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The Memorials, eight free-standing metal and wood
relief sculptures, comprise a primary body of work concerned
with society's reactions to war and violent political unrest.
The source material and inspiration has been Ireland, both it's
historical upheavals and the current "troubles" revolving
around Northern Ireland. The metaphors in the sculpture are architectural,
in particular openings, doors and windows, and constructed memorials.
Although the works are inspired
by particular politics, my intent is for them to address a much
wider audience than just those people concerned with Ireland.
Some reflections on The
Memorials
This group of eight sculptures
has evolved over a three year period from 1985 to 1988. They
are large, on the order of 8-1/2' x 4' x 2-1/2' , free standing
reliefs. The materials are primarily corrugated steel panels
and oriented strand board (a type of composite wood sheeting
similar to plywood). Each sculpture is finished with a semi-opaque
stain applied over reflective silver paint.
- Their eight titles,
- -Northern Window
- -Cenotaph for the forgotten.
- -Marker
- -Between North and South
- -Belfast Pieta
- -the citizens
- -Heaney's doorstep
- -Memorial to the long term memory.
- April 24, 1916
November 8, 1987
offer oblique clues to specific
events and situations that have inspired them. Although a clue,
the titles do not delineate the content of the sculptures. The
forms, the juxtaposition of materials, and the relationship and
reference to architecture are intended to evoke both a response
from the viewer and elicit an empathy that will cause the viewer
to question the whys of the sculptures.
The basic and unifying reason
for these sculptures is my concern with the war that goes on
in Ireland. It is my intention that these sculptures address
the human condition in any situation where people are warring
on one another. By using corrugated steel (a material found in
nearly every culture, serving the common purpose of providing
shelter and protection) as a human element, combining this element
with an architectural reference, I hope to get a real sense of
the purpose of "a memorial". This purpose is grounded
on the condition of war and asks the viewer to reflect upon his
or her responsibility toward that condition. It is this aspect
of "a memorial" that I address in the following thoughts:
A memorial is a mnemonic
device. In addressing the memory it reminds us to keep alive
that which we may want to wish away.
A memorial is a device
that keeps the past as part of the present.
A memorial can be a monument,
but is not necessarily one. A monument marks as event, an idea,
a place and then with time tends to supplant that event, idea
or place. how many of us know what L'Arch de Triomphe or the
Washington Monument represents? Yet, a simple headstone at a
grave serves as memorial to a life. Even if we cannot read the
words on it, it marks a person's life by placing a punctuation
at the end.
Memorials are addressed
to something. Specific events that effect unspecified people.
An event lives in time,
is transitory in space so must be marked in place to survive
as a reality. Events are only real as they happen, they pass
into memory. The effects of the event are lasting in a physical
way. The windows covered after a bomb explodes, the dead and
injured, the fear that begins to in form all decisions. The memorial
makes us remember the event that caused these and question the
ideas behind that event.
The memorial can serve
as a persistent collective consciousness.
- Douglas Holmes
- September 11, 1995
- Alameda, California - - - - - - - - - -
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