|
Twin
Towers - A Remembrance
There's
something so delicate, yet forceful in Chicago mixed-media
artist, Jordan Scott's remembrance of the Twin Towers.
This giant 6x6 work - painstakingly put together from
7,500 canceled postage stamps - is one of the most evocative
pieces I've seen capturing what we all lost that September
day over 5 years ago.
As
a former New Yorker, this piece drew me in and then
held me in its gaze for a long time. I felt it looking
out at me as I gazed into it. I was truly absorbed.
It
works on many levels beyond its stunning physical beauty.
Stamps
are richly evocative - where did they originate? Who
sent them? What letters did they carry? They each represent
a person and sadly, all of them are canceled. The artist
verified that the number of stamps used to create the
actual towers equals the number of people who were lost
there that day.
Stamps
also have a history - they represent a currency that
carries letters to their destination. Just as the people
who lived and worked in the Towers carried their stories
- each small stamp represents the stories and the expanding
web of a larger life they were connected to.
There's
a poignant pause created here - as one sifts through
layers and associations that tie us back to the abundant
life the Towers stood for. The work touches on both
the individual and the collective; of people saved,
as well as people lost, as the Towers unexpectedly crumbled
that day.
Working
on so many levels, this is ultimately a hopeful work.
It holds our attention - by creating a rich body of
associations that bring to life a place and an event
that has marked us all.
Douglas
Frohman
Chicago 2006
|