened
floral image emerging into a brightly-colored forma brighter
future;
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- the
oddly vertical collages of horizontal American iconography by
Daniel Weiss seem to say our construction
of events and symbols depends a great deal on our perspective;
- the
transformation of the last piece in Nancy
Puringtons series of gold-leaf paintings from paying
homage to the natural delights of summer to a plain rectangular
blotch of indigo ground that she could not complete after September
11; and,
- Margaret
Whitings two visual works that through selected circled
words turn the pages of old books on the Law of Nations into statements
against war and violence.
connection
For many of us, one of the initial responses to September 11 was
a drawing within to the safe and familiar. But several works show
the power and importance of the connections we weave outside ourselves
and our own circles. Renae Angeroths
song, Another Day, reminds us that while September 11 jolted
us and brought us together in many ways, we are not the only ones
who face such tragedies, and we need to be more compassionate when
others around the world endure hardships and shocks like we did.
Janet Hart Heinickes drawing, The
Hospitality of Bread, shows the commonality among peoples of
the world. Poet Marianne Taylor juxtaposes
the estrangement of the suicidal/homicidal pilots with the suicides
of teenage boys in her own townwhat makes individuals commit
these acts, and what is our role as community in their disavowal
of humanity? Neil Nakadates poems
tell the stories of family members responses to the eventsand
his own, in the telling of theirs.
endurance
The vastness and endurance ofand the comfort found inthe
natural world are revealed in other pieces. Both Laurie
Elizabeth Talbot Hall, in her mixed media boxes (That Which
Sustains Me and Solstice), and Jennifer
S. Otis, in her ceramic forms perched on a stone (Cacela
Velha), evoke the solace and beauty found in the natural world,
and the persistence of rock, sea, land, phases of the moon and sun.
And in his essay, That Morning, on the Prairie, James
Calvin Schaap tells the story of how his students were perhaps
most prepared having first sat in silence on the vast and beautiful
prairie early in the morning on September 11, before they learned
of the attacks upon their return to school.
Other
works remind us of the importance of family, friends, and the simple
things in life, such as Barbara Laus
poem, Post September, recalling the innocence of summer and
children and the gardens produce, and the yearning for those
days; and Mary Swanders essay, 9/11,
the story of her prophetic encounter with a stranger in New York
the weekend before the attacks. Also, Rustin
Larsons poem, Something Visceral, celebrates the
tenaciousness with which we hang onto life, and our resolve to make
a better place of this world.
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Art
transforms, connects, and endures. The work of the Beyond 9-11
artists and others change or affect the creator and the viewer in
ways that may surprise us at times. In times such as thesein
all timesartists, writers, and musicians can provide a unique
perspective that helps us see our world and our own circumstances
in new ways if we pay attention. In that moment of paying attention,
art may be just what we need.
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